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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
For Theatre Major and Minors and Non-Majors. Students are introduced to basic makeup application techniques for stage using basic facial structure, highlight and shadow, and color theory to create the most commonly required makeups for stage including corrective, aging, character makeup, facial hair, and simple special effects. Prerequisites: Full Major or Minor status in Theatre OR Instructor Consent.
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3.00 Credits
This course continues the exploration of the acting process through monologues and scenes, focusing on the exploration of the self in creating character. Prerequisites: "C" or better in THEA 1220 OR Instructor Consent.
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2.00 Credits
Introduces the fundamentals of movement and their relationship to acting through the lens of Alexander Technique. Focus is on body alignment, awareness, placement, centering, and being grounded in space. Prerequisites: "C" or better in THEA 1220 OR Instructor Consent.
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5.00 Credits
For Theatre Majors and Minors. Theatre Core Requirement. An introduction to the art of scenography, including the ways in which theatre artists communicate visually, and the way audiences read information in a theatrical design. This course has a lab component.
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3.00 Credits
For Theatre Majors and Minors. An introduction to the art of scenography--a performance-art design practice that focuses on visual elements to promote audience reception and engagement in storytelling. Scenographers study the text, develop ideas with a director, address performers' needs, and analyze how audiences read these elements, in order to create the imaginative and appropriate environments of set, properties, costumes, lighting, and sound.
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2.00 Credits
Theatre core requirement for Theatre Majors and Minors. This is a lab experience in the areas of scenic, lighting, sound, properties, and technical direction. Students will learn basic terminology, tools, and design skills for scenography as an integral part of the storytelling and performance process.
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3.00 Credits
For Theatre Majors and Minors. Theatre Core Requirement. In-depth analysis of play scripts in their historical and cultural contexts, with a special emphasis on the rhetorical and structural elements common to most plays. Prerequisites: Full Major or Minor status in Theatre OR Instructor Consent.
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3.00 Credits
This course is the first class in a series of two in which students learn the fundamentals of music theory in order to improve their ability to read and write musical notation; and develop their ability to recognize, understand, and describe the basic materials and processes of music that are heard or presented in a score. In this introductory course, the instructor will address fundamental aural, sight-singing, and compositional skills using listening and written exercises. Building on this foundation, the course will progress to include more creative and analytical tasks. Prerequisites: Admission to Emphasis in Musical Theatre OR Emphasis in Stage Management OR Instructor Consent.
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3.00 Credits
This course is the second class in a series of two in which students learn fundamentals of music theory in order to improve their ability to read and write musical notation; and develop their ability to recognize, understand, and describe the basic materials and processes of music that are heard or presented in a score. In the second semester of study, the instructor will address more advanced aural, sight-singing, and compositional skills using listening and written exercises, as well as performance and examination. Building on foundational skills learned in Music Theory I, the course will progress to include more advanced creative an analytical tasks. Prerequisites: "C" or better in THEA 1714 OR Instructor Consent.
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3.00 Credits
Musical theatre is an exciting, highly collaborative, and constantly evolving art form that is quintessentially American. This course is a survey of the creation and development of American musical theatre from its roots in early European comic opera and operetta to the contemporary Broadway musical. Students will learn the history and basic forms/styles of musical theatre; explore the aesthetic and philosophical attitudes of those who create(d) musical theatre; and examine the political climates and prevailing social attitudes of the eras in which musical theatre was and is currently created and how these climates and attitudes have inspired and influenced the subject matter, artists, and productions.
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