Vagina Monologues Auditions
Vagina Monologues Auditions
Open auditions for Princeton students. Performances will be February 22-24, 2018, at Theatre Intime
Open auditions for Princeton students. Performances will be February 22-24, 2018, at Theatre Intime
Founders of acclaimed theater company The Debate Society Hannah Bos, Oliver Butler, and Paul Thureen lead a workshop on for student artists on finding inspiration, locating a unique voice, overcoming blocks, and laying groundwork for creating new work.
Interdisciplinary artist Autumn Knight lectures as part of a series on Black Feminist Performance
In this new short comic opera borne out of a Princeton Atelier class, four university students have been recruited as test subjects for a marvelous new machine which can measure love between couples to an unprecedented level of accuracy. What could possibly go wrong? A semi-staged performance featuring a mixed cast of professionals and students including Heather O’Donovan, Bradley King, Brandon Gaines, Shruthi Rajasekar, Hansini Bhaskar, and Sebastian Cox. Pre-performance discussion at 7 PM each night.
A dense collage of overlapping works by architects, artists, designers, scientists, filmmakers, research groups and think tanks. The effect is a kaleidoscope of artistic, technical, philosophical, theoretical and ethical reflection on the intimate relation between “design” and “human.” It is the first time the exhibition will be shown in the United States. Open weekdays 9 AM - 9 PM; open weekends 10 AM - 6 PM.
Kathakali is a dance theater form from Kerala, a state in the southern most tip of India. Performers play characters, where the hands speak through gesture, the face expresses the emotions behind the words, and the feet dance. For the contemporary performer the principles of expression in Kathakali can provide a rich source of inspiration and practice. For Princeton students only — RSVP required.
The Lewis Center for the Arts' Peer Arts Advisors host an ice cream social for Princeton students to come meet the advisors and ask questions about pursuing the arts at Princeton.
NYU historian Ben Kafka considers the work of interpretation in psychoanalysis and how it relates to interpretation in the humanities, reflecting on the challenges of relearning how to make interpretations in a new setting. What analytic & academic interpretation might be able to teach, or unteach, each other? Lunch provided — RSVP to jp16@princeton.edu.
The Richardson Artist in Residence program is open to all Princeton student performers, providing students with time and space to develop high quality performances in Richardson Auditorium.
Seeking a Black man or a Black actor comfortable playing male roles to play Actor 4, a leading role, in We are Proud to Present a Presentation about the Herero of Namibia, Formerly Known as South West Africa, from the German Südwestafrika, Between the Years 1884-1915, by Jackie Sibblies Drury. Undergrads, grad students, post-docs and staff able to play a character in his twenties are encouraged to audition!
Lecture by Shane Butler, Professor of Classics and the Nancy H. and Robert E. Hall Professor in the Humanities at Johns Hopkins University. The lecture kicks off the workshop "Classics in Queer Time."
Remembering Langston Hughes: His Art, Life, and Legacy Fifty Years Later is a local and national forum on Langston Hughes. Free and open to the public; registration is requested.
Award-winning poet Phillip B. Williams creative writing seniors Robert Marshall, Catherine Saterson, David Shin, and Mariah Wilson
Princeton’s Famous Triangle Club is proud to present the world premiere of its brand new original musical-comedy extravaganza, Spy School Musical! Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to follow a reluctant team of spy students embarking on a dangerous mission to take down an evil German air conditioning magnate. But when faced with evil henchmen, nefarious schemes, and budding romances, will they be able to save the world before it self-destructs? Featuring zany disguises, exploding gadgets, and newly-discovered laws of physics, this super secret mission will leave you feeling both shaken and stirred. Ending with Triangle’s famous all-male kickline, Spy School Musical is sure to be a killer two acts of thespionage!
Danai Gurira’s gripping drama tells the story of five extraordinary women brought together by upheaval in their homeland of Liberia and their tale of survival, hope, humor and resilience near the end of the Second Liberian Civil War. With professional guest director Shariffa Ali and featuring senior Ugonna Nwabueze.
Join award-winning writer and producer and Princeton alum John Sacret Young '69 for a visual presentation and conversation with Professor of Visual Arts Joe Scanlan focusing around Young’s latest memoir.
Exhibition of work by Princeton students from 2010 to the present representing work created during the seven years since the Program in Visual Arts launched courses in graphic design. Includes a mix of animated, printed and digital media work by 184 past and current students curated by faculty member David Reinfurt
Visual arts juniors and seniors open their studios to visitors to show and discuss their current work.
