2015 Schedule - Comparative Drama Conference

Transcription

2015 Schedule - Comparative Drama Conference
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
The CDC cannot guarantee that this Itinerary will not change, although we will do everything
possible to minimize any changes.
8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Conference Registration
Main Lobby
Conference packets for pre-registered participants are available at the Conference Registration Table in the
Lobby of the Pier 5 Hotel, as is registration for those who have not pre-registered. Events take place in the
conference rooms off the lobby of the Pier 5 Hotel and in the Harbor Club on the second floor.
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 1
Closed
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 2
Theatre and Theology
Harbor West B
Presiding: Les Essif (University of Tennessee)
1. Hagens, Jan L. (Yale University)
“Theater and Religion: A Neglected Relation.”
2. Shaw, Marc Edward. (Hartwick College)
“Don’t Mess With a Missionary Man: Mormons in Contemporary
American Drama.
3. Ramis, A. Gabriela. (Olympic College)
“Reception and Metatheater in The Great Creator: The Effect of
Baring the Device.”
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 3
Theatre and/as Politics:
Olmost, Valdez, and Triana
Harbor West C
Presiding: Brittany Proudfoot Ginder (University of Maryland,
College Park)
1. Cotsell, Michael. (University of Delaware)
“Hunting Dogs: The Vision of Matthew Paul Olmos’s The Nature of
Captivity.”
2. Flores, Adam. (Baylor Theatre)
“Reevaluating El Teatro Campesino’s Dream for Zoot Suit’s
Prominence, Place, and Plausibility on The Great White Way.”
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 4
Adaptation Theories
Harbor East D
Presiding: Miriam Chirico (Eastern Connecticut State University)
1. Gilbert, Richard. (Loyola University Chicago)
“A Practice-Based View of Theatrical Adaptation: What is Adapted?
Adapted to What?”
2. Norris, Marcos. (Loyola University Chicago)
“‘What has Christ got to do with it?’: Adaptation Theory, Søren
Kierkegaard, and Waiting for God(ot).”
3. Pellegrini, David. (Eastern Connecticut State University)
“Meta-Adaptation & Performance.”
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 5
Staging Bodies in Post WWI Theatre
Harbor East E
Presiding: Ellen Dolgin (College of Blauvelt)
1. Schwartz, Michael. (Indiana State University of Pennsylvania)
“‘What a Lot of God Damn Fools it Takes to Make a War!’:
Deconstructing and Reconstructing the American Soldier in Stallings
and Anderson’s What Price Glory?”
2. Considine, Kerri A. (University of Tennessee)
“Romanticism’s Machine Children: Modern Machine Bodies and the
Romantic Cult of the Child.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 6
Nazi Influences on German and French Theatre
Harbor West A
Presiding: Ian Andrew MacDonald (Dickinson College)
1. Muller, David G. (Independent Scholar)
“Louis Jouvet’s Après-Guerre Tartuffe (1950): Apotheosis or
Purification?”
2. Sharifian, Hesam and Sarah M. Henneböhl. (Tufts University
and The University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign)
“Werner Egk’s Peer Gynt: Anti-Semitism in Komponist des
Wiederaufbaus’s Work.”
3. Jakoby, Vera. (McDaniel College)
“Hitler’s Parsifal: Reenactment of Wagner Opera’s in the Third
Reich.”
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 7
Classical Greek Theatre
Harbor West B
Presiding: Kelly Younger (Loyola Marymount University)
1. Falkner, Thomas. (McDaniel College)
“Tragedy, Democracy, and the Athenian Jury: The Case of Socrates.”
2. Long, Jacqueline. (Loyola University Chicago)
“Gender, Democracy, and the Justice of Athena’s Vote to Acquit
Orestes.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 8
Early Modern Theatre:
T. D., Jonson, and Shakespeare
Harbor East C
Presiding: Jan L. Hagens (Yale University)
1. Kimball, Claire. (Scholar-at-large)
“Staging Dismemberment in The Bloody Banquet.”
2. Wedow, Lindsey. (Loyola University Chicago)
“But Now the Evil Out-Carries the Devil: Ben Johnson, King James I,
and the Politics of Witchcraft in The Devil is an Ass.”
3. Méndez, Emilio. (National Autonomous University of Mexico)
“‘What, then, do you see?: the Dramaturgy of Love in Shakespeare’s
Love’s Labour’s Lost and Calderón de la Barca’s To Give Everything
and Not Give Anything.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 9
Samuel Beckett
Harbor West D
Presiding: Graley Herren (Xavier University)
1. Hatch, David A. (University of South Carolina)
“The Artistic Milieu of TCD and Antecedents of Godot.”
2. Kordich, Jason. (Mt. San Antonio College)
“An Artist’s Last Stand: Krapp and his Revisionist Memory.”
3. Nail, Christopher. (University of Texas at El Paso)
“Blasphemous Existentialism: Finding Meaning in Beckett”
11:45 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Lunch Break
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
1:00 – 2:15 p.m. Session 10
Plenary Session
Harbor Club
If Music Be the Food of Love, Play On
Christopher Innes
(York University)
Brigitte Bogar
(York University)
Presiding: Ellen Dolgin (College of Blauvelt)
Examining both the philosophical and dramaturgical use of songs in his plays demonstrates the sheer
musicality of Shakespeare’s work. Indeed, songs can be shown as central to Shakespeare’s drama; most
notably the way he uses harmony and discord to represent politics and, related to the Music of Spheres,
humanity itself. It is the musical nature of Shakespeare’s plays that has made them one of the major sources
for operas through the centuries: in fact, more operas have been based on his plays than any other particular
source. Shakespeare has also been borrowed for musicals on the modern stage; and it can be seen how the
modern musical adaptations of his plays have restored Shakespeare’s popular appeal, rescuing him from the
elitist view of the 18th and 19th centuries.
