Wednesday, July 27, 2011

What Do Theatre Majors Do?

Many of my students have expressed interest to me in becoming a professional actor someday, and furthering their theatre education by majoring in theatre when they reach college age. However, very few of them seem to really understand what that entails. In fact, I didn’t really myself until my parents and I started researching different schools. Below, you’ll find my account of what being a theatre major at Butler University is like. I hope this will help to demystify the world of higher theatre education.
To get into a theatre program, most colleges and universities require you to audition. You will perform one of two memorized monologues, depending on the school, and most likely interview with several professors, attend a theatre class or workshop, and meet with students already in the theatre program.
Once accepted, you will devote a great deal of time to performing in addition to your course load, which means that being a theatre major is very time consuming. You will probably be required to audition for a few mainstage shows per year, which are produced by the university and your professors. If you don’t make these productions—even if you do—you will most likely be required to do some sort of crew to help with the show. Crew hours can actually be very fun in addition to being extremely educational.
As first and second year theatre majors, younger students who don’t make mainstages often build up experience and establish reputations as good performers in student shows. These shows are directed and designed by students, but since your professors will almost always attend the performances of these shows, they’re a great way to get your face out there. They’re also a wonderful way to make friends.
If your school is by a big city, like Butler is, than you may also have to opportunity to audition at professional theatres, and begin your career as an actor while you are still in school. In addition, many students intern in fields such as stage management, artistic design, and dramaturgy.
When you aren’t working crew or rehearsing, you will be doing homework and preparing for classes. Most schools have academic requirements for all their students, including theatre majors, but you will also attend theatre classes. Courses include classes like Acting, Voice for the Actor (a study in elocution and projection), and Stage Movement (a practical study of how the actor can employ their body in their work), but also ones that focus on design elements like Costume Design, Lighting Design, and Production Fundamentals. While most theatre classes involve practical, hands-on work, students may find themselves behind desks, involved in classroom discussions with professors and fellow theatre majors in courses like the History of Theatre and the Idea of Theatre.
All in all, being a theatre major is hard work, but it is also incredibly rewarding. You become a part of a community of peers and make friends you will have for the rest of your life. Professors have so much to offer and serve as mentors who will shape the kind of actor and person you become. Don’t worry—if for some reason, you decide not to major in theatre, most schools allow non-majors to audition for many, if not all, shows. If you want to do theatre, you can always find a way!
Note: Musical theatre majors would have a different audition process and course load that of course includes singing and dancing lessons.
Guest blogger Shannon Campe is imProv Playhouse’s Resident Dramaturge. She has worked as both a teacher and an actress during her ten years at iP, where credits include The Glass Menagerie (Amanda), Blithe Spirit (Elvira), and Alice in Wonderland (Alice.) She is currently studying Theatre and Creative Writing at Butler University in Indianapolis.

No comments:

Post a Comment