Broadway stage manager Alex Volckhausen offers a workshop for Princeton students. RSVP to Jane Cox, janecox@princeton.edu.
Artist and filmmaker Kevin Everson screens and discusses his short films that combine scripted and documentary moments with rich elements of formalism
Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Hilton Als and poet Hoa Nguyen reads next in the 2017-18 Althea Ward Clark W'21 Reading Series. Please note this reading begins later at 7:30 p.m.
Viktoria Tkaczyk lectures on the Lautabteilung (“sound department”) of the Prussian State Library, directed by the language teacher and phonetician Wilhelm Doegen in the 1920s.
Poet, critic, and editor of Princeton University Press’s Series of Contemporary Poets Susan Stewart presents two young poets — Miller Oberman and Eléna Rivera — who will be reading from their work.
In high comedic fashion, Tom Stoppard's Arcadia asks questions about chaos and order by examining the lives and relationships of two groups of knowledge-seekers working centuries apart. In 1809, precocious genius Thomasina Coverly discovers and dreams as the lives and intrigues of her household unfold around her. Two hundred years later, the historians and scholars living in her house spark and stumble as they struggle to piece together the mundane mysteries of past and present. Come witness as wit and wonder unfold in this tale of science, scandal, and the pursuit of truth (or at least a publishable paper)!
The Princeton & Slavery Project, a scholarly investigation of Princeton University’s historical engagement with the institution of slavery, hosts a scholarly symposium on November 17-18, 2017. Watch a simulcast of Toni Morrison's keynote address from 4:30-6 PM in the Wallace Theater, Lewis Arts complex. Limited seating is first-come, first-served.
McCarter Theatre Center presents a reading of new 10-minute plays, commissioned in conjunction with a significant and timely community endeavor: the national public rollout of The Princeton and Slavery Project.
Actress Katharine Powell Roman leads a workshop for students interested in applying to graduate school for acting. RSVP to Jane Cox, janecox@princeton.edu.
Crystal Dickinson leads a voice and movement workshop for Princeton students. RSVP to Jane Cox, janecox@princeton.edu.
Lumarca is a light sculpture that uses projection and string to pull digital art and animation out of the screen and into the real world.
As part of Dyane Harvey-Salaam's fall dance course, "The American Dance Experience and Africanist Dance Practices," Mickey Davidson gives a lecture/workshop on authentic jazz and swing dance
Filmmakers and artists Frances Bodomo and Ja’Tovia Gary screen their films and discuss how to create spaces for support and exhibition of work by black women filmmakers
World-renowned ballet dancer David Hallberg will hold a filmed conversation with Tina Fehlandt, Lecturer in the Princeton University Program in Dance, followed by an audience Q&A, at the Hearst Dance Theater in Princeton University on Thursday, November 30th at 4:30pm. Free tickets required.
Assistant Professor of Theatre and Performance Studies at Muhlenberg College Sharell D. Luckett leads a workshop for Princeton students, faculty, staff, and the public. RSVP to Jane Cox, janecox@princeton.edu.
Symposium with Boris Groys, Anton Vidokle, Robert Bird, Maria Chehonadskih, Arseny Zhilyaev, Nikolaus Hirsch, Mark Wigley, and Beatriz Colomina, including screening of films by Anton Vidokle
Matt Pilsner leads a stage lighting workshop for Princeton students. RSVP to Jane Cox, janecox@princeton.edu.
Before arriving in Princeton, Max West '19 served two and a half years in Singapore's naval Special Forces. How To Forge A Frogman is West's candid, firsthand account of his basic training as a combat diver. Published in Singapore by Marshall Cavendish in June 2017, the book quickly became a local nonfiction bestseller. Book signing to follow.
Discover Austro-German composer Hanns Eisler — Schoenberg’s student, Kurt Weill’s contemporary, and Brecht’s favorite collaborator — whose music Hitler branded as “degenerate.”
The Princeton Pianists Ensemble is proud to present Rebirth! Join us for the experience of a lifetime -- performed on 5 grand pianos. Relive your childhood memories through the themes of Super Mario Bros. and Mulan, enjoy La La Land's nostalgic melodies, and indulge in the dramatic classics of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2, Verdi's Requiem, and Strauss' Death and Transfiguration. Note: Friday shows will be in Woolworth (McAlpin Hall); the Saturday show will be in the Lee Music Performance & Rehearsal Room, New Music Building at the Lewis Arts complex.






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