CREATE AT ILLINOIS
MFA ACTING
WHAT TO EXPECT Our professional acting training program includes a flexible model and curriculum, allowing for ensemble building, individual attention, and mentorship. Our goal is to build on strengths and broaden approaches to craft by using our classrooms, rehearsal halls, and theaters as places to risk, process, and reinvent. The tuition-free, three-year graduate acting program leads to a terminal professional degree in theatre performance. Graduate actors meet daily in four-hour sessions with our professionally active faculty and guest artists including acting, movement, voice, and speech. Students spend three years in residence, in approximately 12 hours of class each semester. MFA actors will also have the opportunity to teach and co-teach classes at the undergraduate level, working closely with theatre faculty on pedagogy, planning, and classroom practices. At the conclusion of each semester, faculty instructors provide
comprehensive individual evaluations of each student’s progress. MFA actors will also have opportunities to audition and form relationships with Casting Directors, Directors, Playwrights, and Theatre Leaders from companies across the country. Recent audition guests have included NYC Casting Directors Rob Decina (CBS) and Pat McCorkle, and representatives from Steppenwolf, The Goodman, Chicago Shakespeare, Chautauqua Theatre Company, Milwaukee Rep, American Players Theatre, Utah Shakespeare Festival, Illinois Shakespeare Festival, Montana Shakespeare Festival, St. Louis Shakespeare, and others. Guest Artists include Playwrights Luis Afaro, Nancy Garcìa Loza, Kristen Joy Bjorge, and José Rivera Directors Chuck Smith, Kimberly Senior, Barbara Pitts McAdams, Myeongsik Jason Jang, and Madeline Sayet; and Actors Rainn Wilson, Rutina Wesley, Behzad Dabu, and Lindsay Smiling.
WHAT TO EXPECT
CURRICULUM AND PERFORMANCES play, period, and style. Electives may be taken in theatre history, dramatic literature, playwriting, and directing. Performance opportunities occur in productions of the Department of Theatre on the stages of the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts and the Armory Theatre, our student-produced black box space. Graduate actors will also have the option to appear in a showcase for industry professionals at the end of their 3rd year.
CURRICULUM
During their time here, MFA acting students will work with texts from the full scope of dramatic literature, with an emphasis on recentering the canon. In addition to language-rich and contemporary works, actors will also be exposed to solo performance, devised theatre, contact improvisation, clowning, and stage combat. Research and study accompany performance in order to stimulate fresh interpretations and a thorough understanding of each
ACTING COURSES
ACTING COURSES Acting students receive credit for performances in the productions of the Department of Theatre and are encouraged to seek summer acting work beyond the campus to support their classroom learning. MFA actors have been hired to work at The Alliance Theatre, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, St. Louis Shakespeare, American Players Theatre, Utah Shakespearean Theatre, Illinois Shakespeare Festival, Montana Shakespeare Festival, Arkansas Shakespeare Festival, Theatre at Monmouth, and Chautauqua Theatre Company.
ACTING COURSES
MFA Acting classes meet Monday through Friday afternoons. Each semester includes physical and vocal preparation, acting scene work, skill development in voice, speech, and movement. Students immerse themselves in work on heightened language texts, contemporary plays, and stylistic challenges. Emotional connection and effective communication are central to the development of voice and speech skills. Movement training includes a layered approach exploring mask work, clowning, stage combat, and the development of effective practice for dynamic performance.
ACTING FOUNDATIONS Exercises and scene work focus on identifying and strengthening aspects of acting practice including the building of a creative ensemble. SOLO PERFORMANCE Actors write and perform an original solo performance piece. ACTING IN REALISM Actors work on approaches to characterization drawn from realistic plays of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. ACTING IN HEIGHTENED LANGUAGE & SHAKESPEARE Students explore the texts of Shakespeare and contemporaries from the global majority with attention to language and verse, character and action, passion and size. ACTING FOR THE CAMERA Techniques of acting in commercials, TV Film and modern media.
VOICE & SPEECH
HISTORY
MFA Acting students select at least one class in Theatre History and/or Dramatic Literature. Courses vary from semester to semester and include subjects in World Theatre, Musical Theatre and Opera, Classical Drama, Shakespeare, AfricanAmerican Theatre, Latinx Dramatists, and Asian-American Theatre.
MOVEMENT
ELECTIVES
Students experience neutral mask, clowning, physical acting as well as extensive training in all areas of stage combat leading to certification test with the Society of American Fight Directors. Theatre History and Dramatic Literature Courses Society of American Fight Directors.
The Department of Theatre offers courses in Playwriting, Directing, Dramaturgy, and Arts Management. Many other courses are offered from departments beyond the Department of Theatre. For more information please contact Tom Mitchell at tomitche@illinois.edu.
THEATRE STUDIES
Based in the Linklater Voice method, classes focus on relaxation, breathing, resonance, range and articulation as well the integration of the voice and the imagination with the text. Students also explore phonetics, heightened texts, dialects and voice-over techniques for audiobooks and animation.
ASSISTANTSHIPS Students recruited with assistantships may expect three years of support so long as they make satisfactory progress in their studies.
ASSISTANTSHIPS
The Department of Theatre sets aside Graduate Assistantships for MFA Acting students each year. In the current academic year, graduate assistants received a total financial package of at least $23,975 for a level 1, ¼-time assistantship. This package includes a full tuition waiver (up to the 60 credits required) as well as the following benefits: • Tuition Waiver • Medical, Dental, and Vision insurance • Annual Stipend of $9,500–$12,500 • Multiple Grant/Fellowship opportunities
THEATRE.ILLINOIS.EDU Department of Theatre 4-122 Krannert Center for the Performing Arts 500 S Goodwin Ave Urbana, IL 61801
w theatre.illinois.edu