Apr 28, 2024  
Catalogue 2019-2020 
    
Catalogue 2019-2020 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Drama Department


Chair: Shona Tucker;

Professors: Gabrielle H. Cody, Christopher Grabowski, Denise A. Walenb (and Dean of First Year Students);

Associate Professor: Shona Tucker;

Assistant Professor: Stephen C. Jones;

Adjunct Professor: Leonard Jenkin;

Adjunct Assistant Professor: Darrell James;

Lecturer: Kenisha D. Kelly.

On leave 2019/20, second semester

Programs

Major

Courses

Drama: I. Introductory

  • DRAM 102 - Introduction to Theater-Making: Theory and Practice

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)
    An exploration of the strategies theatre artists use to approach the realization of dramatic texts on the stage. Through weekly practical projects, the class examines the challenges posed by a variety of dramatic genres.

    Two 75-minute periods, plus one 75-minute laboratory.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 103 - Introduction to Stagecraft

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    0.5 unit(s)
    An introduction to the fundamentals of stagecraft, including the processes of flat and platform construction, scene painting, rigging, and theatrical safety. Paul O’Connor.

    Two 75-minute periods, one 2 hour lab, and 16 hours of crew time are required.Six-week course.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 104 - The Acting Company

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Designed to provide an opportunity for undeclared acting students who have taken DRAM 102  to continue exploring their collaborate skills from the point of view of the actor. This includes script analysis, rehearsal preparation, historical research, and etiquette and traditions. The lab portion of the class facilitates the collaboration between acting and directing students who participate in a joint lab. Christopher Grabowski.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 .

    Two 2-hour periods; additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 143 - The Genius of Chekhov: Theatre and Tales


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as  RUSS 143 ) Close reading of major plays and selected  short stories by Anton Chekhov. Focus on the forms and themes of Chekhov’s works, as well as their historical contexts in terms of dramaturgy, reception and artistic legacy. Special attention is given to the spectrum of interpretations of Chekhov’s works in a transnational context. Accompanied by film screenings. In English. 

    Open to all classes. Readings and discussions are in English. Russian majors see RUSS 243 

    Two 75-minute periods.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 190 - Theater Production Participation

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    .5 or 1 unit(s)
    This course provides the opportunity for students with declared majors other than Drama to participate in the performance, design, or technical aspects of department productions in the Experimental Theater of Vassar College.  The department.
     

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the department. 

    May not be repeated.

    One 3-hour period plus rehearsal and crew calls.

    Course Format: CLS

Drama: II. Intermediate

  • DRAM 200 - The Experimental Theater

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    0.5, 1 unit(s)


    This course focuses on putting theory and technique into practice through participation in the performance, design, or technical aspects of department productions in the Experimental Theater of Vassar College. Recent and ongoing productions include: The Skin of Our Teeth, Miss Julie, Lysistrata, Euridice by Sarah Ruhl, The Cripple of Inishmaan, Rez Sisters, Ghosts, The Way of the World, Hub Crawl (an original musical), The Passion Play, Servant of Two Masters, Measure for Measure, Las Meninas (Lynn Nottage), A Little Night Music, Crimes of the Heart, The Cherry Orchard, The Importance of Being Earnest. The department.

    May be repeated up to four times.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 , DRAM 103 , and permission of the department.

    One 3-hour period plus rehearsal and crew calls.

    Course Format: CLS

  • DRAM 202 - The Art of Theater Making

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    This course is a sequel to DRAM 102 . Students explore more deeply the complexities of interpretation and realization of texts on the stage. The source material includes poems, plays, and short stories, and culminates in the conceiving and staging of a non-dramatic text. Gabrielle Cody.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  or special permission of the instructors.

