
Running Charades
- a primer -
Since
the podcast
episode with Celia
Keenan-Bolger, where we extolled the joys of playing running
charades, I’ve had several requests to explain the game. Here goes:
The
rules of the
charades part are the same. You’re giving clues without talking, trying
to get your group to guess the title of some film/book/play/song/etc.
(“Movie… three words…first word…sounds like…” etc.) The only difference
here is that it’s a team game.
The
first thing that
happens is everyone (minimum of eight people, I’d say) creates a list
of ten clues. These are the lists that the teams are going to race
against each other to finish. (If you’re confused, just hang in there.
It’ll be clear in a minute.) While certainly not mandatory, some people
like to create a theme list. For instance, titles that all have colors
in them (Purple Rain,
“Don’t
It Make My Brown Eyes Blue,” The
Green Bird), or titles with chronological numbers (One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,
Two for
the Seesaw, The Third Man, etc.), or all Joni Mitchell
album
titles (if you want everyone to hate you). Be creative. You don’t have
to play that round. You get to watch everyone else scramble to get
through your list. And if the concept of a theme intimidates you, don’t
use one. Random lists are just as fun.
Once
everyone’s
lists are complete (keep them hidden, FYI), then divide the group into
two or more teams. A team of 4 to 7 people is a good size, in my
experience. Hopefully you have enough space to separate into teams in
such a way that you can be guessing charades without letting the other
team hear you.
So,
in our example
game, my team is in the bedroom and Celia’s team is in the kitchen. Ted,
who’s on my team, is going to give his list first, so he steps down
from the team for this round and sits with his list in the living room,
i.e. any place equidistant to both teams.
Each
team sends an
emissary, in this case Celia and myself, and Ted whispers to us the
first title on his list: “One
Flew
Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”
OK,
this is where
the running happens, because it’s a race, remember? Celia and I RUN
back to our respective teams, and we start giving clues for One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.
Now, why Celia is so brilliant is that she often tries to convey the
whole idea vs. breaking it down word by word. So Michael
guesses it immediately, Celia says “Yes!” and Michael (i.e. whoever
guessed the title correctly) RUNS to Ted and whispers “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”
This step is important because: a) the listgiver needs to know that
your team got the title right, and b) with several teams working on
different titles at the same time, the listgiver needs to be reminded
which clue you were working on. So, once Ted hears the right title, he
whispers “Two for the
Seesaw,”
and Michael’s off to the kitchen to start the process again.
Meanwhile,
in the
bedroom, my team is stuck. Finally, just as Sara
on
the kitchen team is guessing Two
for
the Seesaw, David
on
my team gets One Flew
Over the
Cuckoo’s Nest. They race to Ted simultaneously. Sara wins
by a
hair, so she gets priority. David stands back and covers his ears, if
necessary, because Ted’s going to give Sara the third title, and
David’s about to get the second one. If David were to hear Sara’s
title, then he would have to recuse himself when his team moved on to
that title….
So
the game
continues like this until one of the teams has completed all ten titles
on Ted’s list. They cheer, the round is over, and Ted returns to my
team in the bedroom. Now someone on Celia’s team becomes the listgiver,
and the process starts again.
Keep
playing until
everyone’s had a chance to be the listgiver.
FYI,
the rules are
identical if there are more than two teams.
Don’t
be daunted by
the thought of doing fourteen or more lists. They go really quickly!
Have
fun!