2:30 – 3:45 p.m. Session 11
Shaw I
Harbor West A
Sponsored by The Shaw Society
Presiding: Tony Stafford (University of Texas at El Paso)
1. Cockin, Katharine. (University of Hull, England)
“Performing Passion and Patronage: Reading the Critical Exchanges
of Ellen Terry and Bernard Shaw.”
2. Lyons, Al. (Indiana University)
“Widowers’ Houses: George Bernard Shaw’s Philanthropic Drama.”
3. Dolgin, Ellen. (Dominican College)
“Beyond the Bravura: Shaw’s Historical Figures in Repose.”
2:30 – 3:45 p.m. Session 12
Highly Theoretical Theatre:
Strindberg, Pirandello, Albee and Kushner
Harbor West B
Presiding: Graley Herren (Xavier University)
1. Burkart, Jessie. (Brooklyn College).
“Dream as Reality: Schopenhauer’s Influence on Strindberg’s Late
Works.”
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
2. Adam, Jessica. (Brooklyn College)
“Schopenhauer in Angels in America: Sublimity Approaches the
Body.”
3. Roberts, Daniel. (Northwest Missouri State University)
“We Are What We Say: The Nature of Reality and the Self in the Works
of Pirandello and Albee.”
2:30 – 3:45 p.m. Session 13
Suzan-Lori Parks and Sarah Ruhl
Harbor West C
Presiding: Nathaniel Nesmith (Middlebury College)
1. Foults, Coralyn. (University of Tennessee)
“The Use and Reuse of History: Exploring History and Political Icons
in Suzan-Lori Parks’s The America Play and Sarah Ruhl’s Passion
Play.”
2. Hammond, Yvonne. (West Virginia University)
“A Nod to Paper Cutout: Filling in Absence in Suzan-Lori Parks’ The
America Play.”
2:30 – 3:45 p.m. Session 14
Theatre in Education
Harbor East D
Presiding: Les Essif (University of Tennessee)
1. MacDonald, Ian Andrew (Dickinson College)
“Theatre as Public Service: Applying Theatre in Education.”
2. Kaback, Doug, Sheri Strahl, and Shad Willingham. (California
State University, Northridge)
“Persephone & Me: Utilizing Touring Theatre, Theatre of the
Oppressed Techniques, and Greek Mythology to Address Gender
Violence and Sexual Assault with Secondary School Students.”
3. du Preez, Petrus. (Stellenbosch University)
“The question of the play: Experiencing the past through high school
drama and the effect of the alternative archive.”
2:30 – 3:45 p.m. Session 15
From Opera to the Modern Musical:
Goethe to Next to Normal
Harbor East E
Presiding: Brittany Proudfoot Ginder (University of Maryland,
College Park)
1. Ferran, Peter W. (Rochester Institute of Technology)
“Goethe’s Musical Egmont.”
2. Little, Julie. (Virginia Commonwealth University)
“Frailty, thy name is woman: A depiction of female madness in Next to
Normal.”
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
2:30 – 3:45 p.m. Session 16
Staged Reading
Harbor Club
The Mathematics of Being Human
Authors: Michele Osherow and Manil Suri
Director: Michael Curry
Cast:
Dramaturg: Janna Segal (Mary Baldwin College)
4:00 – 5:15 p.m. Session 17
Shaw II
Harbor West A
Sponsored by The Shaw Society
Presiding: Tony Stafford (University of Texas at El Paso)
1. Stafford, Tony J. (University of Texas at El Paso)
“Shaw’s The Philanderer: Home is Where the Hearth Is.”
2. Zorn, Christa. (Indiana University Southeast)
“Shaw’s Staging of Capitalism: When ‘Money is Made in the Light.’”
3. Giner, Oscar. (Arizona State University)
“The Dramatic Heroes of George Bernard Shaw and the Spanish
Golden Age.”
4:00 – 5:15 p.m. Session 18
Adaptation Across Form: Miller, Shakespeare
Harbor West B
and The Arabian Nights from Page to Stage to Film
Presiding: Ellen Dolgin (College of Blauvelt)
1. Berryman, Ruby. (Independent Scholar)
“Distilling Genocide Into Drama: Adapting Holocaust and Slave
Narratives to the Stage.”
2. Nanney, Nancy. (West Virginia University at Parkersburg)
“Arabian Nights Retold: King Shahriyar’s Transformative Role in a
Never-Ending Tale.”
3. Ruud, Amanda K. (University of Southern California)
“Silent Soliloquies: Mediating Theatrical Affect in Early Shakespeare
Film.”
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
4:00 – 5:15 p.m. Session 19
19th Century Theatrical Representations of
Ethnicity and Race
Harbor West C
Presiding: Baron Kelly (University of Louisville)
1. Huang, Yizhou. (Tufts University)
“The Stories Told and the Stories Untold: Images of Chinese Women in
Nineteenth-Century American Theatre.”
2. Kochman, Deborah. (Florida State University)
“About [Red] Face: A Comparative Analysis the Osceola-Renegade
Tradition at Florida State University and John Augustus Stone’s
Metamora, or the Last Wampanoags.”
3. Williams-Witherspoon, Kimmika L.H. (Temple University)
“Adapting Our Own: Ira Aldridge and The Black Doctor: PanAfricanism in Early Dramatic Discourse.”
4:00 – 5:15 p.m. Session 20
Teaching Tips and Trade Secrets
Harbor Club
Presiding: Miriam Chirico (Eastern Connecticut State University)
and Kelly Younger (Loyola Marymount University)
Panelists:
Join this informal panel of experienced teachers who will be sharing classroom techniques that explore and
illuminate the performative nature of dramatic literature. This lively discussion promises to spill over into
the hotel lobby so participants can enjoy “Crabby Hour” together.
5:00 – 7:00 p.m.
