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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Retired August 31, 2006. Offers additional introductory academic experience by exploring course-related topics in greater depth with the professor. Available only to courses approved by the University Honors Program.
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1.00 Credits
Retired August 31, 2006. Offers additional introductory academic experience by exploring course-related topics in greater depth with the professor. Available only to courses approved by the University Honors Program.
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1.00 Credits
Retired August 31, 2006. Offers additional introductory academic experience by exploring course-related topics in greater depth with the professor. Available only to courses approved by the University Honors Program.
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4.00 Credits
Explores the history of the theatre and its development in the West, focusing on Greece, Rome, Medieval Europe, Golden Age Spain, Elizabethan and Stuart England, Italian Renaissance, and the spread of Italianate forms throughout Europe during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
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4.00 Credits
Traces the development of the American musical from _The Black Crook_ to the present. Considers the role of musical theatre as both entertainment and serious art form through an examination of script, score, dance, and design. Includes works by composers and lyricists such as Rodgers and Hammerstein, Lerner and Loewe, Cole Porter, Bock and Harnick, Leonard Bernstein, and Stephen Sondheim.
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4.00 Credits
Covers seminal playwrights of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries whose works have had a major impact on both modern drama and theatrical methods of production.
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4.00 Credits
Traces the historical development of theatre in America, as well as its role as a social institution, economic enterprise, and art form.
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4.00 Credits
Aids the theatre practitioner in developing the skills necessary for analyzing scripts in preparation for production. Focuses on dramatic theory and structure and theatrical techniques that enable an actor, director, designer, or playwright to uncover the problems of translating theory into practice.
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4.00 Credits
Offers students the opportunity to develop a series of dramatic dialogues that culminate in the writing of a one-act play. Uses a workshop format.
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4.00 Credits
Examines the current state of commercial, regional, and other noncommercial theatre in the United States, using readings, lectures, reports, and weekly visits to theatre productions in the area. Explores through lectures the background of these types of theatre in twentieth-century American and European theatre.
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