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 About RWU Theatre 

 

 

 

Theatre graduate Zack Gregus sings the National Anthem at the 2006 commencement.

 

Theatre graduate Rebecca Cornell sings the National Anthem at the 2007 commencement.

 
 
 

Theatre graduate Erin McAvoy delivers the
Student Address at the 2008 commencement.

 

 

The Department of Performing Arts consists of three programs: Theatre; Music; and Dance and Performance Studies.  Theatre and Dance and Performance Studies each offer a major and minor; Music offers a minor.

The theatre program was founded by Professor William Grandgeorge, who has been a part of Roger Williams College and University since 1969. Before moving into the Performing Arts Center in 1986, the theatre program's performances were held in the Coffee House Theatre (now a classroom in the FCAS building).

The Theatre program offers four mainstage productions each academic year (two in the Fall and two in the Spring).  A usual season features a musical, a classical play, a modern play, and a contemporary play. 

The program produces an annual "Freshman Show."   This is traditionally the first production of the year and the cast and crew are usually comprised of only freshmen and new students. 

In the spring, the program also produces several "Senior Projects."  These are fully mounted productions.  A senior acting project is directed by a faculty member.  Senior directing projects are directed by seniors while senior design projects can be either a student or a faculty directed production.

The student organization, Stage Company, also produces once a semester.  The fall offerings range from full-length plays, to one-act plays, to shorter plays, to a variety of performance types.  All Stage Company productions are supervised by a member of the faculty.

Each academic year the program takes the students to three or four local professional productions at places like Trinity Repertory, 2nd Story Theatre, and American Repertory Theatre.  After the performance we meet for food, drink, and a discussion of the performance led by a member of the faculty.

At the end of each academic year the program conducts mock auditions and interviews in which all theatre students should participate. Actors present a professional audition while directors and designers offer conceptual plans for a hypothetical production (the faculty chooses a title prior to the interview) before the faculty. Students are then given constructive criticism by the theatre faculty.