
Harold is a structure used in long-form
improvisational theatre that is performed by improv troupes and teams across the world. In the Harold structure, characters and themes are introduced and then recur in a series of connected scenes.
It was first performed in California by
The Committee in 1967.
History
The Committee, a
San Francisco
San Francisco, officially the City and County of San Francisco, is a commercial, Financial District, San Francisco, financial, and Culture of San Francisco, cultural center of Northern California. With a population of 827,526 residents as of ...
improv group, performed the first Harold in
Concord, California, in 1967.
They were invited to a high school and decided to do their improvisations on the
war in Vietnam. On the way home in a
Volkswagen bus, they were discussing the performance, when one of them asked what they should call it. Allaudin (Bill) Mathieu (
W.A. Mathieu) called out "Harold",
which was a joking reference to a line from ''
A Hard Day's Night'' where a reporter asks
George Harrison what he calls his haircut and he answers "Arthur".
The form was further developed by improv teachers
Del Close and
Charna Halpern, as well as the
Upright Citizens Brigade.
When The Committee disbanded in 1972, improv company Improvisation, Inc. was the only company in America continuing to perform the group's "original" Harold: a 45-minute free-form piece that would seamlessly move from one "Harold technique" to another. In 1974, in Los Angeles, former Committee member Gary Austin co-founded
The Groundlings, using improv-as-a-tool. In 1976, two former Improvisation, Inc. performers, Michael Bossier and John Elk, formed Spaghetti Jam, performing in San Francisco's
Old Spaghetti Factory through 1983. Spaghetti Jam performed Harolds while also turning
Spolin games and Harold techniques into standalone performance pieces (i.e., short-form improv).
The 1994 book ''Truth in Comedy'' describes a "training wheels Harold" as three acts (or "beats"), each with three scenes and a group segment. With each beat, the three scenes return. By the end of the piece, the three scenes have converged.
Modified Harolds
Some modern improv forms are Harolds with an added requirement. These include:
* Monoscene – Originally and occasionally still Harold set in one location
* Sybil – Harold performed by a solo performer
* The Bat – Harold performed in the dark
* The Armando – A Harold performed with a guest monologist telling true stories
References
Bibliography
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:Harold (Improvisation)
Theatrical genres
Improvisational theatre
1960s introductions
1960s in comedy