    One 2-hour period, plus one 2-hour lab.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 203 - The Actor’s Craft: The Study of Acting

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    The Actor’s Craft is a studio course designed to look at the initial psycho-physical, kin-esthetic process involved in developing the actor’s instrument. Because there is no “one way” of approaching acting, which is the definitive line on acting, we “sample” techniques of several theater masters during the course of the semester, i.e., Hagen, Bogart, Michael Checkov. Darrell James.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 , DRAM 103 , DRAM 206  and permission of the department.

    Two 2-hour periods.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 204 - Theatre Technologies: Stage Lighting


    1 unit(s)
    This course is an in-depth study of the technology and theories used in the theatrical production process for theatrical performance. Through readings and practicum, the history and evolution of stage lighting are explored. Stephen Jones.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 .

    One 2-hour period plus one 2-hour lab.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 205 - The Actor’s Voice

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    The Actor’s Voice is a practical introduction to the language, tools, and VOICE techniques used by actors. Through the use of diverse voice, breath, and body exercises, text analysis, and monolog work; we explore, develop, and strengthen your analytical skills, confidence, stage presence, general storytelling abilities, and of course… your natural voice. Darrell James.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 , DRAM 206  and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 206 - Movement for Actors

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)
    This course offers a rigorous training in stage movement for actors, which includes elements of yoga, butoh ,and movement improvisation. Students learn to understand neutral posture, alignment, and to explore dynamic and expressive qualities of movement, as well as the methods of developing a richly physical development of character. Concepts from the Laban Movement Analysis, experimental theatre, and post-modern dance are used.  Leslie Sachs.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 .

    One 3-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 207 - Graphic Communications for Theater

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    This course considers the various techniques of hand and computer based communication used in presenting conceptual ideas in theatre design. Areas of study include drafting and rendering for scenic and lighting environments.  Stephen Jones.

    One 2-hour period plus one 2-hour lab.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 208 - Draping and Pattern-Development for Stage Production

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    This course focuses on developing a two-dimensional pattern into a three dimensional form. Students learn basic pattern-making, draping and sewing skills. Kenisha Kelly.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 209 - Introduction to Costume Design for the Stage


    1 unit(s)
    This course focuses on the study and practice of visual representation utilizing the principles and elements of design in conjunction with historical and conceptual research in order to build collaboration, design presentation and creative thinking skills. Students will create production design assignments through the use of the mediums practiced throughout this course. Kenisha Kelly.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 .

    Two 2-hour periods.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 210 - Introduction to Playwriting

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    This course emphasizes the student’s work through the craft of playwriting, theatrical storytelling and narrative. Reading of plays, discussion, writing and reading aloud of material with group feedback constitute the major portion of this course. Generative writing exercises are done in class or suggested for outside class time. The course ends with informal readings of students’ final plays. A communal workshop atmosphere prevails so that students engage in a collaborative approach to problem solving, through rewriting, which dramatic writing requires. The collaboration process between directors, actors and designers is also discussed. 

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 .

    One 3-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 212 - Neutral Mask


    1 unit(s)


    Through Space, Force, and Rhythm, the Neutral Mask teaches Silence, Balance, and Calm, which guides the actor to physical Freedom, Awareness, and Expression. Focusing primarily on the methodologies of Jacques Lecoq, the work is often improv-based, and draws on historical movements like Commedia Dell’arte and clown, as well as Lecoq’s famous Neutral Mask technique and psychological exercises involving elements, colors, and seasons to promote a more mentally and physically liberated actor.

     

     

     

      Darrell James.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  and DRAM 103 .

    One 3-hour period.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS

  • DRAM 214 - Italian Folklore: Goddesses, Muses, Saints, and Black Madonnas


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ITAL 214  and RELI 214 ) This course focuses on Italian folk traditions revolving around women - saints and Madonnas. Rooted in Catholic tradition, many rituals have permeated everyday culture and social structures of belief and behavior. This course takes us on a journey through time and space, traveling through centuries and different Italian regions. The case studies vary in genre, from the literary to the visual, from the kinetic to the culinary, and include: the mysticism of Saint Catherine of Siena; Beatrice as a muse and guide in Dante’s Paradiso (The Divine Comedy); the tammuriata, a women’s drumming and dance tradition for the Black Madonna of Montevergine; the symbolism of the Virgin Mary in Siena’s Palio; women’s healing ritual of tarantismo; feminism and the Black Madonna of Trastevere in Rome. We approach the cases through the lenses of Italian Studies, Women’s Studies, Folklore, Performance Studies, and Contemplative Studies. The practical use of music, dance, drawing, journaling, and a variety of contemplative practices are part of the course. Conducted in English.

