Del Close
Del Close (March 9, 1934 – March 4, 1999) was an American actor, writer, comedian, and pioneering teacher of improvisational theater who profoundly shaped modern comedy through his work at Chicago's The Second City and the development of long-form improv techniques.[1][2][3] Born in Manhattan, Kansas, as the only child of a jeweler, Close was a second cousin of President Dwight D. Eisenhower and grew up in Kansas City, where he developed an early interest in performance after working in carnivals as a teenager.[1][3] His career began in the 1950s with experimental theater, later involving light shows including collaborations with the Grateful Dead in the late 1960s, before he joined the influential San Francisco improv group The Committee as its house director in the mid-1960s, where he first devised the "Harold," a groundbreaking long-form improvisation structure still widely used today.[2][3] In 1961, Close joined The Second City in Chicago as an actor, writer, and director, contributing to revues like 20,000 Frozen Grenadiers and serving as a key figure until 1983, while also co-creating the sketch comedy series Second City Television (SCTV), which ran for seven seasons in the 1970s and 1980s.[3][2] He mentored generations of comedians, including John Belushi, Gilda Radner, Bill Murray, John Candy, Mike Myers, and Chris Farley, and coached performers for the early years of Saturday Night Live.[1][2] In 1983, he co-founded the ImprovOlympic (now iO Theater) with Charna Halpern, where he refined and taught the "Harold" method, emphasizing collaborative, narrative-driven improvisation, as detailed in their 1994 book Truth in Comedy.[2][3] Beyond teaching, Close had a notable acting career in film and theater, appearing in movies such as The Untouchables (1987), Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986), and Fat Man and Little Boy (1989), and performing serious stage roles like Polonius in Hamlet (1985, Wisdom Bridge Theater), Shelley in Buried Child (1995, Steppenwolf Theatre), and Shylock in The Merchant of Venice (1994, Goodman Theater).[1][3] He also released comedy albums like How to Speak Hip (1961) and The Do-It-Yourself Psychoanalysis Kit.[1] Close struggled with drug and alcohol addiction throughout his life but remained a charismatic, boundary-pushing figure in comedy; he never married and had no immediate survivors.[2] In a final act of theatricality, he held a "living wake" the night before his death from emphysema at age 64 and bequeathed his skull to the Goodman Theater to serve as Yorick's in future productions of Hamlet.[1][3] His legacy endures through institutions like iO and the Upright Citizens Brigade, which adopted his techniques, solidifying his role as the "guru" of American improv.[2]Early life
Childhood and family background
Del Close was born on March 9, 1934, in Manhattan, Kansas, a small town of about 15,000 residents, to Del Close Sr., a local jeweler, and Mildred Close, a homemaker. Close was the only child and a second cousin of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The family resided in modest circumstances amid the economic challenges of the rural Midwest following the Great Depression.[2][1] Close's early years were shaped by his father's inattentiveness and alcoholism. A pivotal event involved the suicide of his father on December 16, 1954, when Close was 20; he described handing his father a salt shaker filled with battery acid, an act that left him burdened with guilt and profoundly affected his emotional development. However, Close recounted various dramatic versions of this event, often placing it earlier in his childhood, and the specific details appear to have been embellished.[4] In his mid-teens, Close ran away from home at age 17 to join a traveling carnival sideshow, where he toured the Midwest performing stunts like fire-eating and handling odd jobs, an immersion in performance that foreshadowed his lifelong career in entertainment.[5][6]Education and early influences
Close attended Manhattan High School in Manhattan, Kansas, where he actively participated in drama activities that ignited his passion for performance and theater.[7] He graduated in December 1951, completing high school a year ahead of schedule. This early engagement with dramatic arts laid the foundation for his lifelong commitment to comedy and improvisation, distinguishing him from his peers in the small college town environment. Following his high school graduation in 1952, Close briefly enrolled at Kansas State University, then officially named Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science.[8][9] His time there as a freshman was short-lived, as he soon left to explore broader artistic avenues beyond formal education.[9] During his adolescence in the early 1950s, Close drew initial inspirations for performance from vaudeville traditions and radio comedy broadcasts, which captivated him amid the cultural shifts of postwar America. These mediums, blending humor, timing, and spontaneity, shaped his early comedic sensibilities before his professional entry into theater. Additionally, exposure to emerging beatnik culture and jazz scenes in the Midwest influenced his developing countercultural perspective, emphasizing improvisation and rebellion against convention.Professional career
