Telltales
Telltales is a storytelling exercise in which performers share short personal or fictional anecdotes and the group identifies the dramatic elements, emotional beats, and scene potential within each story. The exercise bridges personal narrative and improvised performance, teaching players to mine stories for their scenic essence.
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Related Exercises
True Stories
True Stories is an exercise in which performers share real personal stories that serve as launching pads for improvised scenes. The authentic emotional content of the true story grounds the subsequent improvisation in genuine human experience. The exercise bridges personal narrative and collaborative performance.
Story String
Story String is a collaborative storytelling exercise in which each performer adds a sentence or beat to an evolving narrative, building on the previous contribution while advancing the plot. The exercise trains narrative listening and the discipline of serving the emerging story rather than redirecting it toward a personal idea.
Object Narrative
Object Narrative is an exercise in which a performer tells a story while handling imaginary objects that become central to the narrative. Each object must be physically specific and consistently maintained throughout the telling. The exercise integrates storytelling with object work and teaches performers to anchor abstract narrative in concrete physical detail.
Narrative, Color, Emotion
Narrative Color Emotion is a scene-building exercise in which performers construct a scene by layering three distinct types of contribution in rotation: narrative (plot-level information), color (sensory or atmospheric detail), and emotion (a felt response to the circumstances). The structured rotation prevents scenes from stalling in pure action or pure feeling, and trains performers to build scenes that are simultaneously propulsive, vivid, and emotionally alive.
Personalize It!
Personalize It is a scene exercise in which performers draw on their own real experiences, opinions, or emotional truths to inform their characters rather than inventing from scratch. The exercise pushes players past generic choices toward specific, grounded work. It builds the muscle of accessing personal material while maintaining the safety of a fictional frame.
Anecdotes
Anecdotes is an exercise in which players take turns telling short true or fictional stories in response to a theme, prompt, or partner's contribution. The practice develops narrative structure, personal voice, active listening, and the ability to find the essential shape in real experience. In its paired version, as documented by Max Dickins in Improvise, two players build a shared fictional memory using "Yes, And" to co-construct the narrative. In its solo version, players practice distilling personal experiences into concise, engaging stories with clear beginnings, middles, and ends. Strong anecdote skills feed directly into monologue-based long-form formats such as the Armando and the Evente, where a performer's personal story serves as the source material for subsequent scenes. The exercise is also widely used in applied improvisation settings for developing communication, listening, and storytelling skills in professional contexts.
How to Reference This Page
The Improv Archive. (2026). Telltales. Retrieved March 17, 2026, from https://improvarchive.org/exercises/telltales
The Improv Archive. "Telltales." The Improv Archive, 2026. https://improvarchive.org/exercises/telltales.
The Improv Archive. "Telltales." The Improv Archive, 2026, https://improvarchive.org/exercises/telltales. Accessed March 17, 2026.
The Improv Archive is a systemically maintained repository. The archive itself acts as the corporate author.