Improv arrived in Argentina in 1988 through the Frenchman Claude Bazin, who led an Improvisation Match workshop at the General San Martín Cultural Center in Buenos Aires. That same year, the first match in Spanish took place, with participants such as Ricardo Behrens (future director of the LPI), Pedro Cano, Eduardo Calvo, and Mosquito Sancineto, which led to the founding of the Argentine Improvisation League. From Buenos Aires, it spread to other provinces: Mosquito Sancineto trained figures such as Romina Coccio, Osqui Guzmán, Marcelo Savignone, and Omar Galván, who founded Sucesos Argentinos in 1997; in La Plata, it arrived via Roberto “Cabe” Mallo around 1987-1988, leading to the creation of the LILP in 2000. Mendoza had its league in 2011…. If you want to learn more about Argentine theatrical improvisation, your essential book is Impro Argentina by Gustavo Caletti (Ed. Coop. Chilavert, 2009), a work based on interviews with key figures in the history of Argentine improv, compiling the first 20 years of improv history in Argentina. Also explore the improv perspective through the works of Argentine improvisers with the greatest international reach: Omar Galván (Improtour), Feña Ortalli (Global Impro), and Pau Farias. Additionally, Hernán Gené‘s work on clowning and…