Theater
- ATL 494/DAN 494/THR 494: Princeton Atelier: Blood Dazzler: Collaboration and CatastropheRooted in Professor Patricia Smith's monumental book of poetry, Blood Dazzler, four award-winning artists will lead students in a collaborative creative process for building performance through poetry, dance, music, and visual art. Blood Dazzler centered on Hurricane Katrina, a deadly category 5 storm. Twenty years later, students will research the storm and its ongoing aftermath, including watching documentaries, conducting interviews, attending events, reading, and writing. Students will be given assignments based on the day's activity and discussion and develop performance works for presentation to the Princeton community on April 24th.
- ATL 495/THR 495: Princeton Atelier: The Year That Never Was: Devising a Holiday SpecialThe Year That Never Was is a course taught by composer/librettists Michael R. Jackson and Rachel J. Peters that invites students of all levels and abilities into the earliest stages of the creation of a new musical theater piece written in the style of television musical variety shows and holiday specials of the 1970s and 80s. As Jackson and Peters resume a collaboration they began asgraduate students, students will assist in thinking through the development of their piece by studying & discussing relevant source materials, working collaboratively to create material for their own variety shows that celebrate an obscure or invented holiday.
- DAN 209/MTD 209/THR 209: Introduction to Movement and DanceMovement permeates every aspect of life, whether within our bodies, minds, or the world around us. In this studio course open to everyone, we use tools from Laban Movement Analysis to develop ways to dance, improvise, make performance, and fully inhabit our lives. We dive into the roles of dancer, choreographer, audience member, and critic in relation to aesthetic questions, politics, identity, religion, and complex views of the human body. Students can apply our work together to dance in any style as well as to daily experiences like moving into an interview confidently and finding embodied practices for transforming stress.
- DAN 351/MTD 374/THR 374/MPP 351: Inventing PerformanceStudents from across fields who are interested in slowing down the art-making process to explore the nature of devising, developing, revising, and performing are invited to join this studio course. We'll make an expansive artist residency together and delve into the often-intermingled roles of creator, performer, designer, and audience member. We'll use embodied tools to generate material and hone collaborative processes. We'll question why and how and in what contexts we create. We'll look at forms like the lecture-performance, the happening, concert dance, and one-person shows. Culminates in student-created performances at the end of term.
- DAN 394/THR 394: A Devised Dance Theatre MultiverseThis course is designed for students to engage in the process of creating new work for performance. Rather than starting with a written play or a pre-conceived movement vocabulary, the students will work together to develop a show from scratch, using a range of improvisation, experimentation, and writing techniques to generate ideas, shape the content, and structure the performance. This course will take inspiration from Raja Feather Kelly's company `the feath3r theory's' model for devised danced theatre called "The Approach". The final work will be performed at an end-of-semester showing.
- ENG 328/THR 324: Revenge Tragedy Beyond Hamlet"Revenge my foul and most unnatural murder!" A ghost compels his conflicted son, Hamlet, to address something rotten in the state of Denmark with these words in Shakespeare's great tragedy. Whether or not you have read Hamlet, or have seen it performed, you probably know the story. This course aims to recontextualize Hamlet in early modern English theater history. Through study of other "revenge tragedy" plays from this period, seminar participants will gain new perspective on Hamlet's embeddedness in a culture and an art form probing the ethics of seeking justice through violence.
- MPP 214/MTD 214/THR 217: Projects in Vocal Performance: VoicecraftIn this course we will learn about the history of singing and the workings of the human voice. Through discussion, research, and performance, we will examine existing works from both classical and non-classical traditions and use them as a starting point to create new works using both conventional and extended vocal techniques. We will work both alone and collaboratively, performing and composing music for solo voice as well as ensemble. We will be joined by guests-performers and composers- with insights to share. The course is open to singers, composers, and actors interested in deepening their knowledge of the voice and exploring new ideas.
