Comedy cage match showcases competitive improv

Unscripted comedy showdown let audience members decide the winners

3 min read
Two people raise their hands in a bar lit with event lights
caption Adri Bell and Draven Hewitt with their $500 cash prize after the final competition on Jan. 30, 2025.
Ella Karan

Laughter filled a room on Grafton Street Thursday night, as a local improv company brought a high-energy cage match competition to Halifax’s comedy scene.

Adri Bell is one part of the team A Very Serious Gaggle, which won the final competition. Bell and partner Draven Hewitt, a couple, triumphed with comedic sketches on the theme of relationships, inspired by audience members’ comments.

The other finalist team, CD-Romcom, delivered a broad range of skits, and used games, objects, and back-and-forth communication with the audience.

Semi-final winners
caption Members of the comedy team A Very Serious Gaggle learn on Jan, 23, 2025, they’ve made it to the finals.
Ella Karan

“We couldn’t have done it without the amazing audience, so a huge thank you to everyone who cast their votes for Draven and I tonight,” said Bell after the show, held in a room below the Halifax Live Comedy Club.

The event was organized by Spontaneity Improv Company. The organization, the only improv school in the Halifax region, aims to grow the city’s improv scene and build community through performance.

“You see a lot of stand-up comedy around the city,” said executive director Sophie Nadeau, who founded the company in 2022.

“What we do is more bit comedy or long-form storytelling,” said Nadeau. “It’s very visual, very fun, very much ‘Whose line is it anyway?’,” referring to the long-running British and American improv TV series.

Countdown
caption Sophie Nadeau reminds performers how much time they have left.
Ella Karan

The cage match format pit two improv teams against each other in timed performances, with the audience deciding the winners. Spontaneity put its own spin on the format, starting the multi-week competition with eight teams in 15-minute rounds.

“It’s up to the audience to vote,” said Nadeau. “Performers are encouraged to bring their friends and family — it makes for an electric atmosphere.”

Semi-finalists
caption Members of the team Improv The Musical performs their skit at the semi-finals on Jan 23, 2025
Ella Karan
Semi-finals
caption Members of Team Troupe Divided perform at the semi-finals on Jan 23.
Ella Karan

After weeks of competition, the two teams won the semi-finals on Jan. 23, securing their spots in the final. The final showdown on Thursday, attended by roughly 30 people, saw the teams battle it out for the $500 grand prize, with A Very Serious Gaggle taking the win. 

“I’ve never been much of a comedy-goer,” said audience member Brooke Bauer. “But it was really impressive to see the teams come up with such funny skits on the spot.”

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About the author

Ella Karan

Ella Karan is in the fourth year of the King's BJH program. Originally from South Africa, she enjoys photography and writing about culture, conservation...

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