    Open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors. May be counted towards the Italian major.

    Two 75-minute periods.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

  • DRAM 221 - Sources of World Drama

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    Drama 221/DRAM 222  is a yearlong course that provides an introduction to dramatic literature and performance practice from around the world. In 221 students read an array of dramatic texts from the works of the ancient Greeks to English comedies of the seventeenth century, along with works from Japan, China, and India. The course balances an exploration of dramatic literature and staging with an investigation of the theories that have affected both the literature and practice of theater, such as Aristotle’s The Poetics, neoclassicism, and Bharata’s The Natyasastra. The course focuses on a series of critical periods and explores the relationship between the theater and the culture responsible for its creation.  Denise Walen.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102 .

    Yearlong course 221/DRAM 222 .

    Two 75-minute periods.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 222 - Sources of World Drama

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Drama 222 is the second half of the yearlong DRAM 221 /222. This course provides an introduction to dramatic literature and performance practice from around the world. In 222 students read an array of dramatic texts from the eighteenth century through contemporary dramas such as August: Osage County and works by Sarah Ruhl and Martin McDonagh, along with works from Africa, the Carribean, and the Middle East. The course balances an exploration of dramatic literature and staging with an investigation of the theories that have affected both the literature and practice of theater, such as Realism, Epic Theater, Absurdism, and Theater of Cruelty. The course focuses on a series of critical periods and explores the relationship between the theater and the culture responsible for its creation. 

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  and DRAM 221 .

    Yearlong course DRAM 221 /222.

    Two 75-minute periods.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 228 - African American Literature

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as AFRS 228  and ENGL 228 ) Topic for 2019/20b: From the Page to the Stage: Turning Black Literature into Black Drama. This course will explore the expressive possibilities of 20th century black literature by means of critical reading, critical writing, and critical performance. Students will examine key works in their historical context, paying attention to the criticism and theory that have shaped their reception (Hayden, Giovanni, Brooks, Hurston, Baldwin, Morrison, Johnson, Whitehead). They will then attempt to transform parts of these texts into scenes as informed by past and present theories of performance and theatre making. Their work will culminate in a public performance of the pieces they have conceived. Tyrone Simpson

    Two 75-minute periods and one 2-hour lab.

  • DRAM 231 - History of Fashion for the Stage


    1 unit(s)
    This historical survey focuses on the transformation of dress from the ancient world to contemporary fashion.The course investigates how clothing influenced the cultural, economic, and political developments of Western Europe over time. Kenisha Kelly.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    Two 75-minute periods.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 232 - Dramaturgy

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    This course is designed to introduce students to the art of dramatic structure, and the pleasures and challenges of production dramaturgy. Through serious historical and cultural research into how plays from various periods and genres were originally produced, we consider the dramaturg’s role in shaping how they might be realized today. In addition to weekly readings and writing assignments, the seminar include sstudent-led research projects and presentations, and culminates with the adaptation of a prose text into a short play. These adaptations are read in class during our final class meetings. Gabrielle Cody.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  

    One 2-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 233 - Looking at Dance Theater


    1 unit(s)
    This course examines the roots of Dance Theater in the United States and Europe, and further examines its development and impact on both American Theater and Dance. Dance Theater embraces the worlds of the avant-garde, post modern, and modern expressionist genres and is responsible for the miasmic mixture and pure invention that we see in the 21st century. Through movement and dance we study economy of action, elements of butoh, dynamics, and physicality to create story and expression.  Leslie Sachs.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  or DANC 155 , and permission of the instructor.

