Story Club, a nonfiction read-aloud, began in a Wrigleyville bar as a way to combine disparate forms: the freshness of the amateur and the consistency of the professional, the personal prose of the stand-up and the eloquent emotion of the slam poet. After about five years, founder Dana Norris decided it was time to branch out into the South Side, and chose Chicago actor Andrew Marikis for the job. At the South Side Story Club in Bridgeportâs Co-Prosperity Sphere, each storyteller has eight minutes to create a world for a rapt audience. Last week, a year after this new branch of Story Club began meeting monthly, Marikis, host and co-producer (along with Will Hindmarch), spoke with the Weekly about the art of the story, community building, and the value of ambitious failure.
What distinguishes Story Club as an organization? How does it fit into the larger Chicago live lit scene?
Thereâs no hard line between audience and performer, which I love…I think a lot of other shows tend to be either all performer or all open-mic. And I think thatâs one thing that makes Story Club unique that I really dig…It was six years ago that Dana [Norris] decided, to start Story Club, because she kept getting rejected from a bunch of open-mics, and she would tell a story, and theyâd be like âWe do poetry and music, and thatâs itââtheyâd all look at her funny, like âWhat are you doing? This is stand-up. I donât know what youâre doing.â She was like, âForget it, Iâll start my own,â and she did. At the same time, a bunch of other people had the same idea, and since then, itâs like, thereâs second- and third generation storytelling events. People would go to these and say, âOh, thatâs cool, I want to start my own that does this thing, and that thing.â
How does the South Side Story Club differ from the other Story Clubs?
So, on the North Side, they ask for a theme, and theyâll just put a word out thereâit may inspire some stories, or it may link stories that are already kind of together that people are interested in telling…On the South Side, a lot of timesâweâll do that, on occasion, like this month, weâre doing âFoolery,â whoopsâbut we also like to do what I call âformalâ challenges, so âchallenge the form.â So weâve done âduet,â two-person stories. Weâve done what we call âcatch your own tale,â which was [when participants] began and ended [their] story with the same sentence. Weâve doneâthe one Iâm really fond of, and I think weâre going to bring back sometimeÂââsomeone elseâs story.â So Iâm an actor, and I know a lot of actor people, so what we didâand Willâs a writerâwe talked to people who maybe donât perform their stories very often, or had some written down that they didnât want to perform; we took those stories, we removed the name, and we gave them to actors. We let the actors treat it like a monologue, and they came in, they did the story, and it was really interesting. We crossed gender lines and race lines and age, and we had a lovely black actress do something that was obviously from a gay manâs perspective. It was just really fun, and it was a fun night, and at the end, the actors acknowledged the writers, whatever they wanted to say if they wanted to say something. We like to mess around. I tend to think an ambitious failure is better than an easy success. I like ambitious failures.
Where do you think South Side Story Club hopes to go from here? Do you have concrete plans for the next six months, the next few years? You know, youâre coming up on one year!
We regularly get audiences between thirty-five and sixty. I would love to have that number be a solid sixty to seventy or eightyâevery month. And Iâd like almost all of them to be from the South Side. Thatâs what I want. I want to start a scene. [laughs] And itâs so arrogant, itâs so arrogant to say, but itâs totally what I want to do. I want to see a scene pop up. I want to see a unique storytelling scene that comes from the life of the people on the South Side, that is native to them, that makes sense to their backgrounds and what storytelling is to them. It may not be like stand-up or like slam poetry. It may be a totally different art, and I want to see what that is, and I would love it if there were a bunch of splintered storytelling groups that came from this, and there was a whole South Side scene thatâs different from the North Side scene. Iâd think thatâd be awesome.