5:30 and 7:15
Dinner Break
Shuttles Depart Pier 5 for Vagabond Players Theatre
We encourage you to take our walking tour of the Inner Harbor and Fells Point
to the Vagabond Players Theatre for tonight’s production. The walk is just 0.7
miles and will take only about 14 minutes. Along the way, stop to enjoy a
coffee, a meal, or a pre-show drink. See pages 90-91 of this Program for full
directions. For those who would prefer not to walk, two Stevenson shuttles will
depart from the Pier 5 hotel, the first at 5:30 and the second at 7:15.
Additionally, the Pier 5 has shuttles that run to the Admiral Fell Inn throughout
the day (see the lobby schedule); the theatre is a block North (away from the
water) from the Admiral Fell Inn, next to Pitango Gelato.
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
8:00 p.m.
Curtain Time for Performance at Vagabond Players
Rabbit Hole
Written by David Lindsay-Abaire
Directed by Eric C. Stein
This Pulitzer Prize-winning drama presents an intensely moving
examination of grief, laced with wit, compassion and searing
honesty.
A Stevenson shuttle will return to the Pier 5 Hotel after the performance. For
those who wish to take a cab back to the Pier 5 (approximately $6) after dining
or enjoying nightlife in Fells Point, see pages 92-97 of this Program for
restaurant suggestions. You will find cab service phone numbers and walking
directions on page 90-91. Note that we recommend walking only in groups; we
do not recommend walking alone.
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Conference Registration
Lobby
Conference packets for pre-registered participants are available at the Conference Registration Table in the
Lobby of the Pier 5 Hotel, as is registration for those who have not pre-registered. Events take place in the
conference rooms off the lobby of the Pier 5 Hotel and in the Harbor Club on the second floor.
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 21
Middle Eastern Political Theatre
Harbor West A
Presiding: Baron Kelly (University of Louisville)
1. Sarbarani, Fatameh Madani. (Arizona State University)
“Eastern vs. Western Historiography.”
2. Shalha, Ziad Abu. (Tiabah University)
“Shakespeare’s Hamlet in Postcolonial Middle Eastern Drama: A
Comparative Study Between Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Mamdouh
Adwan’s Hamlet Wakes Up Late.”
3. Nicholas, Laura. (Baylor University)
“Freeing the Syrian Refugee’s Natural Voice: A Look at the
Reinforcement of Nationalism through Memory-Based Production.”
9:00 - 10:15 a.m. Session 22
A Different Story Altogether: Lochhead,
Wertenbaker, Whitty, and LaChiusa Rewrite
Ibsen, Euripides, and Oklahoma!
Harbor West B
Presiding: J. Chris Westgate (California State University)
1. Zinman, Toby. (University of the Arts, Philadelphia)
“Reimagining Hedda.”
2. Craig, Lydia. (Loyola University Chicago)
“Politic Silence: Female Choruses in Lochhead’s Medea and
Wertenbaker’s The Love of the Nightingale.”
3. Gibbes, Allison. (Florida State University)
“Challenging the Canon: Using Michael John’s LaChiusa’s Giant to
Deconstruct the Mythos of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma!”
9:00 - 10:15 a.m. Session 23
Staging Gender and the Family
Harbor West C
Presiding: William C. Boles (Rollins College)
1. Byrne, Elena E. (Southern Connecticut State University)
“Henry Higgins: Androgynous Parent or Mother in Bernard Shaw’s
Pygmalion.”
2. Andes, Anna. (Susquehanna University)
“Capitalizing on Daughters: The Awkward Gender Politics of Edith
and Honour Thy Father.”
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
9:00 - 10:15 a.m. Session 24
Tennessee Williams
Harbor East D
Presiding: Jeffrey Loomis (Northwest Missouri State University)
1. Garganourakis, John. (Mercy College)
“The Grotesque Body in the Late Plays of Tennessee Williams.”
2. Yost, Connie A. (Millersville University)
“Conflicting Identities: Invisible Males in Suddenly Last Summer and
The House of Bernarda Alba.”
3. Rafieisakhaci, Soudabeh. (The University of Georgia)
“Yalda, a Laura in Iran: A Study on the movie adaptation of The Glass
Menagerie.”
9:00 - 10:15 a.m. Session 25
Contemporary European Drama and
Harbor East E
Performance: Badiou, McPherson and Kjartansson
Presiding: William Hutchings (University of Alabama-Birmingham)
1. Phillips, Doug. (University of St. Thomas)
“Thirteen Ways of Thinking about the Theatrical Event.”
2. Rosbrow, Jesse Edward. (Tufts University)
“Layer upon Layer of Mischief: The Evolving Dramaturgy of Conor
McPherson’s Early Monologue Plays.”
3. Butler, Thomas. (Eastern Kentucky University)
“Ragnar Kiartansson’s Theatrical Repetitions.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 26
Staging Grief: Contemporary American
Playwrights Lindsay-Abaire, Hudes, and Parks
Harbor West A
Presiding: Chelsea Dove (Vagabond Players Theater)
1. Muse, Amy. (University of St. Thomas)
“Sympathetic Curiosities: Rabbit Hole’s demonstration of the power of
intimate theatre.”
2. Smith, Susan Harris. (University of Pittsburgh)
“Re-membering Place: Staging Grief.”
3. Williams, Jaye Austin. (University of California, Long Beach)
“Alienated Flesh Excavating Dereliction and Inaudible Loss in SuzanLori Parks’ One-character Short Play, Pickling.”
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 27
Shakespeare Through the Lens of
Race, Sex, and Class
Harbor West B
Presiding: David Pellegrini (Eastern Connecticut State University)
1. Boulton, Alex O. (Stevenson University)
“Shakespeare’s Floating World.”
2. Chapman, Matthieu. (UC San Diego)
“Aaron’s Incorporation and the Destruction of Civil Society in Titus
Andronicus.”
3. Charlesbois, Elizabeth. (St. Mary’s College of Maryland)
“With Rhyme and Reason: Hip Hop Hamlet in Prison.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 28
Acting Theories: From Plato to the Present
Harbor West C
Presiding: Les Essif (University of Tennessee)
1. Kaplan, Jeff. (University of Maryland, College Park)
“The Poetry of Madness: Plato’s Ion and the Psychology of Acting.”