    Two 2-hour periods.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 234 - Women in American Musical Theater


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as WMST 234 ) This course focuses on the role of female characters in the American Musical Theater. The musical is both a populist and nonconventional form of drama, as such it both reflects contemporary assumptions of gendered behavior and has the potential to challenge conventional notions of normative behavior. Through an examination of librettos, music, and secondary sources covering shows from Show Boat to Spring Awakening the class will examine the way American Musicals have constructed and represented gendered identities. The class is organized thematically and will also consider issues of race, class, and sexuality as they intersect with issues of gender. Denise Walen.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 221 /DRAM 222  or WMST 130 .

    Two 75-minute periods.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 241 - Shakespeare


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ENGL 241 ) Study of a substantial number of the plays, roughly in chronological order, to permit a detailed consideration of the range and variety of Shakespeare’s dramatic art. Zoltán Márkus.

    Yearlong course 241-DRAM 242 .

    Not offered in 2019/20.

  • DRAM 242 - Shakespeare


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as ENGL 242 ) Study of a substantial number of the plays, roughly in chronological order, to permit a detailed consideration of the range and variety of Shakespeare’s dramatic art. Zoltán Márkus.

    Yearlong course DRAM 241 -242.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

  • DRAM 290 - Community-Engaged Learning

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    0.5 to 2 unit(s)
    To be elected in consultation with the adviser and the Office of Community-Engaged Learning.

    Course Format: INT
  • DRAM 297 - Reading Course


    0.5 unit(s)
    Course Format: OTH
  • DRAM 298 - Independent Work

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    0.5 to 1 unit(s)
    Independent work is the study of a topic in depth of a subject that is not already offered by the Drama Department. This means that credit cannot be given to proposed productions as this opportunity already exists in the Experimental Theatre within the department. Examples of possible independent works are: investigations in advanced technical theatre, dramaturgical research projects, and dialect work. If you are interested in electing to pursue an independent project, please consult the appropriate faculty member within the department.

    Course Format: OTH

Drama: III. Advanced

  • DRAM 304 - The Art of Acting


    1 unit(s)
    Advanced study of classical acting including Shakespeare, Chekhov, and Ibsen in which students examine the challenges of creating an entire acting role. Techniques explored include John Barton, Michael Chekhov, Viola Spolin, Anne Bogart, and Kristin Linklater. Christopher Grabowski.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 203 , DRAM 205 , 1 unit in dance or movement analysis, and permission of the instructor.

    Two 2-hour periods and one 4-hour laboratory.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 305 - The Director’s Art

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    An exploration of the director’s work through the study of different genres of dramatic texts and through various methods of realizing an artistic vision, from auteurship to collaborative communities. Students work on several projects during in-class exercises, and a final project is developed outside of class. Christopher Grabowski.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 202  or DRAM 203 , or DRAM 304 , and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period. One 75-minute laboratory.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 306 - The Art of Acting: Comedy

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    Advanced study of comic acting styles including clowning, Commedia Dell’arte, Restoration, High Comedy and Absurdism. The work of Lecoq, Suzuki, Wilde, Coward, Ionesco, Beckett and Callow are explored. Shona Tucker.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 203 , DRAM 205 , one unit in dance or movement analysis, and permission of the instructor.