New York beginnings
After leaving college in the mid-1950s, Del Close moved to New York City around 1957 at the age of 23, taking on odd jobs such as waiting tables and other menial work to support himself while persistently auditioning for acting roles in the competitive theater scene. This period marked his determined entry into professional theater, building on his early dramatic interests from high school productions that had sparked his passion for performance. Prior to New York, he had joined the St. Louis company of the Compass Players in 1957 as an actor and director, contributing to the improvisational troupe's spontaneous, audience-driven sketches.[2] Close's New York tenure also saw him venture into recording, culminating in 1961 with the satirical album How to Speak Hip, co-created with John Brent and released by Mercury Records.[10] The album humorously dissected and parodied beatnik jargon and counterculture lingo through a mock language-instruction format, capturing the era's hipster ethos and earning cult status for its sharp social commentary.[11]Chicago improvisation era
In 1960, Del Close relocated to Chicago, drawing on his foundational experiences in New York improvisation to immerse himself in the city's burgeoning comedy scene. He joined The Second City as a cast member in 1961, performing alongside notable ensembles and contributing as an actor, writer, and director during his initial tenure until 1965.[3][12] His multifaceted role helped shape the troupe's satirical style, emphasizing spontaneous, character-driven sketches that satirized contemporary American life.[13] In 1965, Close moved to San Francisco, where he co-founded the improvisational group The Committee and served as its director. During this period, he experimented with long-form improvisation, devising "The Harold" structure around 1967, with its first performance by The Committee. The Harold fostered interconnected scenes from a single audience suggestion, contrasting short-form games and allowing narrative depth over extended performances, often lasting 30 minutes or more. Close also collaborated with the Grateful Dead on light shows, billed as the "optical percussionist." He returned to Chicago in 1972.[3][14] Back in Chicago, Close resumed work at The Second City as resident director from 1973 to 1982, training performers and staging revues that blended humor with social commentary.[15] During this time, he co-created the sketch comedy series Second City Television (SCTV), serving as head writer and director for its early seasons from 1976 to 1980. He directed numerous productions, refining ensemble dynamics and pushing boundaries in venues across Chicago, including collaborations with the Free Theatre, where he helmed experimental works like the 1970s production The Night They Shot Harry Lindd at the Body Politic Theatre.[16] These efforts solidified his reputation as a pivotal figure in elevating Chicago's improv from club entertainment to a sophisticated theatrical form.[17] In 1982, Close partnered with Charna Halpern at the ImprovOlympic (founded by Halpern and David Shepherd in 1981; now iO Theater), becoming a key teacher and director. Initially building on competitive short-form tournaments, it quickly pivoted to prioritize long-form improvisation, including revivals and expansions of "The Harold."[18][19] Under their leadership, the venue became a hub for extended narrative improv, attracting ensembles that performed interwoven scene structures to create cohesive, audience-inspired stories, thereby expanding Chicago's improv ecosystem beyond Second City's model.[20]Acting and media roles
Close's acting career extended beyond the stage into film and television, where he frequently played supporting character roles that highlighted his distinctive, offbeat presence shaped by years of improvisation training.[2] In Brian De Palma's 1987 crime drama The Untouchables, Close portrayed the corrupt alderman John O'Shay, a minor but memorable figure in the story of Eliot Ness's battle against Al Capone. His background in improv contributed to the nuanced, improvisational flair he brought to such scripted parts.[1] Close appeared as the droning English teacher in John Hughes's 1986 teen comedy Ferris Bueller's Day Off, delivering a hypnotic lecture on European history that underscores the film's satirical take on education. He also took on the role of Reverend Meeker in the 1988 horror remake The Blob, providing a touch of eccentric authority to the film's cast of townsfolk facing the extraterrestrial menace. Earlier in his career, Close had an uncredited role as a man at the bar in George Lucas's 1973 coming-of-age film American Graffiti, marking one of his initial forays into Hollywood productions.[21] In the 1980s, he contributed to television as an acting coach on Saturday Night Live, influencing the show's comedic style through his mentorship rather than on-screen appearances.[2] Additionally, Close lent his voice to various commercials, showcasing his versatile baritone in broadcast media.[3]Teaching and mentorship
