My Photo

Contact

  • Email Address:

Biography

Adam Brooks has been following his passion of writing silly music for silly people for the past five years. Adam has worked with Second City Cleveland, composing and directing for graduation and understudy shows as well as playing Mainstage shows. He also provided music for many sketch comedy shows including Attack of the Baby Makers, Last Call Cleveland, The Public Squares, and Habitat For Insanity, in which he wrote the music for the critically acclaimed original musical 20,004: A Race Odyssey. He has also accompanied numerous improvisational troupes, including the many casts of ImprovBoston and The Tribe, and Tiny Little Lungs in Boston, and Cabaret Dada, Flanagan's Wake, The University Circles, and Oliver Twisted in Cleveland. Adam is currently studying film scoring at the Berklee College of Music, and is happy to be back home.

TC Cheever has been performing in Boston for over a decade, with a special focus on improvisational theater and comedy. TC started in improv with Renegade Duck, performed with TheaterSports at ImprovBoston, and was a founding member of Boston's first and premier troupe specializing in improvised musical theater, Musical Improv Company. MIC performed all around Boston and at prestigious festivals like the Toronto Improv Festival and the Chicago Improv Festival. TC is a member of the near-legendary theater group The Gold Dust Orphans, was seen in the Boston cast of the long-running Chicago favorite Flanagan's Wake, has performed with the Boston Rock Opera, toured as part of the Electric Carnival with Lollapalooza in 1994.

Adam and TC are both currently affiliated with ImprovBoston. One Block From Broadway, 02139 is a reference to ImprovBoston's location on Cambridge Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the heart of Inman Square-- just one block away from Broadway in Cambridge.

If you'd like to see improv in Boston, or take classes in improvisation, check out the 'big three' of Boston improv, ImprovBoston, ImprovAsylum, and The Tribe.

If you want to know more about improvisation as an artform, or just want to see the scary truth about what people who do improv are like offstage, try YesAnd.com, the improv information source that cannot be denied.