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M.F.A. in Acting
The
M.F.A. Acting curriculum at Penn State is a two-year, year round program
that features process oriented actor training, extensive work in Shakespeare,
and exciting preparation for the profession. The program incorporates
an acting residency in London, an intense film/television residency in
Toronto, an audition tour of LORT theatres, and a showcase for theatrical
agents and casting directors in New York City.
The two-year M.F.A, curriculum culminates with the actors serving as the core company for a season of professional productions at Pennsylvania Centre Stage, the Equity (AEA) theatre company associated with Penn State.
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Your Trip Through
the Two Years of M.F.A. Acting at Penn State
We come in contact with you for the first time when you arrange for an
audition/interview with us, either through the University/Resident Theatre
Association (info@urta.com) or by personal
audition at one of the three U/RTA sites (New York, Chicago, Las Vegas)
or by coming to our national audition day at Penn State in February.
When auditioning through U/RTA, an actor pays one fee and is seen by
up to 35 programs that attend the unified auditions. If we are interested
in meeting with you after your audition, these sessions are scheduled
by U/RTA in the hotel that is hosting the auditions in each site. Although we strongly recommend auditioning through U/RTA, some students wish to arrange an individual audition with us. These 15-minute private auditions
require a fee of $25.00 and can be scheduled for the New York and Chicago
sites and in State College by contacting Jessiee Datino at jad461@psu.edu.
From all of the actors we have auditioned and
interviewed in the four sites, we make a “finalist list” of about 20 actors. These actors are invited to Penn State in mid February for callback auditions that also allow the student to meet the
faculty and current students, tour the facilities, see a performance,
and get to know the campus and the area. From this group, we choose a
class of eight actors to whom we make offers of admission. Most often
a class consists of five men and three women. Our class is usually complete
by the beginning of March.
From March until classes begin in late August,
the actors contact each other via e-mail and telephone and most visit
State College to arrange housing and just walk around picturing themselves
as part of the Penn State School of Theatre for the next two years.
So, now imagine yourself walking onto the campus
of Penn State University for your very first day as you begin your two-year
course of study as a member of the M.F.A. Acting Company. As you enter
the Arts Building you greet the seven other members of your class with
whom you have become acquainted by e-mail since you were chosen from hundreds
of other auditions. Congratulations, you made it!!
The Fall Semester begins with the three core
performance classes that will constitute the foundation of your training. All
your teachers share the same acting methodology and although the classes
are identified separately as Voice, Movement, and Acting, they are, in
fact, all acting classes and they reinforce each other. We cannot overstate
the importance of this continuity in the training because it is the key
to giving our actors a “way of working.” Being given a useful
way of approaching your work as an actor, one that enables you to “take
care of yourself” in the professional world is the single most important
aspect of the Penn State M.F.A. in Acting.
The Acting Company moves together through a sequential
progression of skills in each class for two full years.
Fall: Semester
One
1. Thea 820A Acting I: This class introduces the actor to the “reality of doing.” Through structured improvisations, the actor learns how to talk and listen truthfully onstage, work off behavior, personalize the imaginary circumstances, and make strong active choices. Special exercises are incorporated throughout the semester to develop and strengthen the dramatic imagination. In addition, a specific approach to script analysis is explored that prepares the actor for scene work that will be presented at the end of the semester.
2. Thea 820B Movement for Actors: This class
provides the foundation work for the entire movement training sequence.
Concentration is on conditioning, breath and stretch, effort-shaping,
archetype, ensemble awareness, coordination, and mastering a movement
form (T’ai Chi)
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3. Thea 820C Voice and Speech: This class covers
the basics of voice production and forms the foundation of all the work.
Relaxation, breath release and support, resonance, range and articulation
are covered and related to text. Exploration of the vocal demands of text
and language are experienced with connection always to the practical voice
work.
4. Thea 500: This is the first of four courses
that introduce the actor to the dramatic canon, and provides a methodology
for play analysis, and the skills necessary to research and perform a
role.
5. Thea 597C: A course exploring the principles of the Alexander technique in theory and in practice.
Thea 597A: Singing. The focus of the MFA Actors’ Singing class is to provide an introduction to singing which includes vocal technique, vocal health and musical theatre repertoire. There will be class voice and individual appointments
Assistantship Assignment: The actors serve the
School of Theatre in various capacities such as working in the script
library; overseeing an on-line Integrative Arts study section, serving
as an assistant to one of the program heads, etc.
Spring: Semester
Two
1. Thea 821A Acting II: This class extends the process-oriented actor training into further work on scene study from American Realism, with a special emphasis on Point of View and Introductory character work.
2. Thea 821B Movement for Actors II: The focus is on the neutral/universal mask, moving on into the expressive/character mask. The work here is directed towards simplicity in movement; towards using a minimum of effort for maximum effect, and the journey into fully supported physical transformation.
3. Thea 821C Voice and Speech II: This class
is an extension of the voice foundations work of the last semester focusing
on a comprehensive integration of voice and speech awareness through the
Lessac method of training.
4. Thea 505: This is the second of the four dramatic
literature classes, concentrating on the plays of Ancient Greece and Shakespeare.
Assistantship Assignments continue.
Also during the Spring semester, the actors are
eligible for casting in one of the M.F.A. productions or the URTC season.
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Summer: Semester
Three: Part One (Shakespeare)
In this intense summer of the First Year, the actors spend six weeks at
Penn State and five weeks in London. The work begins with an introduction
to the skills needed to perform the plays of William Shakespeare. The
Acting Faculty feels strongly that a sound grounding in Shakespeare allows
the actor to perform successfully in any pre-modern style.