Improv teaching methods
Del Close's improv teaching methods emphasized intuitive, collaborative exploration over scripted performance, fostering an environment where performers could discover authentic narratives through structured yet flexible exercises. Central to his pedagogy was the philosophy of "follow the fear," which encouraged actors to deliberately pursue choices that evoked discomfort, as these often led to the most genuine and innovative scene work.[4][22] Close believed that avoiding fear resulted in predictable, inauthentic improvisation, and he instructed students to use it as a guide, stating that “If we treat each other as if we are geniuses, poets and artists, we have a better chance of becoming that on stage.”[23] In the 1960s, Close began developing long-form improv structures to move beyond isolated sketches, creating the Harold—a format involving an opening group game, interconnected scenes, and recurring themes based on an audience suggestion—which he first developed and performed with The Committee in San Francisco toward the end of the 1960s, before refining it at the ImprovOlympic (iO).[17][24] He also devised The Game, a technique where performers identify and heighten unusual behaviors or "tilts" within scenes to build escalating patterns, promoting narrative depth over punchlines.[25] These structures were taught through iterative practice, with Close rejecting rote memorization in favor of spontaneous adaptation to audience prompts, such as transforming everyday scenarios like a laundromat into thematic explorations.[17] Close placed significant emphasis on the "yes, and" principle, instructing performers from the 1960s onward to accept and build upon each other's ideas without negation, which cultivated trust and momentum in ensemble work.[26] Complementing this was his focus on "group mind," a collective intuition where improvisers listen deeply and synchronize as "one mind, many bodies," enabling seamless collaboration and emergent storytelling.[27] He urged students to prioritize support and agreement, viewing denial as a barrier to creativity, and integrated these concepts into training sessions to develop heightened awareness and mutual reliance.[28] Disillusioned with the superficiality of short-form improv, which relied on quick games and audience participation for laughs, Close rejected it in favor of narrative-driven long-form exercises that allowed for character development and thematic complexity.[24] He argued that short-form stifled deeper artistic potential, instead channeling his classes toward extended formats like the Harold to illuminate broader human truths through unscripted play.[17]Notable students and protégés
Del Close's influence extended to pioneering improvisers during his time with the Compass Players in the mid-1950s, where he collaborated closely with Mike Nichols and Elaine May, contributing to the group's innovative short-form improv style that laid the groundwork for their acclaimed duo act and subsequent film directing and writing careers.[2][12] In the 1970s, as a director and teacher at The Second City in Chicago, Close mentored a generation of performers including John Belushi, Gilda Radner, and Bill Murray, whose training under him honed their skills in long-form improvisation and directly propelled their breakthroughs as original cast members on Saturday Night Live, where they helped define the show's sketch comedy format.[2][29][30] During the 1990s at iO (formerly ImprovOlympic), which Close co-founded in 1981, he provided guidance to emerging talents such as Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, and Rachel Dratch through his advanced classes emphasizing experimental forms like "The Harold," fostering their development into key Saturday Night Live contributors—Fey as head writer and performer, Poehler and Dratch as cast members—who later shaped modern television comedy.[30][31][32] Close's broader impact is evident in his training of Matt Besser at iO, where Besser studied under him in the early 1990s and absorbed principles of artful, narrative-driven improv that informed the founding of the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in 1996 by Besser and collaborators, extending Close's methods to New York City's improv scene and influencing a new wave of comedians through UCB's training programs and performances.[33][34]Personal life
Relationships and personal beliefs