2. Pastorino, Gloria. (Farleigh Dickinson University)
“The Physical Language of Satire: Jacques Lecoq’s Legacy in the
Theatre of Dario Fo.”
3. Yoho, Rob. (Baylor University)
“Group Mind and Human Consciousness: Improv as Mindfulness
Practice.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 29
Gender in 17th Century Drama:
Harbor East D
Behn, the Salonniéres, and Beaumont and Fletcher
Presiding: Brittany Proudfoot Ginder (University of Maryland,
College Park)
1. Raphaeli, Kara. (University of California, San Diego)
“Troubling Gender in English Restoration Comedy.”
2. Kennedy, Theresa. (Baylor University)
“Deliberating the Heroine in Seventeenth-Century French Women’s
Theater.”
3. Park, Judy. (Loyola Marymount University)
“Curious rules when every beast is free”: Tyranny, Animality, and
Republican Possibilities in A King and No King”
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 30
Monstrous Beckett
Harbor East E
Presiding: William Hutchings (University of Alabama-Birmingham)
1. Wetmore, Kevin J. (Loyola Marymount University)
“Night of the Living Dead, or Endgame: Jan Kott, Peter Brook,
Samuel Beckett and Zombies.”
2. Ardoin, Paul. (University of Texas at San Antonio)
“‘Fashionable Despair’ and Literary Theater: Hansberry’s Monstrous
Beckett.”
3. Herren, Graley. (Xavier University)
“Beckett at the Bates Motel: Eh Joe and Psycho.”
12:00 – 1:30 p.m.
Lunch Break
12:00 – 1:30 p.m. Session 31
CDC Board Meeting
Chesapeake Room
Board Members Only
1:30 – 3:00 p.m. Session 32
Harbor Club
Author Meets Critics
Presiding
Verna A. Foster
(Loyola University Chicago)
The Author
Katherine Weiss
(East Tennessee State University)
The Book
The Plays of Samuel Beckett
(Critical Companions)
(Metheun Drama)
The Critics
Doug Phillips
(University of St. Thomas)
William Hutchings
(University of Alabama-Birmingham)
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
Awarding of The 2014 Anthony Ellis Prize for the Best Paper by a Graduate Student
Presiding: Graley Herren
Awarded to
Giuseppe Sofo (University of Avignon; Università La Sapienza, Roma)
for
“Translating Tempests: A Reading of Aimé Césaire’s Une Tempête in Translation”
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 33
Wrestling with Albee: The Politics behind
Harbor West A
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Three Tall Women
Sponsored by The Edward Albee Society
Presiding: Natka Bianchini
1. Huang, Chi-hua. (National Chengchi University)
“Facing with the Mother Figure: A Comparative Study of Edward
Albee’s Three Tall Women and Hugh K. S. Lee’s Wedding Memories”
2. Malarcher, Jay. (West Virginia University)
“The Metaphysics of Pronoun Confusion in Edward Albee’s Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”
3. Stanley, William Chad. (Wilkes University)
“Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Bear?: Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of
Virginia Woolf? and the Cuban Missile Crisis.”
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 34
Staging Domestic Space in Contemporary
Drama: Ruhl, The Raisin Cycle, and Pinter
Harbor West B
Presiding: William C. Boles (Rollins College)
1. Shanahan, Ann M. (Loyola University Chicago)
“Women and Houses in Theatre and Drama.”
2. Thomas, LaRonika. (University of Maryland)
“‘An Attractive Place to Live’: Thresholds, Landmarks, and Spatial
Imaginaries on the American Stage.”
3. Higgins, Jeanmarie. (University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
“Walls, Thresholds and Doorways in Harold Pinter’s Mountain
Language.”
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 35
Images as Performance, Performance as Image
Harbor East C
Presiding: David Pellegrini (Eastern Connecticut State University)
1. Grote, John. (Baylor University)
“The Burning Monk’s Inspirational Flame: The Self-Immolation
Performance of Thich Quang Duc and Audience Reaction in the United
States and Vietnam.”
2. Snyder, Christine. (Brooklyn College)
“Consuming Pauline: Confirming and Conforming to the Middle Class
Woman Through Pauline Cushman’s 1864 Publicity Materials.”
3. Essif, Davenne. (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)
“Theatrical Emptiness in Giorgio de Chirico’s The Painter’s Family
(1926).”
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 36
Women of Color Counter the Hegemonic Stage:
Spiderwoman, Carroll, and Childress
Harbor East D
Presiding: Laura T. Smith (Stevenson University)
1. Sundin, Bridget. (Indiana University)
“Spiderwoman Theater: (Re)Claiming Authenticity through the
Othered Body.”
2. Stollenwerk, Joe. (Indiana University)
“Don’t Bother Me, I Can’t Cope: Reclaiming a Lost Musical.”
3. Ponnuswami, Meenakshi. (Bucknell University)
“Alice Childress’s Wedding Band.”
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 37
Ibsen
Harbor East E
Presiding: Jeffrey Loomis (Northwest Missouri State University)
1. Bailey, Matthew J. (Northwest Missouri State University)
“Puppeteers and Meta-Puppeteers: The Autodeconstructive Nature of
The Master Builder.”
2. Striplin, Alyssa. (Northwest Missouri State University)
“Crossing Masculinity and Feminism to Build a Common Ground: A
Comparison of Ibsen’s The Master Builder and Howe’s Pride’s
Crossing.”
3. White, Eliot. (Millersville University)
“The Family as a Fulcrum of Tragedy: Maternal Burden, Sins of the
Father, and Shattered Illusions in Ibsen’s Ghosts and Williams’ The
Glass Menagerie.”
