Improvisation in St. Louis
Companies
Historical Moments
Compass Players Open at the Crystal Palace in St. Louis
Theodore J. Flicker directed a St. Louis branch of the Compass Players at the Crystal Palace cabaret in 1957, assembling an ensemble that included Mike Nichols, Elaine May, and Del Close. The engagement consolidated the improvisational methods developed in Chicago before the Compass Players concluded their work in 1958.
ComedySportz St. Louis Founded
ComedySportz St. Louis launched in fall 1998 at Union Station under Eric Karwisch and Clancy Hathaway, drawing its founding ensemble from existing St. Louis improv groups. The franchise navigated organizational disruptions in 1999-2000 before stabilizing as a continuous CSz Worldwide franchise in the St. Louis metropolitan area.
The Improv Shop Founded in St. Louis
Kevin McKernan placed the first advertisement for The Improv Shop in October 2009, and Andy Sloey joined as co-founder in 2010, establishing St. Louis's primary long-form improv training institution.
Compass Improv Founded in St. Louis
Eric Christensen founded Compass Improv as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in St. Louis in October 2012, launching an annual improv festival honoring the city's connection to the original Compass Players (1955) who performed at the Crystal Palace before their Chicago work. The organization developed the CORE Improv school program and detention-center workshops alongside its festival.
How to Reference This Page
The Improv Archive. (2026). St. Louis. Retrieved March 17, 2026, from https://improvarchive.org/locales/north-america/united-states/missouri/st-louis
The Improv Archive. "St. Louis." The Improv Archive, 2026. https://improvarchive.org/locales/north-america/united-states/missouri/st-louis.
The Improv Archive. "St. Louis." The Improv Archive, 2026, https://improvarchive.org/locales/north-america/united-states/missouri/st-louis. Accessed March 17, 2026.
The Improv Archive is a systemically maintained repository. The archive itself acts as the corporate author.