Del Close maintained several significant romantic relationships throughout his adult life, primarily with fellow performers in the comedy and theater scenes. In the late 1950s, during his time with the Compass Players in Chicago and subsequent move to New York, Close developed a passionate but ultimately tragic romance with Elaine May, his co-performer and improv partner, which influenced his early career trajectory amid the group's dissolution.[35] Later, in New York and Chicago, he had brief romantic involvements with other women in the performing arts, though he never formally married.[1] His most enduring personal partnership was with Charna Halpern, the actress and improv teacher with whom he co-founded the ImprovOlympic (now iO) in 1983; their tumultuous 19-year professional collaboration evolved into a deep, non-marital bond that lasted until his death, marked by mutual support in both personal and creative endeavors.[29] Close's social circle included close friendships with Beat Generation figures, reflecting his affinity for countercultural nonconformity. He formed a strong bond with comedian Lenny Bruce in New York during the early 1960s, admiring Bruce's fearless stage presence and viewing comedy as a form of social protest; the two shared a kindred spirit in challenging societal norms through performance.[4] These connections, rooted in the beatnik scene, provided Close with intellectual stimulation and reinforced his rejection of conventional lifestyles, echoing the lingering emotional impacts of his early family trauma.[4] In terms of personal beliefs, Close developed a profound interest in the occult during the countercultural movements of the mid-20th century, drawing inspiration from Aleister Crowley's writings and exploring chaotic magic as a framework for personal and artistic exploration.[4] In the 1980s, Close converted to Wicca during a pilgrimage to Toronto, where a local coven aided him in overcoming his cocaine addiction through rituals performed by Wiccan priests; he later became a warlock in a Chicago-based Wiccan group, integrating these practices into his daily life for spiritual healing and self-reflection.[36] Close incorporated Wiccan elements, such as invocations and archetypal symbolism, into his personal routines and even select improv exercises, viewing them as tools for confronting fear and unlocking deeper truths.[4] At his living wake on March 3, 1999, a pagan priest and priestess performed a brief ceremony, underscoring the centrality of these beliefs to his worldview.[37]Health struggles and recovery
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Del Close struggled with severe addictions to heroin and cocaine, which profoundly impacted his professional life. His substance abuse led to his dismissal from The Second City in the mid-1960s, prompting a move to San Francisco where he served as house director for the improv troupe The Committee, marking a temporary hiatus from his Chicago-based career.[38][4] These addictions exacerbated periods of instability, including near-lethal overdoses possibly intended as suicide attempts and institutionalization for emotional issues.[4] Close underwent aversion therapy at Schick Shadel Hospital in 1978 to address alcoholism, though he continued using marijuana and occasional hallucinogens, which he viewed as beneficial.[2][4] Following the 1982 overdose death of his student John Belushi, who had used Close's apartment for drug use, Close successfully overcame his heroin addiction. This sobriety enabled a career resurgence, as he co-founded the ImprovOlympic (now iO Theater) with Charna Halpern in 1983, focusing on teaching long-form improvisation and mentoring a new generation of performers.[39] Halpern provided crucial support during his recovery, serving as his professional and personal partner for over 15 years.[1] In the 1990s, Close developed emphysema due to his lifelong heavy smoking, with the condition diagnosed in the late decade and progressively worsening his health.[4] This illness compounded earlier mental health challenges stemming from his father's suicide in 1954, when Close was 20; his father ingested sulfuric acid, an event that Close frequently recounted and that contributed to his own bouts of depression and self-destructive tendencies.[8][4] Despite these struggles, Close's path to sobriety in the 1980s allowed him to sustain his influential role in improv education until his emphysema advanced.[2]Death and legacy
Final years and passing
In the late 1990s, despite his worsening emphysema, Del Close continued to teach improvisation classes at the ImprovOlympic (iO) in Chicago until 1998, where he co-developed the long-form "Harold" technique with Charna Halpern.[1] His declining health limited his activities, but he remained committed to mentoring young performers, often incorporating themes of mortality into his workshops and productions.[4] Close died on March 4, 1999, at the age of 64 from complications of emphysema at Illinois Masonic Medical Center in Chicago.[1] The night before his death, friends organized a raucous farewell party—described as an early 65th birthday celebration and living wake—in his hospital room, with Bill Murray serving as master of ceremonies; Close enjoyed a chocolate martini, his first drink in nearly two decades, before requesting a lethal dose of morphine.[1][4] In his will, Close bequeathed his skull to the Goodman Theatre for use as Yorick's in future productions of Hamlet, fulfilling his desire to continue performing posthumously.[1] However, a 2006 investigation revealed that the skull donated in his name was not Close's but a clinical teaching specimen, as he had been cremated shortly after death, raising questions about the fulfillment of his unconventional request.[40]Posthumous recognition and tributes
