Expert

(Taking turns)

There is an interviewer and three people who together form an expert. On stage there are three chairs, three next to each other, one diagonally so you can look at both the audience and the people on the three chairs. The audience is asked what the expertise of the professor is.

The interviewer asks them questions about this, the professor answers. This happens by the three players taking turns saying a word (Watch out, one word!). This must happen in order.

Trick of the game is that the three players have to give a logical answer in this way and they have to take over each other’s movements: if someone picks their nose, all of them do, if someone takes on a certain emotion, all players copy it, if someone is portraying something, everyone does the same.

Variation: a variation of the professor is that two people walk arm-in-arm and form one person like this. The left person is the left arm and left leg etc. The players take turns saying a word and that is how the professor talks. The professor can make their entrance like a character in any game, but like this it is often used as a warming up.

N.B. one person means that they speak in the first person singular. In a team of four players this way two ‘people’ can be formed, that play a scene together.

 

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