ProfessorsBaron, Conboy, Eilenberg, Goto, Kowsar, Peters, Schechter, Washington
Associate ProfessorsArhelger, Roehrman, Tomalin, Wilson
Assistant ProfessorDamashek
B.A. in Drama
Minor in Drama
M.A. in Drama
M.F.A. in Theatre Arts: Concentration in Design/Technical Production
The Department of Theatre Arts offers a comprehensive program of both practical and theoretical courses for undergraduate and graduate students whose interests center on various aspects of educational and professional theatre.
The curriculum provides the student with a foundation for advanced study in the dramatic arts, for teaching, or for a career in professional theatre. As a center for the training of future theatre artists, the department is committed to introducing a diversity of theatrical traditions and cultures to students. To this end, the department employs its three dedicated theatre spaces and its one shared theatre space as learning laboratories, in which students collaborate with faculty and guest professionals. Studio workshops and advanced stage productions in those theatres are the culmination of the educational experience.
The department actively seeks and facilitates interdisciplinary programs of study and production with other members of the College of Creative Arts, as well as with Departments and Programs from across the campus. The department also encourages and facilitates collaboration with off-campus area theatres. In these ways we enlarge students experiences, and open new connections between students, the college, the campus as a whole, and the community, offering students an education grounded in practical professional stage practices as well as diverse on-campus academic and production experiences.
Faculty members encourage and facilitate collaboration with off-campus area theatres, in ways that enlarge students experiences and open new connections between students and the community. This contact with the community offers students an education grounded in practical professional stage practices as well as university classes and production on campus.
The diverse backgrounds of both faculty and students in the program provide our campus and community with a wealth of theatrical experiences and attractions. Graduates of the program are prominent in professional theatre throughout the nation, with positions of leadership in theatre, television, film, and theatre education.
Fundamental to the major program is a core of required courses designed to develop a foundation upon which to elect, upon advisement, one of the following areas of emphasis: performance, play development and dramaturgy, technical theatre and design, or popular theatre.
The minor program is not a requirement for any credential or degree but is intended to give the student an opportunity to pursue an interest in theatre arts.
The Master of Fine Arts in Theatre Arts offers a Concentration in Design/Technical Production. The three-year Master of Fine Arts is designed to provide rigorous, professional training to prepare students for careers as professional theatre artists or artist teachers. The concentration focuses on specialized skills in the areas of scene design, costume design, lighting design, and/or technical production.
The M.F.A. program combines the elements of professional practice and scholarly work to project a production concept through a specific discipline. The philosophy of the curriculum is based on two necessities of theatrical art: collaboration and discipline. Students progress through a full-time sequence of courses which trains them to work with other specialized theatre artists in realizing a total work of theatre, as well as to excel in their own chosen arts. The program is designed to develop the candidate's practical skills and personal strengths towards motivating communication, commitment, and support among the production group.
The Master of Arts in Drama provides training for students wishing to expand their knowledge and increase their competence in the fields of history and literature of the theatre, acting, directing, theatre design, and production; seeking teaching credentials where the master's degree is required; and preparing for further graduate work elsewhere.
The Department of Theatre Arts produces its plays in four performance spaces: McKenna Theatre, a proscenium stage with orchestra pit, fly system, and film/video projection systems is the largest theatre in the College of Creative Arts with a seating capacity of 701. The Little Theatre is a smaller proscenium stage with fly system and a seating capacity of 250. The Studio Theatre is a modified thrust stage with fixed grid and seating capacity of 78. The Brown Bag Theatre is a black box theatre with a seating capacity of 55.
The performance spaces are supported by outstanding technical facilities. Theatre Arts classes and production work are conducted, with professional supervision, in the Scene/Paint Shop, Costume Shop, Properties Shop, Lighting Laboratory, and Sound Design Laboratory.
Career opportunities in theatre arts include performance and technical positions in professional, regional, and community theatres, as well as the areas of film and television, for actor, director, stage manager, designer (lighting, costume, scenery, and props), and craftsperson (stitcher, carpenter, props artisan). Teaching positions range from elementary and high school theatre classes through community college and university curricula in all aspects of the dramatic arts. Other career possibilities include such diverse fields as advertising, design (interior, fashion, display), drama therapy, and recreation.
The core consists of the twenty-four units listed below while the area of emphasis consists of twenty-one units of required and elective courses. No fewer than twelve units, planned with and approved by an assigned adviser, must be taken in residence study.
On-line course descriptions are available.
Core Courses | Units | |
TH A 130 | Acting Workshop I | 3 |
TH A 205 | Introduction to Technical Theatre and Design | 2 |
Units selected from the following: | 4 | |
TH A 310 | Stage Scenery and Properties (2) | |
TH A 312 | Costuming and Make-Up (2) | |
TH A 313 | Stage Lighting and Sound (2) | |
Units selected from the following: | 3 | |
TH A 340 | Principles of Directing | |
TH A 341 | History of Directing | |
TH A 460 | Play Development Workshop | |
TH A 531 | Understanding and Performing Shakespeare | |
TH A 401 | Theatre Backgrounds: 500 B.C.-1642 | 3 |
TH A 402 | Theatre Backgrounds: 1642-1900 | 3 |
TH A 403 | Theatre Backgrounds: 1900-Present | 3 |
TH A 515 | Stage Management | 3 |
Total for core | 24 | |
Area of Emphasis (area chosen on advisement) | 21 | |
Total | 45 |
The B.A. in Drama offers four areas of emphasis: Performance, Play Development and Dramaturgy, Technical Theatre and Design, and Popular Theatre.
Teaching Credential: The Single Subject Approved Program (English Subject Matter: Drama Emphasis) requires completion of courses in English as well as Theatre Arts. For details on this program, please consult credential advisers in the English Teacher Resource and Advising Center.