Following Del Close's death in 1999, his former students at the Upright Citizens Brigade founded the annual Del Close Marathon, a three-day festival of nonstop improvisation that began in 1999 and has grown into one of the largest improv events in the world, drawing thousands of performers and audiences from across the globe; as of 2025, it continues annually, having relocated to Los Angeles in 2019 before announcing a return to New York City in 2026.[27][41][42] In 2002, directors Cesar Jaime and Jeff Pacocha released The Delmonic Interviews, a documentary tribute featuring archival interviews with Close himself alongside reflections from his peers and students on his influence in improv comedy.[39][43] The 2016 documentary Thank You, Del: The Story of the Del Close Marathon, directed by Todd Bieber, chronicles the festival's evolution while honoring Close's legacy through footage of performances and interviews with participants, premiering at South by Southwest.[44][45] Heather Ross's 2020 hybrid documentary For Madmen Only: The Stories of Del Close further explores his life and impact, blending interviews with comedians like Bob Odenkirk and Tim Meadows, reenactments, and archival material; it premiered at the Mammoth Film Festival and later screened at other events.[46][47] Biographical works have also contributed to Close's enduring recognition, including Kim Howard Johnson's 2008 book The Funniest One in the Room: The Lives and Legends of Del Close, which draws on accounts from over 80 of his associates to detail his career and eccentricities.[48] Bob Odenkirk's 2022 memoir Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama includes personal anecdotes about Close's mentorship, crediting him with shaping Odenkirk's early comedy path at Second City.[49] Close's posthumous notoriety extended to the macabre interest surrounding his skull bequest to the Goodman Theatre, where a substitute skull was used in several productions such as Arcadia, Pericles, and I Am My Own Wife; following the 2006 revelation of its inauthenticity, it remains on display in the artistic director's office.[50][51] Close's lifetime students, including figures like Tina Fey and Stephen Colbert, continue to perpetuate his improv techniques through their own teaching and performances.[46]Works
Publications and writings
Del Close co-authored Truth in Comedy: The Manual of Improvisation in 1994 with Charna Halpern and Kim Howard Johnson, published by Meriwether Publishing.[52] The book serves as a foundational guide to improvisational theater, detailing the "Harold" technique—a long-form structure Close developed that involves six to seven performers creating interconnected scenes, monologues, and games to explore patterns and subvert expectations for comedic effect.[52] It emphasizes collaborative "group mind" principles, influencing improv training worldwide and aiding performers like Mike Myers and Chris Farley in their careers.[52] In the 1980s, Close contributed science fiction and horror stories to comic books, often blending speculative elements with personal anecdotes. He co-wrote the DC Comics anthology Wasteland (1987–1989) with John Ostrander, producing semi-autobiographical tales in nearly every issue of the 18-issue series, such as encounters with L. Ron Hubbard and vengeful witches, frequently noted as "mostly true."[53] Close also scripted backup stories like "Munden's Bar" in Grimjack for First Comics, collaborating with Ostrander on issues including #3 (1984).[54] Throughout the 1970s and 1990s, Close wrote articles on improvisational philosophy for theater magazines, advocating for long-form techniques as an artistic form rooted in ensemble trust and spontaneity. These pieces explored his views on comedy as pattern recognition rather than scripted jokes.[55] Posthumously, Close's writings and spoken insights were compiled in Guru: My Days with Del Close (2005) by Jeff Griggs, which incorporates excerpts from their conversations during Close's final years, illustrating his improv teachings through anecdotes and directives.[56]Recordings and performances
