
DUDLEY RIGGS - FOUNDER OF THE BRAVE NEW WORKSHOP
Dudley
Riggs is a fifth generation member of a distinguished show business family,
and has worked variously (since the age of 5) as a circus aerialist, movie
actor, vaudevillian, comedian, writer, stage director, and producer.
A noted improvisational comedian, Riggs created the Instant Theater Company
in New York, which he moved to Minneapolis in 1958 to become the Brave
New Workshop.
Riggs also opened the Experimental Theater Company (E.T.C.) in the Seven
Corners area of Minneapolis in the early 1970s. This theater provided
a wider range of material including stand-up comedy, variety shows, and
specialty acts, including the Flying Karamazov Brothers, Penn & Teller,
Louie Anderson, and Lizz Winstead, among many others.
Riggs has attended the University of Chicago, the University of Tulsa
at Oklahoma, the University of the Philippines in Manila, Mankato State
Teacher's College and the University of Minnesota. His continuing education
includes being accepted into the Harvard University Writing Program in
1996.
In addition to receiving a Kudo Award from the Twin Cities theater critics,
Riggs received the Urban Guerrilla Award and the Charlie Award from the
National Association of Comedy Arts. After selling the Brave New Workshop
in 1997, Dudley Riggs started his third career as a writer. He is currently
working on two books – one a memoir of his early life in circus
and vaudeville, the other a history of instant theatre and political satire.
Congratulations Dudley!
Dudley Riggs honored with the lifetime achievement award at the 2009 Ivey
Awards.

"No
Joke!" - says Star Tribune
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