A minimum of twenty-two units, of which at least eleven must be at the upper division level, should be planned with an assigned adviser.
Applications for classified status in the M.F.A. program are accepted beginning October 1 of the preceding year, for admission the following fall. Applications for classified status in the M.A. program are accepted beginning October 1 of the preceding year, for admission the following fall.
For both programs, contact the department office and the SFSU Division of Graduate Studies for specific application deadlines in March for fall and October for spring.
Applicants are required to file the CSU Graduate Admission Application with the SFSU Division of Graduate Studies and submit requested materials to the Department of Theatre Arts. Admission to classified status requires acceptance by both the university and the Department of Theatre Arts.
Students must meet university and departmental requirements and must normally have completed an undergraduate major in theatre arts. Consideration is given to students with a strong undergraduate minor or other relevant work. Admission to the program is based on evaluation of a student's previous work and supporting materials.
Level One: evaluation of graduate student's statement of purpose, which is a written requirement for admission to classified status in the Theatre Arts Department. On the basis of this material the M.F.A. or M.A. graduate coordinator may properly advise a student of the need to obtain additional skills in writing. If remedial work is required, it is so indicated as a condition to classified status. Level Two: judged by a graduate student's written work while enrolled in TH A 707. It is expected that papers written for this course will demonstrate scholarly style. If papers written for this course do not earn a superior grade, students must secure the graduate coordinator's permission before enrolling in other 700-level courses.
Besides meeting all general requirements, a diagnostic examination on the entire field of drama may be given at the time of registration in order to assist the M.F.A. or M.A. adviser in developing each student's program. Weaknesses in any area may necessitate enrollment in specified courses selected in order to build strength in the area. Such courses are usually taken in addition to the minimum number of units required for completion of the graduate major.
To complete either the M.F.A. or the M.A., students must satisfy all university and Department of Theatre Arts requirements. The university requirements are described in the front of the Graduate Education section of this Bulletin. Department requirements are provided in detail by the M.F.A./M.A. graduate coordinators and M.F.A./M.A. advisers. In addition to satisfactory completion of the course requirements, the department requires satisfactory performance on yearly departmental reviews, participation in the department's production program, and the successful completion of a final creative project or thesis. The Department of Theatre Arts accepts a limited number of transfer units on a course-by-course basis.
Graduate AdvisersArhelger, Roehrman, Wilson
Applicants seeking admission to the M.F.A. in Theatre Arts must submit the following materials directly to the Department of Theatre Arts, M.F.A. Graduate Coordinator, San Francisco State University, 1600 Holloway Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94132-4157: (1) statement of purpose (include proposed area and/or areas of emphasis); (2) copy of transcripts from all colleges or universities attended; (3) three letters of reference from people who know the applicant's theatre work; (4) a current resume; (5) other information considered appropriate, but which does not appear on transcripts; and (6) a portfolio of slides and designs to be submitted upon request to the M.F.A. coordinator.
The Department of Theatre Arts M.F.A. committee evaluates each student's performance at the end of the first year and recommends for or against continuance in the program.
On-line course descriptions are available.
Core Requirements | Units | |
TH A 705 | Seminar: Performance and Production Theory | 3 |
TH A 711 | Collaborative Processes in Theatre | 3 |
TH A 740 | Play Production Concepts | 3 |
TH A 757 | Internship in Theatre | 3 |
TH A 894 | Creative Work Project | 3 |
Total for core | 15 | |
Concentration | ||
One of the following: | 3 | |
TH A 701 | Seminar: Theatre History and Historiography | |
TH A 702 | Seminar: Shakespearean Production Style | |
TH A 710 | Seminar in Stage Arts | |
TH A 750 | Design Studio | 9 |
TH A 810 | Advanced Practicum in Theatre | 9 |
Electives on advisement | 24 | |
Total for concentration | 45 | |
Total for degree | 60 |
Creative Work Project: A candidate must demonstrate professional competency in two or more areas of design in a large-scale studio design project that also includes a written component.
Graduate AdvisersEilenberg, Kowsar, Schechter
Applicants must submit the following directly to the graduate coordinator: (1) statement of purpose (include proposed area and/or areas of emphasis); (2) copy of transcript; (3) three letters of reference from people who know the applicant's theatre work; and (4) information considered important but which does not appear on the transcript.
All upper division courses in theatre arts in acting, directing, management, and design are acceptable upon advisement except: TH A 300, 310, 312, 313, 315, 335, 401, 402, and 403.
On-line course descriptions are available.
Core Requirements | Units | |
TH A 700 | Theatre Research Methods | 3 |
TH A 701 | Seminar: Theatrical History and Historiography | 3 |
TH A 707 | Seminar: Theatrical Writing | 1 |
TH A 709 | Seminar: Dramatic Literature and Criticism | 3 |
Other Requirements | ||
Units selected from the following: | 3 | |
TH A 702 | Seminar: Shakespearean Production Style | |
TH A 703 | Seminar: The American Stage | |
TH A 704 | Seminar: Contemporary Plays and Performance | |
TH A 705 | Seminar: Performance and Production Theory | |
TH A 894 or TH A 898 |
Creative Work Project Master's Thesis |
3 |
Upper division/graduate course in drama | 3 | |
Supporting upper division/graduate courses in related subjects approved by graduate major adviser. | 12 | |
Minimum total | 31 | |
and Master's Comprehensive Written Examination |
Master's Thesis or Creative Work Project. Depending upon the educational and professional aims of the student, the M.A. committee recommends whether a master's thesis or creative work project is to be undertaken by the individual student.
Master's Comprehensive Written Examination. If failed may be repeated once only and must be repeated within a year of the failure. Written policies regarding this examination may be obtained from the M.A. graduate coordinator.