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Los Angeles Times
Friday, July 17, 1992

Out on Their Own The Acme Players have had a few name changes, but the
troupe is still headed for laughs.

JANICE ARKATOV
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

They were the Two Roads Players. Then they were the Tujunga 
Group. As of last week, they are the Acme Players. "This is the 
last name change," swears founder M. D. Sweeney, whose 12-member 
improv/sketch comedy group has been presenting its latest show, 
"Some Assembly Required," since February at the Acme Comedy Theatre 
in North Hollywood.

"First we were at the Two Roads Theatre, so we were the Two 
Roads Players," he said. "We wanted a name we could take with us 
when we moved, but we found we didn't like it." The reference to 
Acme is a nod to the perennial product line immortalized in the old 
Warner Bros. cartoons. By day, Sweeney and two of the group's 
members work at Warners.

The company was formed three years ago with a couple of 
Sweeney's friends. He had worked with some recruits during a 
previous stint in the improv group L.A. Connection; others answered 
his ad in Drama-Logue.

"I was really inspired by what the Groundlings were doing," said 
Sweeney, who had once served on the West Hollywood comedy group's 
board of directors. "Second City was great and innovative at one 
time, but they haven't developed, moved on. I think the Groundlings 
are the best anywhere: best format, best instruction, most solid 
approach. But I wanted the autonomy to do my own thing-especially 
after working in TV production, where no one gets to do their own 
thing."

Though new material is beginning to filter in for a new show 
that will bow in September, "Some Assembly Required" is about 
one-third improv and two-thirds set sketches.

Among the skit topics: errant Girl Scouts selling their wares 
among the audience, a course in writing romance novels, a 
Catholic-products convention and "Play It Again, Stan," in which 
Oliver Hardy shows up to help a fellow with his romantic problems.

Born and raised in Ohio, Sweeney graduated from film school at 
the University of Michigan "and came out here to be a movie 
director," he said. "Hopefully, the rest will be history." He 
stumbled into art direction. A friend had a company that built the 
sets for "TV Bloopers and Practical Jokes." On that job, from 1984 
to 1987, he also served as segment producer and did some writing. 
"That was a wild ride," he said.

After "Bloopers," he moved on to writing jobs with "Tiny Toon 
Adventures" and Nickelodeon's "On the Television," and is now a 
free-lance writer at Warner Bros., working on Steven Spielberg's 
animated series "Animaniacs," which is expected to premiere in the 
fall of 1993. His girlfriend, former Groundling Sherri Stoner, is 
the producer of the show.

Acme Player Paul Rugg-also an alum of L.A. Connection whose gigs 
have included dressing up as a turtle for children's birthday 
parties-is a staff writer for "Animaniacs." He believes the two 
roles intersect nicely. "A cartoon is very visual, and of course 
you've got to play off that," he said. "But the comedy also has a 
lot to do with what they say. So writing five- or six-minute 
sketches has really prepared me for this job."

Sweeney hopes to expand the group's activities in the future. 
"Perhaps TV-who knows?" Other plans include a late-night improv 
program. As for the inevitable comparisons to the Groundlings, 
whose format and set the Acme Players' strongly resembles, "Of 
course we draw from them," he said. "But I don't want to be 
portrayed as copying them or ripping them off. Hopefully, we'll 
discover new ground."

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