    Two 2-hour periods and one 4-hour laboratory.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 307 - The Director at Work


    1 unit(s)
    This course presents the opportunity for advanced students to hone their personal style as stage directors. Students will explore text from Classical Greece, the Elizabethan period, and 20th century realism. While exploring the history and traditions of realizing works from these periods, students will be encouraged to explore strategies for taking their conceptual and philosophical ideas into a dynamic rehearsal and production process suited to their personal vision. Christopher Grabowski.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 202  or DRAM 203 , DRAM 232 , or DRAM 304 , and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period plus one 4-hour lab.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 308 - Auditioning and Acting for the Camera


    1 unit(s)
    This course focuses on audition skills needed for the various arenas in the life of the actor: the classical and contemporary stage, commercial television, film, industrial film, etc., and provides the tools for sustaining work on the camera, including developing a reel by the end of the semester. Shona Tucker.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 203  and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 309 - Advanced Draping and Costume Design


    1 unit(s)
    This course takes the study and practice of visual representation to a more advanced level. There will be a strong emphasis on collaboration, construction, design presentation and creative thinking. In order to build both design and draping skills simultaneously, students will design as well a construct a variety of projects in this course. Kenisha Kelly.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 209  and DRAM 208 ; students must take both in order to take this course.

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 310 - Advanced Playwriting

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Building on the skills developed in DRAM 210 , this course offers students the opportunity to continue their exploration of script analysis and play construction at an advanced level. Emphasis on developing each writer’s vision and voice while also focusing on craft, form and style as well as revision processes, all culminating in staged readings of selected student work. 

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  and DRAM 210 , and permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 312 - Advanced Costume Design

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Advanced Costume Design focuses on a more in-depth study and practice of the visual representation of costumes for the stage. Through various practical and theoretical projects, students explore and understand the process of design for a production including the principles and terminology used and how they can both support and enhance a theatrical experience. This course also includes experimentation with various design mediums as well as the creation of both craft and costume construction projects. Kenisha Kelly.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 208  and DRAM 209 .

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 313 - Historic Costume Collection and Exhibition

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    This intensive is created to support both the research and study of clothing as artifacts. Students will have the opportunity to work with objects from the Vassar College Costume Collection  and another community based historical collection. For the Spring of 2020, the Vassar College Costume Collection will collaborate with the historic collection of Locust Grove in Poughkeepsie, NY. Students will conduct research, examine garments, learn various preservation and stabilization techniques for textile preservation, and methods for mounting historic exhibitions. This will include visits to the Locust Grove collection along with a tour of the Morse family home. The intensive will be one unit and will meet once a week. The course will conclude with a full exhibit of the objects in the Palmer Gallery in May of 2020. Kenisha Kelly

    1 2-hour period

    Course Format: INT
  • DRAM 317 - Introduction to Screenwriting

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)


    (Same as FILM 317 ) Study of dramatic construction as it applies to film, plus practice in story development and screenwriting. Joseph Muszynski (a); Shane Slattery-Quintanilla (b).

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 102  or FILM 209 , and permission of the instructor.

    Writing sample required two weeks before preregistration.

    Open only to juniors and seniors.

    One 2-hour period plus outside screenings.

    Course Format: CLS

  • DRAM 320 - Scenography

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    This course explores theatrical production design as a form of visual dramaturgy. Through a study of multiple performance theories throughout the history of theatre, students explore the impact that lighting, scenery, and sound have on the storytelling process. Stephen Jones.

    One 3-hour period; additional lab time required.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 323 - Chekhov’s Short Stories and Plays


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as RUSS 323 ) Close reading of major plays and selected short stories by Anton Chekhov in a seminar format. Focus on the forms and themes of Chekhov’s works, as well as their historical contexts in terms of dramaturgy, reception and artistic legacy. Special attention is given to the spectrum of interpretations of Chekhov’s works in a transnational context. Accompanied by film screenings. Class discussions are in English but Russian Studies students are required to read part of the texts in the original. The department.

    Prerequisite(s): RUSS 210  or above, or permission of the instructor.

    One 3-hour period.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

  • DRAM 324 - European and American Drama

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Historical and critical study of European and American dramatic literature, theory and criticism, playwrights, and/or aesthetic movements.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 221 /DRAM 222 .