Del Close's early recording career in New York produced two notable spoken-word comedy albums that satirized mid-20th-century cultural trends. His debut, The "Do It Yourself" Psychoanalysis Kit, released in 1959 on Hanover Records, featured Close as a mock psychoanalyst guiding listeners through absurd self-therapy sessions, complete with diagnostic tools and therapeutic exercises delivered in a deadpan style.[57] The album's tracks, such as "General Diagnosis" and "Therapy," parodied the era's growing interest in Freudian analysis, blending humor with instructional parody.[58] In 1961, Close collaborated with John Brent on How to Speak Hip, issued by Mercury Records, a satirical "language course" teaching beatnik slang and hipster lingo through lessons on vocabulary, riffs, and "bopping."[59] Brent portrayed the straight-laced instructor, while Close embodied the cool "hipster," delivering lines like "It's not really square—it's just sort of ... unhip" in a format mimicking Berlitz language records.[10] The album captured the countercultural vibe of the early 1960s and remains a cult classic for its witty dissection of emerging youth subcultures.[59] Close's live performances emphasized improvisational theater, particularly during his tenure at The Second City from 1961 through the 1980s, where he directed and performed in revues like Compass Players offshoots and original sketches that honed long-form improv techniques.[3] These shows, often unscripted and responsive to audience suggestions, were occasionally captured in audio for internal review and training, preserving Close's innovative approach to ensemble dynamics.[60] At iO Theater, co-founded with Charna Halpern in 1983, Close directed and performed in experimental long-form pieces throughout the 1980s and 1990s, including ensemble-driven formats that expanded on his "Harold" structure.[19] Audio recordings of these performances, such as select iO revues, are archived at the theater for educational purposes, offering insights into Close's emphasis on "yes, and" collaboration and narrative emergence in live settings.[19] His uncredited advisory role extended to coaching Saturday Night Live casts in the 1980s, influencing their improvisational sketches, though specific audio contributions remain undocumented in public records.[2]Film and television
Del Close's screen career encompassed a range of supporting roles in films and television, where his distinctive gravelly voice, imposing stature, and improvisational timing often lent eccentricity and depth to authority figures, criminals, and oddballs. Beginning in the early 1960s, his film work frequently intersected with Chicago's independent and cult cinema scenes before expanding into Hollywood productions in the 1980s and 1990s. His earliest notable film role was in the experimental Chicago-made Goldstein (1964), an improvisational drama inspired by the Talmud, where Close appeared as a disciple alongside co-stars including Patinkin and Taylor Mead. In the 1970s, he contributed to horror and drama genres with parts like the hobo wearing an eyepatch in the sci-fi remake Beware! The Blob (1972), the promoter Hawk in the music drama Gold (1972), and the man at the bar in George Lucas's coming-of-age classic American Graffiti (1973).[15] These early roles showcased Close's ability to infuse brief appearances with memorable quirkiness, drawing from his theater roots. By the 1980s, he gained wider recognition in mainstream films, including the mechanic in Michael Mann's crime thriller Thief (1981), the English teacher delivering the iconic "Life moves pretty fast" lecture in Ferris Bueller's Day Off (1986), the corrupt alderman John O'Shay in Brian De Palma's The Untouchables (1987), and the reverend in the 1988 remake of The Blob.[61] Later credits included the police commissioner in The Big Town (1987), the gang leader in Next of Kin (1989), a scientist in Fat Man and Little Boy (1989), the con artist Eddie Farrell in Opportunity Knocks (1990), a baseball owner in A League of Their Own (1992), and the detective H.R. Rineman in The Public Eye (1992).| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1964 | Goldstein | Disciple | Independent improvisational film; early Chicago collaboration. |
| 1972 | Beware! The Blob | Hobo with Eyepatch | Cult horror remake.[15] |
| 1972 | Gold | Hawk | Drama about a rock promoter. |
| 1973 | American Graffiti | Man at Bar | Brief but iconic in ensemble cast.[62] |
| 1976 | The Last Affair | Supporting role | Lesser-known drama. |
| 1981 | Thief | Mechanic #1 | Crime thriller with James Caan. |
| 1986 | Ferris Bueller's Day Off | English Teacher | Memorable classroom scene. |
| 1987 | The Untouchables | Alderman John O'Shay | Prohibition-era drama.[61] |
| 1987 | The Big Town | Police Commissioner | Gambling noir with Bruce Dern. |
| 1988 | The Blob | Reverend Meeker | Horror remake. |
| 1989 | Next of Kin | Gabby | Action film with Patrick Swayze. |
| 1989 | Fat Man and Little Boy | Scientist | Historical drama on the Manhattan Project. |
| 1990 | Opportunity Knocks | Eddie Farrell | Comedy with Dana Carvey. |
| 1992 | A League of Their Own | Baseball Owner | Sports comedy.[62] |
| 1992 | The Public Eye | H.R. Rineman | Noir thriller. |