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 38
Staged Reading
Harbor Club
The Quickening
Author: Mark Scharf
Director: Chelsea Dove
Cast: Amanda K. Gatewood, Marianne Angelella, Eric C. Stein
Dramaturg: Janna Segal (Mary Baldwin College)
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 39
Damaged Masculinities in the Drama of
Shepard, Letts, Koutsoubeli, and Highway
Harbor West A
Presiding: Jeffrey Loomis (Northwest Missouri State University)
1. Covey, William B. (Slippery Rock University)
“Fool for Love, Killer Joe, and the Fate of Women in Rural Noir
Drama.”
2. Rapti, Vassiliki. (Harvard University)
“Orpheus in the Bar by Chloe Koutsoubeli: A Radical Modern Greek
Adaptation.”
3. Hawkins, Maureen S.G. (University of Lethbridge)
“‘Symbolically Loaded’: The Functions of the Wall Hangings in Dry
Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing.”
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 40
Dark and Twisted: British Playwrights Pinter,
Jellicoe, Ravenhill, and Kane
Harbor West B
Presiding: Verna Foster (Loyola University Chicago)
1. Cameron, Rebecca. (DePaul University)
“Playing with Fire: Rape Games in Pinter and Jellicoe.”
2. Izmir, Sibel. (Atılım University)
“Theatrical Strategies in Mark Ravenhill’s Shopping and Fucking.”
3. Ngezem, Eugene. (Clayton State University)
“Consumerism in Mark Ravenhill’s Shopping and F***ing and Sarah
Kane’s Blasted: (Mis)representation of Sexual Hurricane and the
Collapse of Decency in Contemporary World.”
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 41
Stop that Show! Recovering Historiography
in the Wake of Interrupted Performance
Harbor West C
Presiding: David Pellegrini (Eastern Connecticut State University)
1. Ginder, Brittany Proudfoot. (University of Maryland, College
Park)
“Black Magic: The Curse of Macbeth Meets Orson Welles.”
2. Hughes, Erica. (Virginia Commonwealth University)
“Tannhäuser in Paris: Richard Wagner vs. French Tradition.”
3. Salsbury, Kate. (Point Park University)
“Sparks of Controversy on Catfish Row.”
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 42
Chinese Theatre and Theatre for China
Harbor East D
Presiding: Baron Kelly (University of Louisville)
1. Lowe, William (Howard Community College) and ChingHsuan. (Ohio Wesleyan University)
“Uncovering the Zaju Chinese Drama of the Yuan Dynasty.”
2. Hoenshell, Nicholas. (Baylor University)
“Gao Xingjian’s Model Theatre: Postmodern Pastiche and Parody in
The Other Shore.”
3. Hunter, Mead K. (University of Portland)
“Lessons from the Mouse: Shifting Narratologies on Planet Disney.”
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 43
Contemporary Comedy in Theory and Practice:
Sedaris, Leguizamo, Gray, Durang, McDonagh,
and Callaghan
Harbor East E
Presiding: William Hutchings (University of Alabama-Birmingham)
1. Chirico, Miriam. (Eastern Connecticut State University)
“Performed Authenticity: Narrating the Self in Comedic Monologues.”
2. Combs, Robert. (George Washington University)
“The Joys and Sorrows of Not-Getting-It: Christopher Durang, Martin
McDonagh, and the Dangerous Comedy of Defamiliarization.”
3. Goff, Jennifer. (Wayne State University/Frostburg University)
“Not-So-Benign Violation: The Dangerous Comedy of Sheila
Callaghan.”
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 44
Staged Reading
Harbor Club
Dyskolos
Version by: Katherine B. Free (Loyola Marymount University)
Director: Kevin J. Wetmore (Loyola Marymount University)
Cast: Ron Marasco (Loyola Marymount University), others TBD
Dramaturg: Janna Segal (Mary Baldwin College)
8:00 p.m.
Harbor East A, B & C
2015 Keynote Event:
David Lindsay-Abaire
Welcome:
President Kevin Manning
(Stevenson University)
A Conversation with David Lindsay-Abaire
Presiding: Kelly Younger (Loyola Marymount University)
Join your colleagues from the Comparative Drama Conference for a conversation with
David Lindsay-Abaire, Pulitzer Prize winning playwright, screenwriter, lyricist and
librettist. Lindsay-Abaire’s play Rabbit Hole received the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Drama
and five Tony nominations. His most recent play Good People was awarded the New
York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, The Horton Foote Prize, The Edgerton
Foundation New American Play Award, and two Tony nominations. Lindsay-Abaire also
wrote the book and lyrics for Shrek the Musical, which was nominated for eight Tonys,
four Oliviers, a Grammy, and earned him the Ed Kleban Award as America's most
promising musical theatre lyricist. His other plays include Fuddy Meers, Kimberly
Akimbo, Wonder of the World and A Devil Inside. In addition to his work in theatre,
Lindsay-Abaire’s screen credits include his film adaptation of Rabbit Hole (starring
Nicole Kidman - Oscar Nomination), Oz the Great and Powerful, Inkheart, Robots, and
MGM's upcoming Poltergeist reboot. Come prepared for a lively conversation on
contemporary theatre followed by a Q & A with the audience.
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FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 2015
9:30 p.m.
Reception
Harbor Club
All conference participants are invited to join us for a reception with David Lindsay-Abaire hosted by the
Comparative Drama Conference Board and sponsored by Stevenson University. Please join us for hors
d’oeuvres, a cash bar, and a magnificent view of the Inner Harbor from the Pier 5 Hotel’s Harbor Club.
Shuttles to the Admiral Fell Inn will close at 10:45. Information on taxi services can be found on page 93
of this Program.
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
8:30 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
Conference Registration
Lobby
Conference packets for pre-registered participants are available at the Conference Registration Table in the
Lobby of the Pier 5 Hotel, as is registration for those who have not pre-registered. Events take place in the
conference rooms off the lobby of the Pier 5 Hotel and in the Harbor Club on the second floor.
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 45
The Function of Realistic Conventions in
Wilder and Young Jean Lee
Harbor West A
Presiding: Brittany Proudfoot Ginder (University of Maryland,
College Park)
1. Piede, Samantha. (Millersville University)
“Not Verisimilitude, But Reality: Theatre and Film’s Impact on
Thornton Wilder’s Our Town.”