    One 2-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 325 - Comedy Tonight


    1 unit(s)


    Samuel Johnson observed that comedy “has been particularly unpropitious to definers,” although Renaissance thinkers confidently identified it. Renaissance theories of comedy determined that the form presented the humorous events that befall ordinary people. Comedies concerned the small misfortunes–without painful consequences–of plebian characters written in colloquial prose. Modern drama has seen the line between comedy and tragedy diminish almost completely as distinctions between the serious and the ludicrous, pain and its absence, have been obliterated. Ionesco wrote that “comic and tragic are merely two aspects of the same situation, and I have now reached the stage when I find it hard to distinguish one from the other.”  This course explores the comic vision expressed in dramatic literature from antiquity to the present day. The class also investigates theories of comedy with special emphasis on what makes people laugh. Theoretical work includes writings by Henri Bergson, Sigmund Freud, Susanne Langer, Northrup Frye, Umberto Eco and others. Plays may include work by Aristophanes, Plautus, Machiavelli, Shakespeare, Moliere, Sheridan, Wilde, Chekhov, Shaw, Brecht, Coward, Ionesco, Fo, Mamet, Albee, Frayn, Ludlum, MacDonagh, Ruhl, etc. 

     

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 221 /DRAM 222 . Enrollment is limited to Juniors and Seniors.

    One 2-hour period.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS

  • DRAM 336 - Seminar in Performance Studies

    Semester Offered: Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Selected topics in Western and non-Western performance traditions and literatures. Weekly assignments include performative writing, and performance labs. The Department.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    One 2-hour period.

  • DRAM 337 - Seminar in Para-theater


    1 unit(s)
    This course explores the theory of performance through an examination of para-theatrical genres and their relation to performance. What is a performance and who constitutes the performance event? Course readings cover street theatre, demonstrations, stand-up comedy, tourism, dance, performance art, terrorism, mediatized and virtual performance, and theories of liveness as well as the performativity of race, class, gender, and sexuality. Students participate in fieldwork investigations and empirical exercises.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 221 -DRAM 222  and permission of the instructor.

    One 2-hour period.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 338 - Contemporary Drama and Theater in the U.S.


    1 unit(s)
    The United States has a strong and vibrant history of regional theater production. Across the country theater companies are producing exciting work and reimagining classic plays for new audiences. This course will take a careful look at the regional theater scene in order to understand what plays and production methods have captured the imagination of the country. Together the class will read plays that have been popular at a number of regional theaters and the reviews of those productions. Students will also study individual regional theaters in depth by researching the plays produced over the last five years and the design concepts used in production. (Possible choices include but are not limited to Steppenwolf, The Arena Stage, The Studio Theater, The Goodman, The Guthrie, Milwaukee Repertory, Actors Theater of Louisville, Seattle Repertory, The Mark Taper Forum, La Jolla Playhouse, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Hartford Stage, the McCarter Theater, Manhattan Theater Club, Playwrights Horizons, American Repertory Theater.) Students will also examine audience demographics and ticket sales, the organizational structure of the theater and its staff, policies for guest artists, the theater’s mission statement, board of directors and financial operations, development practices, community and educational outreach methods, marketing strategy, facilities, resources, and history. Besides a comprehensive knowledge of contemporary theater in the United States, each student will also gain exhaustive knowledge of at least one regional theater.

    Prerequisite(s): DRAM 221 /DRAM 222 .

    Enrollment limited to Juniors and Seniors.

    One 2-hour period

    Not offered in 2019/20.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 339 - Shakespeare in Production

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    (Same as  MRST 339 ) Students in the course study the physical circumstances of Elizabethan public and private theaters at the beginning of the semester. The remainder of the semester is spent in critical examination of the plays of Shakespeare and several of his contemporaries using original staging practices of the early modern theater. The course emphasizes the conditions under which the plays were written and performed and uses practice as an experiential tool to critically analyze the texts as performance scripts. Denise Walen.

    Enrollment limited to Juniors and Seniors.

