Bachelor of Arts in Theatre and Performance Studies

Accredited by the National Association of Schools of Theatre, the Department of Theatre and Performance Studies at ʯÁñÖ±²¥ is located near metro Atlanta. We offer a Bachelor of Arts degree in Theatre and Performance Studies with concentrations in Acting, Musical Theatre, Design Technology, and Performance Studies. Our mission is to cultivate scholar-artists with an array of transferable skills who will pursue graduate studies, careers in professional theatre, and/or employment in related fields after graduation. 

In this program, you will learn from an exceptional faculty who are professional artists in metro Atlanta and beyond, as well as published scholars. Our small classes provide individualized instruction and combine the breadth of a liberal arts education with the depth of professional training in the disciplines of theatre and performance studies. Our innovative production season includes classic and experimental material ranging from published plays to adaptations of literature, storytelling, performance art, performance ethnography, comedy improv, musical theatre, and spectacle performances. Every student enjoys multiple opportunities to perform, design, direct, and/or write material, depending upon his/herpassion. 

Other signature elements of the program include education abroad programs, global performance tours, internships with professional theatre and performance organizations in metro Atlanta, and the development of world premieres alongside faculty and professional theatre partners.

students on stage
Department of Theatre and Performance Studies students, left to right: Nakia Lambert, Dani Ramos, Michelle Lee, Mack Scales, and Adrian Mendoza-Trejo; image by Lauren Liz Photo.

The Curriculum:

Theatre and Performance Studies majors take 15 credits of lower-division foundational courses in theatre, performance studies, acting, and stagecraft. At the 3000- and 4000-level, students take a core of classes including acting, visual imagination, performing literature, play analysis, performing culture or performance art, and theatre and performance history and theory. Additionally, students select a three-course concentration choosing from emphases in acting, performance (including storytelling, performance art, directing, adaptation of texts for the stage, and dramaturgy), design/technology, or musical theatre. An applied/professional sequence of six (6) credits, which is individually designed in cooperation with the student’s advisor, may include combinations of internships, performance credits, co-ops, directed studies, international study, practicum courses, and/or service-learning components. The theatre and performance studies degree culminates in a senior seminar that focuses on planning for graduate studies or careers in theatre and related fields. 

View/Download Graduation Requirements

View Academic Maps . 

Concentrations

Acting

In the acting concentration, students explore a range of performance techniques and styles by applying them to classical and contemporary texts, as well as creation of original work.  Acting students will train to grow as performers, and as artists, thinkers, makers, viewers, and citizens of the whole theatrical arena.  

The concentration features holistic physical, intellectual, and aesthetic training to fulfill learning outcomes of professional preparation, academic rigor, and commitment to the liberal arts framework. The course offerings each semester strive to provide a balance between acting, voice, and physical training opportunities.

The Department’s annual production season offers numerous and diverse opportunities for students to apply skills acquired in their classes to performances and productions. Students are encouraged to use their related studies to expand their knowledge in dance, singing, directing, writing, composing, dramaturgy, design, and various other topics to supplement their training in theatre.

Design and Technology

Welcome to the Department of Theatre and Performance Studies' Design and Technology concentration at ʯÁñÖ±²¥, conveniently located near metro Atlanta. We are glad you are here! 

As scholar artists, we embrace the study and creative practice of design and technology from an analytical and reflective perspective. Whether it is Design, Stage Management, or Theatre Technology, we are committed to helping you thrive and achieve your professional goals. 

On this page, you will find essential information regarding our concentration, including course requirements, four-year roadmap, and faculty and staff credentials. This page will also connect you to important industry resources and our Alumni Club of TPS graduates who are working professionally in design/tech.  

Choosing a Design and Technology concentration for your B.A. degree in Theatre and Performance Studies will afford you many exciting opportunities during--and beyond--your career here at ʯÁñÖ±²¥.

student drawings of costumes for rent

Design and Technology Student Projects

Design and Technology Resources

  • James Maloof

    Production Designer


    Katie Marks

    Production Manager, Disney Parks Live Entertainment


    Matthew L. McCoy

    Creative Design Director, Executive Consultant of Theme-Based Destination Experiences


    Margot Potter

    Writer, Actress, Vocalist, Design Expert, and On-Camera Talent; Freelance artist


    Ben Rawson

    Lighting Designer


    Erik Reagan Teague

    Costume Designer


    Ben Tilley

    Lighting Supervisor, Philadelphia Theatre Company


  • Regional, National and International Organizations

    •  (USITT): an organization that connects performing arts design and technology communities to ensure a vibrant dialog among practitioners, educator, and students
    • (USA): an American nationwide labor union that aimed to protect craft standards, working conditions and wages for the entertainment and decorative arts industries
    •  (SETC): a nonprofit membership organization serving a diverse constituency across 10 states in the southeast region of the United States.
    •  (IATSE): a labor union, representing the technicians, artisans, and craftspersons in the entertainment industry:
    •  (OISTAT): a global network of theatre makers celebrating design and technology in live performance