2. Vorlicky, Robert. (New York University)
“Radical Dramaturgy: The Case of Young Jean Lee’s Straight White
Men.”
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 46
Rewriting and Adapting Across Time, Culture,
and Genre: Homer, Euripides, and Wijaya
Meet Strattis, Walcott and Wisconsin
Harbor West B
Presiding: Ian Andrew MacDonald (Dickinson College)
1. Sofo, Giuseppe. (Université d’Avignon)
“Theatre, Rewriting and Translation: Analysing the translations of
Derek Walcott’s The Odyssey: a Stage Version.”
2. Sachdev, Rachana. (Susquehanna University)
“Exoticization, Postcolonialism and Globalization: The Case of Puta
Wijaya’s Geez!”
3. Scharffenberger, Elizabeth. (Columbia University)
“The Comic Refashioning of Tragedy in Strattis’ Phoenician Women.”
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 47
Dramas of the American Progressive Era
Harbor West C
Presiding: Ellen Dolgin (College of Blauvelt)
1. O’Malley, Lurana Donnels. (University of Hawai’i at Manoa)
“Spirits in Black and White: Ethiopia, Columbia, and the Witch of
Endor.”
2. Westgate, J. Chris. (California State University)
“‘Dissolution by Stages—and then—the Worst’: The Specter of Syphilis
in The Dawn of a To-morrow.”
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
3. Holtcamp, Victor. (Tulane University)
“Remembering ‘The Rod’: The Goldenrod Showboat in St. Louis.”
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 48
Lorraine Hansberry
Harbor East D
Presiding: Baron Kelly (University of Louisville)
1. Bernd, Lisa. (Cleveland State University)
“Lorraine Hansberry and Amira Baraka: The Mimesis of Militancy in
the Civil Rights Movement.”
2. Burch, William. (Rutgers University)
“Bad Theatricality: Lorraine Hansberry’s Apocalyptic Anxiety.”
3. Grams, Timothy. (Northern Michigan University)
“The Causes and Effects of Nihilism in Black America.”
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 49
Shakespeare in Historical Context
Harbor East E
Presiding: Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. (Loyola Marymount Univeristy)
1. Cooledge, Dean R. (University of Maryland Eastern Shore)
“The Original ‘Company Man’: Shylock as a Metaphor for the
Corporation in Early Modern England.”
2. Dotson, Jessica. (Virginia Commonwealth University)
“Shakespeare’s Supernova.”
9:00 – 10:15 a.m. Session 50
Eugene O’Neill Society Business Meeting
Harbor Club
Presiding: Jeff Kennedy, President (Arizona State University)
This meeting is open to all interested parties.
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 51
Adapting Historical Conventions to a
Contemporary Context, or ‘How to Do Things
with a Greek Chorus and Moliere’
Harbor West A
Presiding: Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. (Loyola Marymount University)
1. Kafetzi, Eleni. (University of Sorbonne)
“Ancient chorus in modern interpretations: Modern choruses in
contemporary interdisciplinary performances.”
2. Taylor, Scott D. (Western Washington University)
“Moliére Meets Paris Hilton at the Circus: Expanding the Theatrical
Text and Bridging the Gap between 17th Century Paris and 21st Century
Hollywood.”
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 52
Indian Theatre
Harbor West B
Presiding: Muhammad Azam Khan (Independent Scholar)
1. Rudisill, Kristen. (Bowling Green State University)
“Terrorists at Home: Tamil Brahmans As Indian Patriots.”
2. Guha-Majumbur, Rupendra. (University of Delhi)
“Opposing Patriarchal Hegemony: Radical Heroines in the Plays of
Sophocles and Rabindranath Tagore.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 53
Tennessee Williams Goes to the Movies
Harbor West C
Presiding: William Hutchings (University of Alabama-Birmingham)
1. Loomis, Jeffrey B. (Northwest Missouri State University)
“Archives of an Ironic Film Fan?: The ‘Tony’ Drafts of The Glass
Menagerie.”
2. Feldman, Alex. (MacEwan University)
“Tropic Temptations, Exotic Epiphanies: Reading the Hispanic in the
Plays and Films of Tennessee Williams.”
3. Foster, Verna A. (Loyola University Chicago)
“White Woods and Blue Jasmine: Woody Allen Rewrites A Streetcar
Named Desire.”
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 54
The Drama of Business/The Business of Drama
Harbor East D
Presiding: William C. Boles (Rollins College)
1. Johnson, Martha. (University of Minnesota)
“‘Bring Your Own Translator’: Communication and Changing
Business Paradigms in David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross and
David Henry Hwang’s Chinglish.”
2. Papa, Lee. (College of Staten Island)
“Theatre vs. Business: Plays of the Contemporary Workers’ Theatre.”
3. Boles, William C. (Rollins College)
“Money at Play: Theatricalizing the Great Recession in Contemporary
British Theatre.”
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
10:30 – 11:45 a.m. Session 55
Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy:
Drama, Play and Performance
Harbor East E
Presiding: Elizabeth Scharffenberger (Columbia University)
1. Potts, Kathleen. (The City College of New York)
“Dramaturgical Alternatives to Naturalism in Nietzsche’s Birth of
Tragedy and Suzan-Lori Parks’s Topdog/Underdog.”
2. Sheaffer, Adam. (University of Maryland, College Park)
“‘delightful and tragic’: Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy and Sarah
Ruhl’s Dead Man’s Cell Phone.”
3. Young, Patrick James. (University of Maryland, College Park)
“The Politics of Sandcastles: Rhetorics of play and The Birth of
Tragedy.”
10:30 – 11:45a.m. Session 56
Arthur Miller’s Life and Work – A Centennial
Discussion of the Works of Arthur Miller
Harbor Club
Sponsored by The Arthur Miller Society
Presiding: David Palmer (Massachusetts Maritime Academy)
Panelists: Susan C.W. Abbotson (Rhode Island College), Claire
Gleitman (Ithaca College), Michele Cobb (L. A. Theatre Works),
Stephen A. Marino (St. Francis College), Brenda Murphy
(University of Connecticut).
