Meet Maryn, a member of Senseless Acts of Comedy!
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Year: Sophomore
Major/Minor: FTDM major, education minor
Hometown: Grapevine, TX
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Q: So, you said youāve been doing Loose Ends since freshmen year?
A: āI knew I wanted to do improv. I did competitive acting before and when I toured TCU I talked to a film professor and he told me about Senseless Acts of Comedy. Then he was like āthereās Loose Ends.ā I found them on Facebook and then I showed up the first week. I didnāt audition my first semester cause I got mono. I was sick for like an extended period of time. So I missed a lot of practices but then I tried out second semester and here I am.ā
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Q: Are you involved in any other extracurricular activities?
A: āStudent Filmmakerās Association.ā
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Q: Why do you have the maroon tie?
A: āI think people have wondered that before⦠We had our first meeting with the new troop and we were all trying to pick colors and I didnāt want a bright color cause Iām like the color of paper. Bright colors just make me look worse. So I wanted a darker one and they were like ābe maroonāā¦Iām like āI love maroonā⦠so now Iām the maroon tie.ā
Q: You said you first became interested because you did acting?
A: āYeah itās called oral interpretation. They have it on campus here⦠So yeah it was weird but it forces a lot of characterization and it is my favorite event. Itās also the event I was most successful in was humorous interpretation.ā
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Q: Whatās your favorite improv game?
A: āI really like anything that involves characterā¦Anything that we have to give jokes on Iām really bad at. Like I cannot⦠I suck at jokes.ā
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Q: Do you have a go-to character?
A: āYeah and I hate it. I feel like I always jump into to like a southern person sometimes or a kid. I play little kids a lot.ā
Q: Any reason?
A: āI guess itās because Iām the most confident with that voice. Iām confident with British⦠The first thing I jump into is like a little kid or like a southern woman whoās really uptight and Iām like uhhh I need to stop playing those people. I guess those are my go-to.ā
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Q: How have you changed as a comedian? What challenges have you overcome?
A: āI was really shy for a really long time. Then I got into stage theater, quickly found out it was not my thing. I donāt really like singing. I like goofing off and I like doing voices. Iāve gained more confidence I think, and Iām not as uptight. I learned if people donāt laugh thatās okay and just kind of go with the flow as long as Iām having fun and doing what I love thatās important. I used to be a lot more uptight.ā
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Q: Are you planning on doing anything with comedy after college?
A: āI would really love to write for a late night show or the ultimate dream would be on SNL. But no, I would like to write for a sitcom, write for late night or possible be in one, but also I would love to do movies, like Hot Rod, Bridesmaids stuff like that. I could not direct a serious movie.ā
Q: Whoās your comedic inspiration?
A: āI really admire Jane Curtin. Sheās on SNL. I think at the time, the early 70ās, it was really hard to be (I mean itās always hard to be) a female comedian. She just kind of went in there and was very businesslike, just was like āscrew you guys like Iām doing what Iām doing.ā And she didnāt party either, not that Iām like against that, but I just thought that was cool. Because sheād go home with her dog and her husband and everyone else was like going to bars. I just think sheās really cool.ā
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Q: Do you have any advice for people looking to get into comedy?
A: āI think a lot of people are hesitant. I think the laughter thing is like āmy god what if people donāt laugh at me?ā āWhat if things donāt go well?ā haunts people; it makes them nervous. I guess my biggest advice is if itās something you really love, just do it because the more time you do it youāre going to get used to and thereās someone somewhere thatās going to think youāre funny. I was told in high school for improv that a lot of girls were afraid to do double chins or really gross characters and I never was like that because Iām weird. This senior always said āugly girls winā- like girls that just go out there and are going to go head-to-head with guys in comedy and just do it and not care what people think. Do not care about looking good or getting this certain amount of laughsā¦Do it. Be weird. Donāt pay attention to the audience.ā
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Photo courtesy of Maryn Richardson