- MTD 313/THR 313: Acting Through SongThis course allows students, working at their own experience level, to analyze, rehearse and perform songs from the canon of dramatic musical theater. Using anything from lyrical arias to power ballads, we will approach lyrics and accompanying music as keys to creating character. We will investigate the "want" that drives a song. An accompanist will be in class for warm-ups, rehearsal and presentations. Students will find songs that suit their voices and challenges that they are looking for. Students will explore and present research on the voice, and will perform in a final celebratory showing. No singing experience necessary.
- MUS 349/DAN 387/THR 387/VIS 387: Cultivating a Transdisciplinary Performance PracticeThis intensive workshop explores performance as a site for an evolving, transdisciplinarity that is in mindful relationship with artistic movements, cultural continua, contemporary resonances, and individual agency. Rather than fetishize the urgent development of a legible, "authentic", or (impossibly) unique artistic identity, we will instead strive toward a practice of radical honesty, fluid curiosity, fierce courage, intentional consumption, and rigorous reflection. To that end, students will regularly create, perform, and document original solo & group work that syncretizes multiple disciplines.
- THR 101/MTD 101: Introduction to Theater MakingIntroduction to Theater Making is a working laboratory, which gives students hands-on experience with theatre's fundamental building blocks -- writing, design, acting, directing, and producing. Throughout the semester, students read, watch and discuss five different plays, music theater pieces and ensemble theater works. We will analyze how these plays are constructed and investigate their social and political implications. In-class artistic responses provide hands-on exploration as students work in groups to create and rehearse performances inspired by our course texts.
- THR 203/AAS 204/DAN 203/GSS 378: Black Performance TheoryWe will explore the foundations of black performance theory, drawing from the fields of performance studies, theater, dance, and black studies. Using methods of ethnography, archival studies, and black theatrical and dance paradigms, we will learn how scholars and artists imagine, complicate, and manifest various forms of blackness across time and space. In particular, we will focus on blackness as both lived experience and as a mode of theoretical inquiry.
- THR 204/MTD 204: Acting Fundamentals: Voice, Body, ImaginationThis course develops skills needed to successfully approach all acting styles and centers the actor as a lead creative artist. We will concentrate on how the voice, body, and imagination can build a performance. The goal is fluency in these tools, stronger stage presence, and collaborative rehearsal skills. Each class is made up of individual and ensemble-based physical and vocal exercises to bolster creative thinking and to ready the body and voice for performance. We will find inspiration in readings and short performance texts. Students will leave the semester with a strong foundation for further acting courses or projects in all genres.
- THR 205/CWR 210: Introductory PlaywritingThis is a workshop in the fundamentals of writing plays. Through writing prompts, exercises, study and reflection, students will be guided in the creation of original dramatic material. Attention will be given to character, structure, dramatic action, monologue, dialogue, language and behavior.
- THR 207/MTD 207: Pop Up PerformanceThis workshop course rehearses the compositional, producorial, and performance skills necessary to create (and present) an original, self-contained work of solo performance. The course will draw upon foundational methods and techniques of solo performance-making as a practice, as a process, and as a genre of contemporary performance. Over the course of the semester, each class contributor will develop their own original 8-12 minute solo performance piece, even as the class as a cohort works collaboratively to support, workshop, and provide audience for one another, and to co-produce a "Pop Up Performance" mini-festival at semester's end.
- THR 224/MTD 224/VIS 224: Introduction to Theatrical Design: Lights, sound, costumes and sceneryIntro to Stage Design is an interactive course where students will explore the world through a design lens to develop visual literacy and investigate how visual cues shape our understanding of the world. This studio course will explore Scenic, Costume, Lighting and Sound design. Students will take on the role of designer across disciplines, developing analytic, research and collaborative skills, and exploring and questioning power structures in the process. This hands-on course will emphasize communication and collaboration within creative and production teams in support of bringing design visions to life.
- THR 252/GSS 244/LAO 252/LAS 242: Topics in Dramaturgical and Performance Analysis: The Fornésian TraditionThis seminar offers an intensive introduction to the principles and practices of dramaturgical and performance analysis of stage plays as written works, as blueprints for theatrical performance, and as exercises in worldmaking. This seminar also rehearses how the techniques of dramaturgical and performance analysis might be applied to modes of embodied enactment - whether historical or contemporary, whether in art or everyday life - beyond the theatrical frame. In Spring 2025, the course will focus on the life, work, and legacy of the pathbreaking Cuban-American playwright, director, designer, and teacher María Irene Fornés (1930-2018).