    Design Competitions and Exhibitions

    Scene Design-Tech Resources

    Publications

    •  (TD&T): a publication of USITT
    • : a British journal of theatre technology and design

    Theatrical Supplies

    • : a manufacturer and major supplier of scenic and lighting equipment, tools, and materials
    •  a major supplier of theatrical fabrics and materials for entertainment industry

    Digital Drafting and Rendering Programs

    • : a drafting and modeling program popular in the entertainment industry
    • : another most widely used drafting and 3D modeling program
    • : a major program for theatrical renderings

    Lighting Design-Tech Resources

    Foundations:

    •  (mentorship/internship) 

    History of lighting design in US theater with paperwork and plot examples

    Consoles/Gear: Training Videos and info from the leader of theatrical consoles in the US. Also, what we use at ʯÁñÖ±²¥.

    •  (EOS Family Consoles) 

    Programs/Virtual Light Labs: Play with color and angle of light in a 3D environment (web-based)

    Costume Design-Tech Resources

    Stage Management Resources

Musical Theatre

The musical theatre concentration provides students with fundamental training in each of the areas of musical theatre: acting, voice (solo and group singing), dance, music theory, and musical theatre history and literature.  Beyond that foundation, students can choose from an array of offerings that support their training for a career in musical theatre. Each spring, the department hosts a Musical Theatre Showcase for which the students are invited to perform their best work of the year in an evening for the public or showcase a special musical theatre project. The Department’s season includes a musical every year (sometimes two) to ensure that students can apply skills developed in the classroom to a full production.  The musical theatre concentration also offers advanced classes that allow students to explore writing for musical theatre, composition, audition techniques, various styles and genres of musical theatre performance, and special topics. Students are urged to use their related studies courses to supplement the basic courses with additional study in acting, voice, movement, dance, directing, writing, composing, dramaturgy, design, and other theatre special topics.

photo of musical theatre perfomers on beach
The Department of Theatre and Performance Studies will present "Once on This Island" Nov. 2 - Nov. 12. Students, left to right, above: Zach Tellez, Coriana Rayner, Devin Dent, and Alisa Milan; image by Lauren Liz Photo.

 

Performance Studies

Thank you for your interest in the Performance Studies concentration in the Department of Theatre and Performance Studies at ʯÁñÖ±²¥, conveniently located near metro Atlanta. 

What is Performance Studies? 

Performance studies examines and interrogates both conspicuously staged artistic performances and everyday cultural performances. Artistic performances are performances marked and understood as art: solo performance, performance art, performances of literature, theatrical storytelling, plays, and performance poetry are all examples of this sort of performance. This category considers performance as an art form.

Cultural performances include those events embedded in everyday life in which a culture's values are displayed for their perpetuation: rituals such as parades, religious ceremonies, and community festivals as well as conversational storytelling, performances of social and professional roles, and individual performances of race, gender, sexuality, and class. This category considers performance as a way of studying how people move through the world as individuals, construct identity, and build community together.

Performance Studies is also keenly interested in the intersection between these categories. For instance, one might study the performances of a particular culture and turn that study into a staged performance about that culture. Cultural performances influence the kinds of artistic performances that a culture creates and, in turn, those artistic performances influence cultural performances. Therefore, Performance Studies embraces the creative process of making art as well as the critical process of analyzing performances. Performance Studies first emerged as its own field of study in the last decades of the twentieth century informed by insights from anthropology, sociology, theatre, oral interpretation, communication studies, literary criticism, cultural studies, ethnography, folkloristics, mythological studies, and psychology.

Today, performance scholars contribute to these diverse fields of study.  The program in Theatre and Performance Studies here at ʯÁñÖ±²¥ features performance as an art form, as a field of study, and as a method of inquiry (or a way of knowing) in classes throughout the major. The entire program embraces the idea of performance praxis, embodying theory through performance.

image of students sitting on stairs and laughing

The B.A. in Theatre and Performance Studies degree features several required courses in Performance Studies as well as courses that integrate the scholarship of Theatre Studies and Performance Studies, including:

  • Introduction to Performance Studies
  • Performing Culture
  • Performance Art
  • Performing Literature
  • Performing Folklore and Fairytales
  • Performing Classical Myth
  • Performing World Myth
  • Performing Personal Narrative
  • Adapting and Staging Literary Texts
  • History and Theory I: Ancient through Renaissance Theatre & Performance
  • History and Theory II: Neoclassical through Romantic Theatre & Performance
  • History and Theory III: Victorian through Contemporary Theatre & Performance
  • American Performance Traditions

Our program offers a Concentration in Performance Studies, which, in addition to some of the courses above, includes:

  • Performance Composition
  • Dramaturgy
  • Directing
  • Directing Styles

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