91直播

On stage, a man wearing black and white speaks to a woman in a green dress. Two women look on, wearing bronze and orange dresses.

Program Overview

Theater

Staging the stories that express our world.

A scene from Ophelia: A Prism, performed in Wurtzel Theater during 2023 Winter Term. Written by Mieko Gavia 鈥11 and directed by H. Harvey 鈥11.
Photo credit: John Seyfried

If We Don鈥檛 See It, We Make It

Theater is where the community gathers to explore the complexities of the human condition. We embody stories that reflect, reconsider and respond to the world around us. Our work requires cultivating imagination, collaboration, perseverance and a community of artisans working together to realize living moments. If the stories you want to see aren鈥檛 being staged, then dig in and get started. New forms of community demand stories, old stories retold and new ones never before heard. 91直播 Theater is about telling stories by making living art.

An Immersive Workshop Experience within the Liberal Arts

At 91直播, we pride ourselves on a rigorous and supportive theater culture that encourages experimentation, collaboration and the creation of new connections across fields. Our program combines intensive mentorship in acting, directing, playwriting and production, with innumerable opportunities in our production shops and theaters, including the newly completed Eric Baker Nord Performing Arts Complex, home to our three performance spaces. By integrating elements of conservatory training within a broad liberal arts education, 91直播 Theater encourages students to explore their interests while developing meaningful networks with other students, faculty and staff, as well as guest artists and scholars.

Featured Facts and Stories

More than 10 shows per year on 3 stages means ample opportunity to create and experiment

91直播 College Theater employs more than 100 students annually to help realize our season

Faculty-Student Mentorship

Balancing rigorous instruction with  supportive mentorship, our faculty work one-on-one with students to help them find and explore their creative voices while honing their technical craft.

Costume designer and associate professor of theater, Chris Flaharty, working on a costume with a student.

Featured Courses

THEA 174

Lighting Technology and Design

An introduction to lighting technology, terminology and technique. Lectures cover lighting history, equipment, manual and computer controlled lighting systems, distribution systems, electricity, lamps, reflectors, lenses, projection equipment and moving lights. Beginning design processes will also be covered. Students hang and focus lights for actual shows and participate in a crew for a theater, dance or opera production during the semester.

Taught by
Jeremy Benjamin

THEA 240

Arts Management

Students will be introduced to and develop an understanding of the critical areas that comprise Arts Management, including Organization Structure, Management Theory, Budgeting and Fiscal Theories, Marketing and Audience Development. They will also begin to develop the ability to understand and navigate the challenges of competing priorities in today鈥檚 world, specifically, reconciling aesthetic, managerial and economic considerations.

Taught by
Eric Steggall

THEA 264

African American Drama

This class surveys plays written by Black Americans from the post-slavery period through the late 20th century. An overview of the history of African-American performance is followed by reading and discussion of current criticism and a wide selection of plays by writers such as James Baldwin, Lorraine Hansberry, Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones), Adrienne Kennedy, Langston Hughes, Ntozake Shange, August Wilson, and George Wolfe. Requirements include papers, journals and scene work.

Taught by
Caroline Jackson Smith

THEA 313

Advanced Acting: Heightened Movement, Heightened Text

A good actor must know how to effectively engage in heightened verbal and non-verbal conversations on stage. This course goes in depth to perfect a student鈥檚 ability to fully engage and use their voice and body as a tool for creative expression of character, emotion, and relationship onstage. Students will use unique exercises to increase balance, strength, confidence, and range of motion while also learning advanced techniques in stillness, gesture, rhythm, and movement that will inspire creative delivery of emotionally charged and/or poetic texts.

Taught by
Justin Emeka 鈥95

Student Profiles

鈥楻ainbow鈥 Connections

Amara Granderson 鈥17 made her Broadway Debut last year as the Lady in Orange in for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf, a production that went on to be nominated for 7 Tony awards.  After an illustrious career in acting at 91直播, find out how Granderson took the next steps towards fame.

Amara Granderson

Arts Leadership with a Purpose

At 91直播, Henrietta Key 鈥18 majored in theater with a concentration in arts administration and a minor in computer science. She currently serves as the Development Coordinator at the Tony-winning Williamstown Theatre Festival, where she played an integral role in executing a successful $4 million crisis fundraising campaign in the wake of the global pandemic.

Henrietta Key.

A Career in Theater

Arif Silverman 鈥15, was a theater major at 91直播 who took plenty of courses in English, French and classics. He is now a New York-based actor and writer with credits in theater, film, and radio, as well as a children鈥檚 musical and three solo shows.

Arif Silverman.

What does Theater at 91直播 Look like?

Yue Zhao in a gray button-up shirt, wearing glasses.

Yue Zhao 鈥20 performs in the original play SuperheroMan, produced for the Lab Series 鈥 2016.

Photo credit: Courtesy of 91直播 College Theater

People gathering around a grand piano.

Alums John Kander 鈥51 and Ian Axness 鈥09 (at the piano) coach the student Ensemble of The Landing in a reading of this original musical by John and fellow Alum Greg Pierce 鈥00 鈥 2015.

Photo credit: Yevhen Gulenko

Several students standing in rows.

The Movement for Ensemble class works in the new Welch Studio 鈥 2019.

Photo credit: Chris Schmucki 鈥22

Nani Borges and Jad Kaiss.

Nani Borges 鈥19 rhapsodizes for Jad Kaiss 鈥19 in Angels in America: Perestroika 鈥 2018.

Photo credit: John Seyfried

Six students on stage in colorful dresses.

Beautifully expressive storytelling dramatizes Tolstoy鈥檚 Family Happiness 鈥 2016.

Photo credit: John Seyfried

Students in colorful dresses.

The brilliant-hued Ladies move to the rhythms of Ntozake Shange鈥檚 classic choreopoem for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf 鈥 2017.

Photo credit: John Seyfried

Casey McKinney and Paige Baskin.

Casey McKinney 鈥19 and Paige Baskin 鈥19 play a musical scene from Flora, the Red Menace in a Tribute to John Kander for the dedication of our Theater in his name 鈥 2018.

Photo credit: Yevhen Gulenko

Student actors on the stage set.

鈥淲e Are Descended鈥濃擳he Ensemble narrates in song at the opening of Dessa Rose 鈥 2015.

Photo credit: John Seyfried

Theater News

Upcoming Theater Events

Details: Date, Time, and Location

Date

  • Time

  • Location

    Mudd Center, Seeley G. (Terrell Main Library)

Art

Next Steps

Get in touch; we would love to chat.


Exterior view of the Eric Baker Nord Performing Arts Annex.

Photo credit: Courtesy of 91直播 College Department of Theater