In celebration of the centennial this year of Arthur Miller’s birth, participants in this roundtable will discuss
why Miller’s plays continue to be produced so widely, not just in America but indeed throughout the world.
Which of Miller’s themes are specifically American; which are grounded in universal issues of the human
condition? What can we learn from looking at Miller’s plays about how people engage with literature and
why people care about fictional characters? How do plays become canonical, as many of Miller’s plays
have in American and other cultures? The session begins with brief statements from each of the five
panelists followed by discussion among the panelists and an open discussion with the audience.
12:00 – 1:30 p.m.
Lunch Break
12:00 – 1:30 p.m. Session 57
CDC Board Meeting
Board Members Only
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Chesapeake Room
SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
1:30 – 3:00 p.m. Session 58
Harbor Club
Visions of Tragedy in American Theater
Sponsored by The Arthur Miller Society
Presiding
David Palmer
(Massachusetts Maritime Academy; Arthur Miller Society)
J. Chris Westgate
(California State University, Fullerton; Eugene O’Neill Society)
Panelists:
On Edward Albee: Natka Bianchini (Loyola University Maryland, Edward Albee Society)
On Susan Glaspell: Sharon Friedman (New York University, Susan Glaspell Society)
On David Mamet: Brenda Murphy (University of Connecticut)
On Arthur Miller: Stephen A. Marino (St. Francis College, Arthur Miller Society)
On Eugene O’Neill: Jeffery Kennedy (Arizona State University, Eugene O’Neill Society)
On Thornton Wilder: Jackson R. Bryer (University of Maryland, Thornton Wilder Society)
On Tennessee Williams: Susan C. W. Abbotson (Rhode Island College)
On August Wilson: Sandra G. Shannon (Howard University, August Wilson Society)
Organized by the Arthur Miller Society, this round-table discussion among representatives from various
American dramatist societies will examine the ways in which tragedy has been envisioned and depicted in
American theater. Opening five-minute statements from the panelists will be followed by an open
discussion with the audience.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Awarding of The Philadelphia Constantinidis Essay in Critical Theory Award
Presiding: Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr.
The 2014 Philadelphia Constantinidis Essay in Critical Theory Award Winner:
Peter E. Pormann (University of Manchester)
“Arabs and Aristophanes, Menander Among the Muslims:
Greek Humour in the Medieval and Modern Middle East”
International Journal of the Classical Tradition 21, no. 1 (2014): 1-29.
This year the selection committee consisted of Chairperson Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. (Loyola Marymount
University), Robert Davis (Graduate Center, CUNY), Karelisa Hartigan (Emerita University of Florida),
Elizabeth Scharffenberger (Columbia University), Gonda Van Steen (University of Florida at Gainesville),
and Amanda Wrigley (University of Westminster). The CDC Board would like to extend its gratitude to
the committee for their service.
The selection committee thanks those who nominated essays for this year’s award and strongly encourages
nominations for next year’s award.
Call for Nominations: The 2015 Philadelphia Constantinidis Essay in Critical Theory Award
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
The Philadelphia Constantinidis Essay in Critical Theory Award in 2015 will be given to the best
comparative essay on any aspect and period of Greek drama or theatre that was published in English in any
journal in any country between January 1 and December 31, 2015. The award was established in 2006 in
memory of Philadelphia Constantinidis to encourage research and writing on Greek drama and theatre. This
is an open rank competition for academics, independent scholars, and doctoral students. The award is
administered by the Board of the Comparative Drama Conference. The Board solicits nominations and selfnominations for this award. The winner will be notified by the Director of the Comparative Drama
Conference, and will be offered complimentary hotel accommodations and a registration fee waiver to
attend the 40th Comparative Drama Conference. The winner will also receive a check of one thousand
dollars ($1,000) during the awards ceremony at the conference. The deadline for
nominations is December 31, 2015. Nominating letters and electronic copies of the essays (converted to
Adobe PDF) should be emailed to [email protected] by December 31, 2015. Postal mail and
faxes are not acceptable. The letter of nomination should include the name of the author of the published
essay, the title of the essay, the year of publication, the name of the journal, the email address and postal
address of the author, and a brief statement explaining why this essay was chosen for nomination.
Recipients of the award are not eligible for nomination or self-nomination for a three-year period.
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 59
Critiquing Business from Everyman to Enron:
Mamet, Prebble, and Pommerat
Harbor West A
Presiding: William C. Boles (Rollins College)
1. Pressley, Nelson. (Scholar-at-large)
“Capital Meltdowns: November, Enron, and the Stage Rhetoric of
Money.”
2. Essif, Les. (University of Tennessee)
“From Vinaver to Pommerat: The De-idealization of Capital and
‘Work as Business’ in Contemporary French Theatre.”
3. Lowell, Mandy. (Cornell University)
“He Who Could Be Each of Us: Everyman/Elckerlijc as
Communitarian Censure.”
3:15 – 4:30 p. m. Session 60
Audience Reception Studies:
Fahrer, Crimp, and The Living Theatre
Harbor West B
Presiding: Elizabeth Scharffenberger (Columbia University)
1. Heaps, Eric “C”. (Indiana University)
“Refusing to Fully Translate: Echo Translation and Music in Refusing
the Flower.”
2. Running-Johnson, Cynthia. (Western Michigan University)
“Re-viewing and the Role of the Spectator.”
3. Hsieh, Yu-Yun. (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
“Staging ‘the record ritual’: Live and Recorded Sound in The Living
Theatre’s The Connection.”
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
3:15 – 4:30 p. m. Session 61
O’Neill and Ecocriticism
Harbor West C
Organized by The Eugene O’Neill Society
Presiding: J. Chris Westgate (California State University)
1. Kennedy, Jeffery. (Arizona State University)
“‘It’s a hell av a life’: The Sea as Character in O’Neill’s Provincetown
Players Plays.”
