Year in Review 2021-2022

Page 33

NEWS: ACADEMICS

N E W I T H A C A C O L L E G E O P E RA D I R E C T I O N P R O G RA M T O R U N F R O M JA N UA R Y T O M A Y

A

BY CLARE SHANAHAN

n opera direction professional certificate program, which was started in January 2022 and will continue until May, allows participants to become certified in opera direction. The program was created by Dawn Pierce, associate professor in the Department of Music Performance, and is being taught in collaboration with director Chuck Hudson. Hudson has worked around the world directing opera, designing opera programs, working with young performers and teaching opera skills, according to his website. Bea Goodwin, opera stage director and librettist, said direction can be divided into two roles, with preparation serving as one job and work with a cast and team as another. She said she has to prepare everything about the production at home. Following this, Goodwin said she conducts production meetings, gives blocking and works with casts to develop characterizations. She said all of this happens before the show moves to a stage, where the director must plan and check everything and adjust for changes based on staging, costumes and props. “It’s all of these little things that you would never think of that you have to plan for and overly plan for,” Goodwin said. The program requires participants to complete two sessions to receive a certification. The first session started virtually Jan. 24 and will conclude May 6 with the second session taking place on campus from May 18 to 28, according to the college’s website. Christina Moylan, associate provost for graduate and professional studies, said that this program was in development for over a year. It gives the college an opportunity to step into a new space in the opera world and reach a unique audience, Moylan said. “[The program] taps into expertise and resources that I think are strengths for this institution, and it does so during times of year where those resources maybe aren’t being used in the same way by other programs here at the college,” Moylan said. This program is an addition to a long history of music and performance education at the college. The college opened originally as a music conservatory and offered theater arts as another of its earliest programs, according to the college’s website. Today, however, the college is planning to cut four master’s in music programs, as previously reported by The Ithacan. Pierce said the program is open to up to 20 participants and anyone over the age of 18 is welcome to apply, but it is designed for people who already hold a background in theater or opera. The program is not exclusive to Ithaca College students, and Pierce said she sees a benefit for many kinds of people in the theater world. “I thought about … high school teachers who maybe wanted to do an operetta but had only done musical theater or a straight theater director that really wanted to get into opera but didn’t really know what’s different in opera than straight theater,” Pierce said. Typically, individuals who want to get involved in opera direction must either already have industry connections and be taken on as an assistant director or complete an additional college degree, Pierce said. Goodwin said that very few direction-specific college programs exist. Currently in the U.S. there are seven undergraduate programs offering degrees in stage direction and one master’s program, according to Broadway World. Goodwin said her path to stage direction involved attending drama school for theater with a concentration in acting at Wroxton College in Banbury, England, an abroad institution of Fairleigh Dickinson University in Teaneck, New Jersey, and working with friends to create pieces until she was presented with an opportunity to direct an onstage adaptation of “The

Fall of the House of Usher.” She said this experience is a fairly typical one. Pierce said she was looking to create something that is more easily accessible to people who want to get involved in opera direction. “I think that Ithaca is a really good fit for it because we have a tremendously strong School of Music and a really strong theater program, right. We have amazing programs in both, amazing faculty in both and beautiful facilities in both,” Pierce said. There is currently no opera program at the college, but the School of Music offers courses in opera, as well as annual productions and an opera workshop program that gives students an overview of contemporary opera and ends with a production. The curriculum for the virtual session is divided into distinct sections including pre-production and preparation, staging rehearsals, technical rehearsals, performance in a theater and postproduction review. In each of these sections students learn their roles as directors and how to handle each step of the production process. The second session will consist of a residential workshop, giving participants an opportunity to apply their skills in the direction of a scene. The second session will run in tandem with an opera studio program. This program gives singers an opportunity to develop both stage and singing skills through masterclasses, lectures and practical performance, according to the college’s website. In addition to participants of the direction program, opera studio students will work with a musical coach and conductor to develop their skills. Pierce said the decision to run both programs at the same time will give participants in both the opportunity to collaborate with individuals skilled in performance and directing, respectively. “It’s a really exciting opportunity for them all to work together,” Pierce said.

Dawn Pierce, associate professor in the Department of Music Performance, created the college’s new opera direction program that started on Jan. 24, 2022. Kalysta Donaghy-Robinson/The Ithacan

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Football Head Coach Leaves

4min
page 146

New Football Head Coach

3min
pages 147-151

Women’s Cross Country Captain 144–145 Equestrian Club

10min
pages 143-145

Gender Equity Gap

5min
page 142

Club Sports

5min
page 140

Editorial: Limited Club Sports Funding

4min
page 141

Basketball Guard 1,000 Career Points

3min
page 136

Sprinter Breaks 60-Meter Dash Record

4min
page 135

Football Kicker Travels Country

6min
page 134

All-Americans

5min
page 133

Editorial: 63rd Cortaca Jug Sparks Concerns

5min
page 131

IC Athletes Attend NCAA Convention

4min
page 132

Shang-Chi

3min
page 116

Cortaca Jug 2022 Venue

3min
page 130

Tick, Tick ... Boom

3min
page 115

Dune

3min
page 114

Super Hearts Day Nerf Event 104–105 State and National Parks

17min
pages 103-107

Encanto

3min
page 113

Editorial: Cons of NFTs

4min
page 111

NFT Trend

3min
page 110

The Milkstand

5min
pages 108-109

Campus Hip-Hop Culture

4min
page 102

Astrology

5min
page 96

School of Music Mental Health Group 98–99 Via’s Cookies

10min
pages 97-101

Pellet Gun Shootings

5min
pages 91-95

Shots-Fired Incident

3min
page 89

Pandemic Budget Cuts 86–91 SAFETY

5min
pages 85-86

Spring Semester Reopening

4min
page 84

Two Swastikas Discovered

5min
page 87

Testing Options

4min
page 83

Surveillance Testing

3min
page 82

Editorial: Mask Mandate Removal

4min
page 81

Indoor Mask Mandate Dropped

4min
page 80

Quarantine Regulations

4min
page 79

Booster Shots

4min
page 78

Synagogue Hostage Crisis Response

5min
page 72

In-Person Fall Classes

4min
page 77

Afghan Refugees

9min
pages 73-76

Reproductive Rights Rally 68–69 Ithaca Decarbonization Plan

20min
pages 67-71

Trader K’s Closing

4min
page 66

Acting Mayor Laura Lewis

4min
page 65

Gentrifcation

4min
page 64

Day of Learning: Grappling with Antisemitism

5min
pages 61-62

Mayor Svante Myrick Resigns

4min
page 63

Campus Climate Initiative

5min
page 60

Commentary: College Fails Students of Color

6min
page 59

Understaffng

5min
page 57

Health Support & Services

4min
page 58

Mouse Sightings

4min
page 56

Commentary: Free Public Transportation

5min
page 55

Inflation

2min
page 54

Center for IDEAS Director

8min
pages 48-50

Zine Addresses Rape Culture

4min
page 52

Student Veteran Support

4min
page 51

Presidential Search

3min
page 44

President La Jerne Cornish

4min
page 46

AAUP Calls for Transparency

5min
page 45

Reaction to 10th President

5min
page 47

Dean Searches

12min
pages 41-43

Editorial: Music Theater School Merger

5min
page 35

Alumni Donations

5min
page 31

Opera Director Program

4min
page 33

Commentary: Course Registration

10min
pages 37-40

Tuition Increase

3min
page 36

Sakai to Canvas

4min
page 32

August & September

2min
page 11

Academic Program Prioritization Phase Two

4min
page 34
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