Dr. Patricia Ybarra is the President of the Association for Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE) as well as the Chair of the Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies at Brown University. In response to recent events on campus and across the country, Dr. Ybarra wrote the following note to the ATHE community, which we are pleased to share here.
Brown University Theatre presents The Red Paint, written and directed by Nikteha Salazar ’16. This new one-act play transcends time and space in an effort to explore the Chicano experience over many generations. Playing at Leeds Theatre on the main campus at Brown University from December 3-6.
Two TAPS alums, and one current graduate student, have been named among the winners of this year's American Society for Theatre Research (ASTR) awards.
Theatre director, digital media artist, and Brown University alumnus, Chi-wang Yang ’99, will talk about his work with co-collaborators from CLOUD EYE CONTROL at Grant Recital Hall, Wednesday, November 18 at noon.
Brown University Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies this week confirmed Kira Hawkridge as the final director for the 2015-16 performance season. Joining Brown Theatre’s roster of all women directors for the season, Hawkridge will welcome in the Spring with a production of Shakespeare’s comedy, A Midsummer Night’s Dream (March 3-6 & 10-13, Stuart Theatre).
It is with great sadness that the Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies shares the news of the death of John Lucas, Senior Lecturer Emeritus, who passed away on August 29, 2015.
Performance in the Virtual World is a multimedia production course at Brown University that examines the place and purpose of live performance in an age of electronic arts and media.
The Road Weeps, The Well Runs Dry, a play written by Brown University Assistant Professor Marcus Gardley, presents a story of spirituality, identity, and migration.
The Princess Grace Foundation USA has named Megan Sandburg-Zakian '00 as one of the winners of its 2015 Princess Grace Awards, which recognizes artists in across multiple disciplines.
Jen Silverman '06 and Max Posner '11 were both named as winners of The New York Community Trust Helen Merrill Playwright Award in the category of Emerging Playwrights this week.
Ralph Lemon, an internationally acclaimed artist whose medium spans dance, cinema, and writing, came to Brown on October 6 to perform at Ashamu Dance Studio.
Brown alum and TAPS concentrator, James Flynn '11, recently published an article in the Yale Law Journal titled Interbranch Removal and the Court of Federal Claims: Agencies in Drag. As a graduate of Yale Law School, Flynn is currently channeling his passion for legal studies into a strong law career at a firm named Covington & Burling in Washington, D.C.
Over the summer break, the graduate student body of the Department of Theatre Arts & Performance Studies, as well as alums of the program, have shone, winning recognition in the form of honors, awards, prizes, and fellowship.
Choreographer, director, and visual artist Ralph Lemon merges old and new material from his publications, performances and exhibitions in a lecture-performance at Brown University’s Ashamu Dance Studio, 83 Waterman Street, Providence on Tuesday, October 6, 2015 at 6pm.
Brown University’s Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies (TAPS) and Sock & Buskin are proud to announce the lineup for its 2015-2016 season, featuring diverse dance performances and a selection of classic, comedic, and cutting-edge plays.
Palestinian dancer and choreographer, Farah Saleh, joins Brown as an Adjunct lecturer at the department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies and MES, Visiting Scholar at the Pembroke Center.
Michal Kobialka Professor of Theatre in the Department of Theatre Arts & Dance at the University of Minnesota visits Brown on October 2 for two lectures commemorating the centenary of Tadeusz Kantor's birth.
TAPS graduate, Max Posner '11 was interviewed recently by Alexis Soloski in The New York Times in an story, "A Playwright With an Absurdist Style, on the Lure of Basements". In Max Posner’s melancholy comedy “Judy,” set in the year 2040, the theater no longer exists. “What’s a play?” an 11-year-old girl asks her aunt. The aunt struggles to remember. “People recited words to each other in the same order, in the same outfits, night after night,” she offers.
The Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies is delighted to announce that Julie Adams Strandberg will receive a Pell Award in June 2015 for Distinguished Achievement in the Arts.
Congratulations are in order for Emeritus Professor Don Wilmeth who has been awarded the 2015 The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Alumni Acheivement Award.
Eleven students from the Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies link their classwork to community in a voice, movement and text workshop for over 30 Providence school teachers and students.
The Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies at Brown University proudly presents You Are the Circus written and directed by final year M.F.A, Playwriting student, Katie Pearl ’15 MFA. Pearl’s thesis production will take place at the Pell Chafee Performance Center on May 14 – 17 as part of the extended Writing Is Live festival.
The AntiGravity Theatre Project presents the latest iteration of the immersive, multimedia performance that is Time’s Up: Love, Friendship and Transformation Across the Fourth Dimension at Brown University Theatre.
The Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies shares the sense of bereavement and loss felt around campus at the death of Hyoun Ju Sohn earlier this week.
As part of its commitment to community engagement and engaged scholarship, the Department of Theatre Arts & Performance Studies at Brown University is hosting a series of community conversations around the upcoming production, 410[GONE].
410[GONE], a new play by Brown University alum, Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig ’05, uses comedy to take a look at the limits of love and how we release loved ones when they are gone.
Last month American Dance Legacy Initiative, in partnership with Artists and Scientists as Partners (ASaP), hosted a lecture/demonstration as part of their annual Mini-Fest which brought together dancers, students, educators, and general audiences to discuss and celebrate America’s rich dance heritage together.
Congratulations are due to Assistant Professor Marcus Gardley, who has won the 2014 Will Glickman Playwright Award for his play, "The House That Will Not Stand."
In Wrestling Jerusalem, San Francisco-based playwright and performer, Aaron Davidman, channels twelve characters with distinct perspectives on the Middle East conflict.
The Department of Theatre Arts and Performance Studies at Brown University proudly announces the sixth annual Writing is Live festival, a presentation of new writing for performance by writers in Brown’s graduate Playwriting M.F.A. program.