- THR 305/CWR 309: Playwriting II: Intermediate PlaywritingA continuation of work begun in Introductory Playwriting, in this class, students will write the first draft of a full-length play, concurrent with exercises, writing prompts, and readings focused on developing a firmer understanding of characterization, dialogue, structure, and the playwriting process. In addition to questions of craft, an emphasis will be placed on the formation of healthy creative habits and the sharpening of critical and analytical skills through reading and responding to work of both fellow students and contemporary playwrights of note.`
- THR 308/CWR 308/ENG 307/MTD 308: New Play DevelopmentThe new play development process has become a critical aspect of the professional theater landscape, but is often confounding to artists. This is a practical course that will introduce the basic processes of developing new plays for the stage, offering theater makers an understanding of their unique role in the critical moments of a new play's early life. The class is for actors eager to hone the skills of originating a role; for directors eager to explore working with a living writer; and for playwrights eager to gain experience navigating the development process, from table readings to workshops to staged readings.
- THR 314/ENV 301/MTD 314: Investigative Theater for a Changing ClimateHow do you tell a story about climate change that dynamically engages its audiences without overwhelming or boring them? We will explore this question and others through readings and discussions, and we will make an original work of theater. Employing the methods of investigative theater, the class will create a script or performance text by pursuing a creative inquiry into some aspect of climate change. Each student will do creative research including interviews; collaborate on a script by editing and writing original material; and work with a team to put the show on its feet. Previous theater experience not required.
- THR 319/VIS 319: Scenic DesignThis course will introduce you to the art and craft of scenic design. It will be an exploratory and hands-on course in the use of physical scenery as a way to tell a story, introducing you to the processes and tools of scenic design as a way of gaining greater understanding of theatrical texts. Over the course of the semester, you will be introduced to a process of interpreting ideas, conceiving and designing physical environments for the stage, television and live events. We will discuss histories and theories, explore the physical craft of creation and present your ideas to your peers using research, sketches, collages and models.
- THR 334: Introduction to Physical PerformanceThis course introduces students to physical acting techniques, which unleash playfulness and expand expressive potential in performance. Games, improvisation, acting exercises and theater masks cultivate freedom, joy, courage, and stage presence. An exploration of the rules of story through movement analysis, along with embodied approaches to text and practical methods to creating characters, prepare for work on monologues and scenes.
- THR 351/TPP 351: The Craft of Teaching - Community Focused Pedagogy for Artists and PerformersHow do you apply your creative skills and artistry to different educational settings? Using the examples of prisons, specialized schools and community-based organizations, lecturer and veteran teaching artist Chesney Snow will guide students through studying and practicing the craft of teaching artistry. Students will understand the history of teaching artistry and how it fits into the structures of today's educational systems and society as well as understanding best practices in the development of teaching artist pedagogy and classroom management.
- THR 382/AMS 391/GSS 254: Feminist Theatre: 1960s to NowThrough plays produced in the United States from the second-wave feminist movement of the 1960s to the Black Lives Matter Movement of the 2010s, we will identify and analyze various themes, approaches, and concerns within feminist plays. Employing script and dramaturgical analyses and performance techniques, students will learn how to contextualize plays from the race, gender, class, sexuality, and politics of the playwright and contextualize plays within their larger historical, social, and cultural milieus. In doing so, students will learn about the different lineages, politics, and aesthetics of feminist theatre.
- THR 452/ENG 453: Topics in Ensemble Performance: A Midsummer Night's DreamThis course is an acting intensive offering students the opportunity to engage in a rigorous rehearsal process with a professional theater director. The course emphasizes exploration and embodiment of character, and culminates in a staged production with simple technical elements, the focus on THE ensemble. This semester, the topic of A Midsummer Night's Dream will be explored through an immersive production staged in the Drapkin Studio in April. This production will explore the dynamics of queer identity using the complex backdrop of a contemporary Texas nightclub scene. The course is inclusive for every identity and ability.