Performance & Production Program

The Misanthrope

The Theatre department regards participation in production and performance as an essential extension of the ideas and the practices introduced in the curriculum. Theatre majors are expected to get involved as a way of honing skills and gaining practical knowledge about theatrical process.

Participation in Theatre department productions is open to all Boston College students, majors, and non-majors alike. Those whose interest in theater is more extra-curricular are welcome. For more information about how to get involved, contact any faculty member or a student on the Council of Majors & Minors or check out the callboard in the back hall of the Robsham Theater Arts Center. Also, watch out for the sign-up for production labs at the beginning of each semester.

Current Season & Events

The Department, in conjunction with the Robsham Theater Arts Center, produces an annual season of six plays, four mainstage shows directed by faculty or a distinguished guest, and two "workshop" productions directed by students. Each season is planned to provide students with a variety of creative opportunities and theatrical challenges. 

View current events

Auditions and Casting

Casting in Theatre department productions is open to the entire campus community and, with rare exceptions, is based on audition. The Department is committed to a policy of diversity and inclusivity in casting, which means that students of color and students with disabilities are encouraged to audition and will be considered on the basis of merit without regard to race or ethnicity. 

Auditions and casting

Rehearsals

Rehearsal schedules are determined by the director of each individual production in consultation with the department chair and the director of the Robsham Theater Arts Center. Generally, a production will rehearse four to six times a week for four to six weeks. Student actors are not necessarily called for every rehearsal. Rehearsals are in the evening on weekdays and during the day or evening on Sunday. Minor conflicts can often be accommodated if communicated far enough in advance. View detailed set of rehearsal guidelines. 

Rehearsal guidelines

Stage Management

Student stage managers are the backbone of theater production at Ï㽶Ðã. This essential role familiarizes students with all aspects of theatrical production and helps to develop leadership, communication, and project management skills. Interested students usually apprentice as assistant stage managers and then work under the supervision of a professional Actors Equity Association stage manager. Student stage managers for mainstage and workshop shows receive a two-credit production lab. View a series of documents and stage-management resources tailored to theater production at Ï㽶Ðã.

Stage management

Design and Technical Production

The Department's "workshop" productions feature sets, costumes, lighting, and sound designed by students. Students who sign up at the start of the term can get one credit for working on preparation or running crews for Department productions. There are also a few paid positions in the scene and costume shops.

Design and technical production

Directing, Playwriting, Dramaturgy

Two of the Department's six annual productions are directed by students. Every other year, the Department produces an evening of original student-written plays under the umbrella title "New Voices." And once or twice a year, a student dramaturg works on a mainstage production.

The Robsham Theater Arts Center

The Theatre department conducts most of its activities in the "Robsham," the home of theater production on campus since 1981. The building contains two performance spaces, a 591-seat proscenium theater known as the "Mainstage" and the Bonn Studio Theater, a flexible black-box theater that accommodates 150 spectators.

Robsham Theater

Student Producing Groups

There are many student-run performing arts organizations on campus, including the Dramatics Society and Contemporary Theatre, two longstanding student theater groups that produce a play or a musical at least once a semester. The Musical Theatre Wing is known for producing cabarets and reaching out into the city of Boston with them.