Category Archives: Speaking Engagements

Tribute to Viola Spolin and Paul Sills at Jane Addams Hull-House Museum

I am thrilled to share the news about the first-ever tribute to Viola Spolin and Paul Sills, presented by Jane Addams Hull-House Museum on June 20th, 2019.

Participants celebrated the innovations and legacies of Chicago theater legends Spolin and Sills with reflections, tributes, and of course, theater games! View the CAN-TV broadcast and see photos here.

Emceed by Mark Larson, author of the forthcoming “Ensemble: An Oral History of Chicago Theater,” speakers included: Jennifer Scott (Director and Chief Curator of JAHHM), Lisa Laws (Deputy Commissioner of Chicago’s Dept of Cultural Affairs), Christine Dunford (Director of the School of Theater and Music at UIC and founding member of Lookingglass Theater), Aretha Sills (Associate Director of Sills/Spolin Theater Works and Spolin side coach), Jeffrey Sweet (Playwright/ theater historian/ author of “Something Wonderful Right Away”), Paul Sand (Tony-winning actor/ Viola Spolin’s Young Actors Co/ The Second City/ Paul Sills’ Story Theatre), Carol Bleackley Sills (Director of Sills/Spolin Theater Works/ Spolin’s editor/ Sills’ artistic collaborator), Dan Castellaneta (Emmy-winning voice actor for The Simpsons/ playwright/ improviser), Deb Lacusta (writer for The Simpsons/ playwright/ improviser), Warren Leming (Story Theater actor/ filmmaker/ musician), Jennifer Green (Artistic Director of The Piven Theatre), with recorded reflections from Amy Pietz (SAG award-winning actress), Kevin Douglas (actor/ playwright/ director), Patrick Murphy (former head of Depaul’s Theatre School), and John C. Reilly (Tony, Oscar and Golden Globe nominated actor), and theater games side-coached by Aretha Sills with players Rachel Sills, Make Keene, Cordis Heard, Solomon D. Mason, Michael Brunlieb, Gillian Hemme, Paul Sand, Dan Castellaneta, and Deb Lacusta.

It was a very special honor that the event took place in the historic Hull-House dining hall where Progressive-era reformers, including Spolin’s revered teacher Neva Boyd, had gathered. The hall is too small to hold all who we wished could celebrate with us, but we hope you’ll enjoy the broadcast at the link below!

Sills/Spolin Theater Works extends our sincere and deep gratitude to the tireless organizers Jennifer Scott, Ross Stanton Jordan, and all the dedicated staff at JAHHM, Mark Larson, Beth Kligerman, and the sponsors including The Second City, UIC Theatre and Music College of Architecture and Design, 2019 Year of Chicago Theatre, and Cornelia McNamara Flowers and Parties.

View the CAN-TV broadcast here and see photos here!

Alan Alda, Laura Lindenfeld, and Aretha Sills in Conversation at AIN Conference

What an amazing night! Alan Alda, Laura Lindenfeld, and Aretha Sills talked about the 10th anniversary of the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science and how his work with Paul Sills and Viola Spolin was an inspiration for the original idea and program. It was an absolute pleasure and honor to learn about the exciting and vital work they are doing in science communication!

The event was part of the Applied Improvisation World Network Conference at Stony Brook University this August.

View photos here.

Talk on the History of Improvisation at the Global Improvisation Initiative Symposium

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Aretha Sills speaking about Jane Addams at the 2017 Global Improvisation Initiative Symposium.

On May 12th, I gave a talk at the first annual Global Improvisation Initiative Symposium at University of California, Irvine. Titled “A Search for Community: Viola Spolin, Paul Sills, and the Origins of Improvisational Theater in the U.S.”, the talk and Q&A traced the roots of their work to the radical Progressive-era philosophies cultivated at Jane Addams’ Hull House in Chicago using stories, personal history, photographs, and Spolin and Sills’ own words and writing.

In 1955, Paul Sills’ called the new improvisational theater, Compass, “a search for a community.” Viola Spolin (originator of Theater Games and author of Improvisation for the Theater) and Paul Sills (founding director of Compass, The Second City, and Story Theater) created a form of theater that celebrated American ideals of liberty, community, and democracy.