    One 3-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 340 - Seminar in Performance Studies: Artaud and His Legacy

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)
    This course is designed to introduce students to one of the most influential thinkers about the theater through the lens of Performance Studies. We explore Artaud’s essays, poems, plays, films, radio texts, drawings and letters, and the ways in which his radical proposals have helped to form many of the great performance traditions of the late Twentieth and early Twenty-First Centuries. Some of the artists examined as part of Artaud’s legacy are Tadeusz Kantor, Tatsumi Hijikata, John Cage, Robert Kaprow, Augusto Boal, Robert Wilson, Carolee Schneeman, Meredith Monk, Yvonne Rainer, Richard Schechner, Linda Montano, and Ann Hamilton and Suzanne Lacy. Gabrielle Cody.

    Prerequisite(s): Permission of the instructor.

    One 2-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 342 - Studies in Shakespeare

    Semester Offered: Fall
    1 unit(s)


    (Same as ENGL 342 ) Advanced study of Shakespeare’s work and its cultural significance in various contexts from his time to today. 

     

    Topic for 2019/20a: After Shakespeare: The Poetics and Politics of Adaptation. While Shakespeare has long served as an icon of England and Englishness, he is also the most popular playwright in the non-Anglophone world, and his cultural currency circulates across nations, languages, and media. This course explores the theory and practice of adapting Shakespeare for worldwide audiences. We address issues of authenticity and authority, representations of difference, postcolonial appropriation, and cross-cultural translation. We also reflect critically on our own positions as contemporary readers, viewers, and consumers of Shakespeare. Each seminar member completes an original research or creative project. Leslie Dunn.

    One 2-hour period.

    Course Format: CLS

  • DRAM 361 - Chinese and Japanese Drama and Theatre


    1 unit(s)
    (Same as CHJA 361 ) A study of Chinese and Japanese culture and society through well-known dramatic genres - zaju, chuanqi, kunqu, Beijing Opera, modern Spoken Drama, noh, kyogen, bunraku, kabuki, and New Drama; a close reading of selected plays in English translation. Scheduled films of performances convey Chinese and Japanese theatrical conventions and aesthetics. Discussions focus on major themes based on research presentations. All readings and discussions are in English. Wenwei Du.

    Prerequisite(s): One 200-level course in language, literature, culture, drama or Asian Studies, or permission of the instructor.

    Not offered in 2019/20.

  • DRAM 390 - Senior Project in Drama

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)
    Students may propose to undertake a project in one of the following areas: research in dramatic literature, theater history, performance studies, acting, directing, design, or playwriting. Proposals can range from collaborative ensemble projects to solo work, to more conventional endeavors in specific areas such as research, acting, directing, or designing. The nature of this project is to be determined in consultation with the department. The Department.

    Prerequisite(s): Senior standing and permission of the department. 

    Course Format: CLS
  • DRAM 391 - Senior Production Laboratory

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)


    Participation in the performance, design, or technical aspects of department productions. Students undertake a major assignment with significant responsibility focusing on theory, craft and collaboration. The department.

    Prerequisite(s): Senior standing, 1one unit at the 300-level in Drama, and permission of the department.

    Enrollment limited to seniors.

    May not be taken concurrently with DRAM 390 .

    Unscheduled.

    Course Format: CLS

  • DRAM 392 - Senior Project in Drama

    Semester Offered: Fall and Spring
    1 unit(s)


    Students interested in scenography, acting, directing, dramaturgy collaborate on a project with a faculty member for 6 weeks.

    The Senior Project in Drama is an embodied thesis experience on the 300-level that asks students to deeply engage and realize either a pre-existing text, or devise a production. Both of these experiments are research and collaboration based and require intense mentorship. The Department.

    Prerequisite(s): Senior standing and permission of the department.

    Course Format: INT

  • DRAM 399 - Senior Independent Work

    Semester Offered: Fall or Spring
    0.5 to 1 unit(s)
    To be elected in consultation with the adviser

    Course Format: OTH