2. Johnson, Katie. (Miami University)
“‘Come On Out o’ That Jungle’: The Ecologies of The Emperor
Jones.”
3. Baker-White, Robert. (Williams College)
“Nature’s Veiled Purpose: O’Neill’s Ecological Imagination in the Tao
House Plays.”
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 62
Re-Interpreting Classical Texts:
Pushkin, Gogol, Chekhov
Harbor East D
Presiding: Verna Foster (Loyola University Chicago)
1. Ignatieva, Maria. (The Ohio State University, Lima)
“Tragedy ‘Boris Gudunov’ by Alexander Pushkin as Russian Political
Nostradamus.”
2. Partan, Olga S. (College of the Holy Cross)
“The Russian Goldoni: Gogol’s ‘The Inspector General’ and the
Italian Comic Tradition.”
3. Rylkova, Galina. (University of Florida)
“Anton Chekhov’s Plays as Studies of Idealism.”
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 63
Trends in Contemporary American Drama:
Vogel, Hwang, Jacob-Jenkins, and Hudes
Harbor East E
Presiding: Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. (Loyola Marymount University)
1. Long, Khalid Yaya. (University of Maryland, College Park)
“Are We There Yet: Post-Race in Contemporary American Drama.”
2. Schlatter, James F. (University of Pennsylvania)
“‘When the Dead Won’t Die’: The Role of Ghosts in Contemporary
American War Plays.”
3. Cizmar, Elizabeth. (Tufts University)
“‘I hates myself!’: Reviving Blackface Minstrelsy in Branden JacobsJenkins’ Neighbors.”
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
3:15 – 4:30 p.m. Session 64
Staged Reading
Harbor Club
Leah’s Dybbuk
Author: Susan McCully (University of Maryland, Baltimore County)
Director: Eve Munson (University of Maryland, Baltimore County)
Cast: Hana Grothe, Hanna Yang, Wonsup Chung, Brielle Levenberg, Kerri Eastridge, Savannah Jo
Chamberlain, Hannah Kelly, Chaz Atkinso
Dramaturg: Janna Segal (Mary Baldwin College)
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 65
Theatre of West and South Africa
Harbor West A
Presiding: Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr. (Loyola Marymount University)
1. Zapkin, Phillip. (West Virginia University)
“‘Kill the Pity in Us’: The Communal Crisis as Crisis of Individualism
in David Greig’s Oedipus the Visionary.”
2. Udengwu, Ngozi. (University of Nigeria, Nsukka)
“Women in Men’s World: A Focus on the Yoruba Popular Travelling
Theatre.”
3. Ofori, Michael. (Ohio University)
“‘Pato’ to Proscenium: Tracing the Paradigm Shift in Ghanaian
Theater Through Architecture.”
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 66
Fin de Siecle Stages: Oscar Wilde, Alfred Jarry
and The Cancan
Harbor West B
Presiding: J. Chris Westgate (California State University)
1. Williams, Todd O. (Kutztown University)
“‘Beautiful Untrue Things’ in Oscar Wilde’s Society Comedies.”
2. Trainor, Sebastian. (Saint Lawrence University)
“The Real Battle of Ubu Roi: The Last Stand of Henry Bauër, Anarchist
Theatre Critic of the Parisian Fin de Siecle.”
3. Calvano, Jenn. (University of Colorado Boulder)
“Complicating the Gaze: Physicality and Female Representations in
Bob Fosse’s Sweet Charity and Fin de Siécle Cancan in France.”
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SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 67
Future Scholars: The Undergraduate Theater
Studies Honors Program at NYU
Harbor West C
Presiding: Robert Vorlicky (New York University)
Presenting Students: Katherine Banos, Michelle Nicole Brady
Davis, Ethan Charles Abramson, Cassidy Dawn Graves, Taylor
Edelhart, and Ilana Khanin.
For over 15 years, the Department of Drama, Tisch School of the Arts, NYU—whose majors are actors,
designers, and directors—has enhanced the scholarly acumen of Theatre Studies researchers through its
Honors Program offerings: students’ participation in highly selective seminars, coupled with the option to
write a mentored thesis. Former undergraduates who completed the thesis have gone on to such successes
as earning PhDs in Drama, Performance Studies, and English; securing teaching positions in university
Theatre Departments; publishing their thesis and speaking at national conferences; and performing on
Broadway and theatres across the U.S.—with their thesis in hand! Please join us to hear 6 honors students
speak briefly about their recent research, within the context of the program’s demanding, pedagogical
approach to elicit original thinking and writing from our future artists-scholars.
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 68
August Wilson and Amiri Baraka
Harbor East D
Presiding: Laura T. Smith (Stevenson University)
1. Kern, Douglas S. (University of Maryland, College Park)
“Dramatizing Death Threats: Amiri Baraka’s Nuyorican Trio.”
2. Nesmith, Eugene. (New Harlem Arts Theatre)
“August Wilson and Lloyd Richards: The Playwright-Director
Dynamic Collaborative Relationship.”
3. Maley, Patrick. (Centenary College)
“Tennessee Williams After August Wilson.”
4:45 – 6:00 p.m. Session 69
NEH Grant Session
Harbor Club
Presiding: Victoria Sams
Victoria Sams, Program Officer in the Education Programs division of the National Endowment for the
Humanities, will hold a forum in which she will present an overview of grant opportunities for CDC
scholars, educators, and organizations. The forum will be followed by a Q & A with the audience. Further
information on NEH grants may be found at http://www.neh.gov/grants/match-your-project. Ms. Sams will
be available for individual consultation, formally and informally, in the Pier 5 Lobby on Friday from 24. To arrange an appointment, contact [email protected] or call (202) 606-8283.
Mark Your Calendar:
The 40 Comparative Drama Conference, 2016
Stevenson University
Abstracts and Proposals due by 3 December 2015
th
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