My Crossword Maker Logo
Powered by BrightSprout
Save Status:
or to save your progress. The page will not refresh.
Controls:
SPACEBAR SWITCHES TYPING DIRECTION
Answer Key:
Edit a Copy:
Make Your Own:
Crucigrama Sopa de Letras Hoja de Trabajo
Calificar este Puzzle:
Log in or sign up to rate this puzzle.

Improv Terms

Horizontales
The Who, What, and Where of a scene, usually established in the first few opening lines. Once Who/What/Where is established, it’s basically the launching pad for the rest of the scene.
A form of not committing to an idea, usually by over-describing or over-talking about a situation
A nonsense language often used in improv
Making an offer or action irrelevant.
“Yes” is the unspoken agreement that improvisers have in a scene - that when someone makes an offer, everyone says "Yes, we accept that idea and will build off of it.” The "and" is what comes after the initial offer - the building blocks of the scene.
Making “what’s at stake” especially and personally important.
explanation of something that just happened, to help it make sense in the context of the scene.
The premise of a scene.
An offer that gives characteristics or attributes to a fellow performer’s character
Verticales
A denial of another player’s offer - this is sometimes done by outwardly saying “No”
Moving a scene forward.
A player's contribution to the scene: can be conceptual, verbal or nonverbal, or physical.
Asking something of the audience.
A scene that is grounded in Who, What, Where.
Accepting an offer but putting it to the side to use later. It never gets used.
The thing that makes a scene dramatically interesting.
A player avoiding making a commitment in a scene, or failing to add to an offer.
Introducing the setup of a scene to an audience.