Capital-F Funny

Newsletter Thursday January 29, 2026, 4:18am - by seantaylor

Congrats to the new Livewire lineup, Magnet beanies on sale, Get coached for free, big sib applications, intern opportunities, mixers, new offerings, and Ask an improviser with Alex Kornfeld.

MAGNET THEATER
Congrats to the new Livewire lineup! Catch all the Livewire teams's season debuts in March!
Warm your head with an official Magnet Theater knit cap!
Our upcoming Sunday afternoon Coaching Class is looking for L2 (and beyond) improvisers to get coached. Sign up here to get involved!
We are looking for exceptional students, improvisers and members of the Magnet Community. Want to be a Big Sib?
Want to earn credit toward classes? Learn about our internships program.
Get some reps at the weekly Wednesday mixer or the monthly Musical mixer! Free for Magnet students
New Offerings
Michael Lutton
Improv Level One
Fridays (2/13) @3pm

Improv Level Two
Saturdays (2/7) @3:30pm

Jason Farr
Improv Level One
Thursdays (2/19) @8pm
Dennis Pacheco
Improv Level One
Mondays (2/23) @8pm
Charlie Nicholson
Improv Level One
Wednesdays (3/4) @7pm
Christine Magee
Improv Level One
Mondays (3/16) @6pm
Louis Kornfeld
Improv Level Three
Tuesdays (2/3) @6:30pm

Team Performance Workshop
Sundays (3/15) @4pm

Team Performance Workshop
Mondays (3/16) @6pm

Elana Fishbein
Adv Improv Level One
Mondays (3/16) @6pm

Adv Improv Level One
Tuesdays (3/17) @6pm

Coaching Class
Sundays (2/22) @2pm

Billy Soco and Stoddard Blackall
Musical Improv Level One
Thursdays (2/5) @6pm
Jacob Horn and James Navan
Musical Improv Level Two
Tuesdays (2/17) @7pm
Michael Lutton and Ammon Taylor
Musical Improv Level Three
Wednesdays (3/4) @6pm
Ashley Glicken
Sketch Writing Level One
Wednesdays (3/11) @6:30pm
Amanda Xeller
Character Writing and Performance
Tuesdays (2/24) @6:30pm
Kevin McDonald
Sketch from Improv
Saturday (5/2) @10am
Adam Wade
Storytelling Level One
Thursdays (2/19) @6:30pm

Storytelling Level One
Sundays (2/22) @11am

Storytelling Level Three
Tuesdays (2/17) @6:30pm

Summer Intensives
Improv Levels One & Two
Mon-Fri (June) @11:30am

Musical Improv Levels 1-3
Mon-Fri (July) @11:30am

Improv Levels 1-3
Mon-Fri (August) @11:30am

Ask an Improviser
"What is the most important improv lesson you ever learned?"
Performer Alex Kornfeld
Magnet Theater
"Improv feels hard when we get on our own backs thinking we have to make it really good, or that we have to be really funny. It’s this dance where of course we want to be thought of as “funny” and of course we want the audience to laugh, but the tighter a grip we use, the more of the funny we seem to lose. “If you desire to attain enlightenment, you will never attain it”, or something like that.

I think it’s also the difference between the idea of capital-F Funny (noun) being this thing to strive for in our improv, vs lowercase-f funny (adjective) being instead something that’s hyperlocal to the scene or the show. It’s context dependent, and it’s why so often we struggle in recounting a great show to somebody who wasn’t there. It could’ve been the funniest thing ever when we saw it, but somehow it falls short in the retelling.

Lowercase-f funny naturally comes out of honest listening. Oftentimes in a show lines that will get big laughs are ones that call something back; maybe some brief line or description our teammates gave, not necessarily with another thought or some big intention (capital-F Funny). By calling it back we are saying to our team as well as to the audience: “Hey, I heard that thing you said before, and I’m making it important.” Put another way, from the perspective of the teammate who just did something without trying to be Funny: the things we say or do while not trying to be Funny are more bricks we hand to our team for the shared effort of building the show together.

Laughter from the audience is not a strictly transactional “That was Funny; you may have this laugh”. When you call something back (for instance) and it gets a laugh, that is the audience saying “I acknowledge what you did there and I appreciate it.” The audience is smart and they’ve been paying attention. They’re laughing because you just showed them you were paying attention, too. "

Check out Alex on stage at the Magnet on Wednesdays at Megawatt with his ensemble Dance Factory!