The Improvised Shakespeare Company
Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited
Folger Shakespeare Library
4.8 • 878 Ratings
🗓️ 7 April 2026
⏱️ 39 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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| 0:00.0 | From the Folger Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited. |
| 0:07.0 | I'm Farah Karim Cooper, the Folger Director. |
| 0:11.0 | One of the pleasures of going to a Shakespeare play is seeing a new interpretation of familiar material. |
| 0:19.0 | The text stays more or less the same, |
| 0:21.9 | while everything else changes from production to production. |
| 0:25.8 | But what if it didn't work that way? |
| 0:28.2 | What if each time you showed up at the theater, |
| 0:30.5 | you got a brand new play, never to be repeated? |
| 0:34.6 | That's what you get at a performance of the improvised Shakespeare Company, a new play made up on the spot by expert improvisers. |
| 0:43.3 | All they require is a title suggested by the audience and they're often running. |
| 0:48.3 | For the past two decades, Improvised Shakespeare has performed regularly in Chicago and Los Angeles, as well as touring internationally. |
| 0:58.1 | The idea to improvise an entire play in the style of William Shakespeare came to founder Blaine Swin in 2005. |
| 1:06.9 | At the time, Swin was a philosophy PhD student at Loyola University and a comedy student at Chicago's Second City. |
| 1:16.4 | Fellow actor Ross Bryant joined the company in its early days. |
| 1:21.5 | Here are Blaine, Swin, and Ross Bryant in conversation with Barbara Bogave. |
| 1:29.6 | Blaine and Ross, I'm so glad you're here. |
| 1:33.2 | Us too. Thanks for having us, Barbara. |
| 1:35.2 | Yes, so happy to be here. |
| 1:37.0 | I don't know if this is an obnoxious thing to ask you straight off, but I was thinking |
| 1:42.4 | since your shows always start with a suggested title |
| 1:45.3 | from the audience, maybe we could start the way you start your performance, and maybe I could throw |
| 1:51.4 | out some titles, and you could pick the least bad one, because they're all bad, and do an opening |
... |
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