Beginning with sonnets and monologues, the actor
is given foundational training in how to interpret and act the text in
order to be specific and truthful. This prepares them for the in depth
work on voice and text in London.
During these six weeks at Penn State the actors will undertake a theatrical combat intensive in order to gain a basic command of vocabulary and technique.
Assistantships continue: The actors are now eligible for teaching THEA 102, beginning acting for non majors and for positions in Pennsylvania Centre Stage as assigned.
Summer: Semester
Three: Part Two (London Program)
1. Thea 510 Experiential Analysis of Period and Style: While in London,
the M.F.A. actors, and M.F.A. designers visit cultural and historical
sites such as the British Museum, The National Portrait Gallery, Stratford,
numerous cathedrals etc. This course unifies these visits by focusing
on the relationship between these places and the work of theatre artists.
2. Thea 811 Shakespeare Intensive: The Shakespeare
course now moves to London. Taught by our London based faculty member,
Charmian Hoare, this part of the course concentrates on the relationship
between voice and text, continuing with work on the sonnets and monologues.
Included in this studio will be the study of period movement and dance.
3. Thea 590 Colloquium: Actors, directors, designers,
critics and other working British professionals are brought into the classroom
to meet and talk with our students.
Fall: Year Two:
Semester Four
1. Thea 822A Acting III: This course is devoted entirely to analyzing
and performing scenes from Shakespeare.
2. Thea 822B Movement for Actors III: Ritual Theatre - then and now. Using the elements of sound, silence, space, rhythm, imagery, and essential objects and inspired by the works of such directors as Peter Brook and Mary Zimmerman, this course delves into ancient and modern forms of ritual theatre. Class culminates in a ritual theatre presentation.
3. Thea 822C Voice and Speech III: This class
continues the work on voice and classical text established in past semesters
as well as focusing on the vocal demands facing the professional actor.
Exploration of speaking in various theatre spaces, health and welfare
of the voice and the recorded narrative voice are all covered. Continued
work on Shakespeare monologues.
4. Thea 506: This is the third of four dramatic
literature courses, concentrating on the Restoration, Neo-classical, Romantic,
and early Realistic plays (1660-1900)
Actors continue to be eligible for casting in
the M.F.A. productions and the School of Theatre season (URTC).
Assistantships continue. The actors are now eligible for Theatre 100, * teaching beginning acting for non-majors (Theatre 102) and other new opportunities.
Spring: Semester
Five
1. Thea 823A Acting IV: Advanced work in Character and its application to the Modern Classics is explored in this class.
2. Thea 823 B Movement for Actors IV: This course is in two parts. The first part engages the actor in comedic styles such as clown, commedia, farce, satire, and character invention. The second part incorporates these techniques into scenes from plays with comedic and highly specialized physical demands.
3. Thea 823C Voice and Speech IV: This course
consists of a semester's study of stage dialects and accents with attention
to integration of these skills with the demands of acting roles
4. Thea 507: This is the fourth and last dramatic
literature course concentrating on plays and playwrights of the 20th Century.
5. Preparation for the Profession: Thea 825A. This class incorporates the selection of material, rehearsal, and
performance of two separate audition showcases. The first showcase is
an audition tour of LORT theatres in the East and Midwest. The second
event is the New York Showcase for agents and casting directors in New
York City.
In addition to being pre-cast in the M.F.A. Shakespeare
production, actors are also eligible for casting in the URTC season and/or
an M.F.A. project production. Assistantship duties continue.
Summer: Semester
Six
1. Thea 824 : Acting for film and television intensive in Toronto, Canada
2.
Thea 825A: Showcase presentation for agents and casting directors in NYC
3. 825 C Professional Repertory Company: The M.F.A. curriculum culminates
with the actors being part of Pennsylvania Centre Stage, the professional
(AEA) theatre company associated with Penn State. The graduating Second
Year M.F.A. actors are the core resident acting company of a professional
season. Each actor earns AEA weeks and works alongside
seasoned professional actors.
- Theatre 100 is one of the most popular courses at Penn State University.
The M.F.A. actors in the Theatre 100 company rehearse and perform scenes
from the plays read and studied by the students in this introduction
to theatre course.
** Students in the M.F.A. Acting program at Penn
State have three kinds of performance experiences. Beginning in the Spring
semester of the First Year, the Acting faculty chooses plays specifically
to reinforce training. These we call the M.F.A. productions. So at some
time in either or both years, the actors will be cast in a production
directed by the acting teacher who has worked with them in class. This
is a critically important opportunity to tie the curriculum to production
and is one of the most important parts of the M.F.A. Acting program at
Penn State.
The second kind of performance opportunity is
being cast in the School of Theatre production season. We call this the
University Resident Theatre Company (URTC). These productions allow the
M.F.A. actor to work with other faculty directors, and undergraduate actors.
The third kind of performance experience is the
one that culminates the training process. In the summer of the Second
year, the M.F.A. actors are members of Pennsylvania Centre Stage, which
operates under a contract with Actors Equity Association. Centre Stage
is therefore both the last experience as a graduate student and the first
experience in a new stage of the actor’s professional career. This
experience removes the actor from the “safe’ confines of the
training program and places them in a real professional theatre situation
where they work as equals with more experienced actors and with outside
professional directors.
For more information contact:
Jane Ridley, head
M.F.A. Acting and Directing Programs
School of Theatre
The Pennsylvania State University
123 Arts Building
University Park PA 16802-2900
(814) 863-1452
e-mail: theatre-mfa@psu.edu
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