Quick Openers: Sure Fire Ways To Clever Convo

The goal: to get to where the words fall,  from a muse-filled sky, down through your mind, and off the end of your quilled tongue.   Author Ken Kesey

Comedy loves heart.  Paul Sills, founding guru at Second City

 

At the feet of the great satirist Paul Krassner *
At the feet of the great satirist Paul Krassner *

 

Ready for a few folk journalistically-tested quick openers?

These convo firestarters tend to be terse, bent toward further conversage.

(For one-liners bent toward getting the heck out of a bad conversation in one quick of a hurry SEE WITCRAFT How to Extricate From Any Conversation — TK)

But hey, you take a chance, am I right? The cartoonist Mark Alan Stamaty of “Macdoodle Street” fame in the Village Voice, drew one that I kept above my typewriter for years. Its theme: “You have to risk it all every day!”

Now some folks have, as it has become known through cultural history, “the gift for gab.” (In some parts of the country: “the gift of gab.”) Usually these high-energy individuals are able to get away with lines like, “Is that a smile? Are you smiling right now?”

Or this one:

Quick Opener, “Don’t they miss you?” Semi-startled, you answer: “Who?”

Quick Opener Comeback: “Heaven. I know they must be missing an angel right about now.”

Yuck. By adding authenticity to your game, you can avoid this superficial subtext–shallower-than-spit level of a conman. Here’s how to insert yourself into another person’s space. Do what Paul Sills, guru of Second City advises. His mother Viola Spolin wrote the first handbook on improvisational theater games and Sills told us in an NYC class one day something I’ve never forgotten: “Encourage the laggards.”

He meant that in the everyday battle for existence, leaning inside with a quick jab, uttering the first sentence, is not that hard. So try to encourage those you cannot.

“You are in the safest place in the universe,” he’d tell us. “On a stage.”

Our teacher was right. What a safety in freedom we all felt about firing that first volley. We could say anything. Perhaps Sills’ approach came from Shakespeare’s “As You Like It,” wherein Jacques says: “The whole world is a stage, and all the men and women merely actors.”

But how can you continue offstage, backstage, in real life, without acting out every anxiety, all your neuroses falling out all over everybody because after all, Shakespeare’s Jacques was a melancholy man after all.

Think of professional athletes who “make a play.” A folk journalist is just as serious about playmaking. (And often makes plays at being serious, too.) What do I mean by this?

Make a play for making room enough so a conversation can become as big as your subject’s world. Because when you explore, you find interesting people. People get more interesting by telling you a tale. They might reveal their dreams, or say something obscene, something simple as recalling an episode of their favorite show, or talk about where they went that time with their first love.

 

BACK POCKET BANTER (Other Quick Openers)

Noticing how pictures on the fronts of t-shirts are just about the same size as a small TV screen, “What is that funny thing on your shirt?”

From mall to boardwalk, it is easy to be encourageable, “Where did you buy that lovely dress? Did you make it yourself?”

“Is that good? What you’re reading. What’s it about?”

“I love the rain don’t you?” (Stolen from Woody Allen where his next line is, “It washes the memories off the sidewalks of life.” May be inapplicable in some western climes.)

“Do you hear that? What’s that song they’re playing?”

Even, “Whacha’ doin?” when gently expressed can get the ball to their side. The Beatles did a whole song with that as their title. **

“I really admire your shoes” is most always welcomed by young women.

And young men have been known to lead with one of the following three:

 “Yo!” “Wazzup?” And, “Nice car! Hey!”

Or the equally played betimes: “Hey! Nice car!”

 

NEXT TIME:  “Onward!”  Author Henry Miller and radio storyteller Jean Shepherd both said this I think, although Jean (flicklives.com) was more known for “Excelsior!”

 

* Hear my conversation with Paul Krassner, publisher of The Realist and co-founder of the Youth  International Party: The Yippies!

http://www.scpr.org/programs/offramp/2012/11/27/29428/paul-krassner-turned-on-groucho-and-told-john-yoko/

* * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpWrNS2UTgA

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