The third year focuses on creative and poetic engagement with classical texts, Shakespeare and contemporary heightened language, and a distinct two-year track in Screen Acting.
Acting: Actors train in the contemporary relevance of Shakespeare and contemporary heightened language.
Screen Acting: Actors begin a two-year Screen Acting track which begins with the language of filmmaking and etiquette on set, then focuses on the grounded realism of film acting technique, and later specific skills needed to audition for TV and film.
Movement:Actors synthesize their bodywork to meet the physical and vocal demands of the dynamic material they are exploring, inhabiting the size and scope of both heightened text and screenplays.
Voice and Speech: Actors explore heightened language, vocal extremes synthesizing the movement, voice and acting work.
Production Practice: Third and fourth-year BFA Acting students, alongside our MFA Acting students, make up the casting pool for our public season. Each BFA Acting student in the casting pool will perform in a minimum of three productions over the course of the last two years of the program. Our public season is a mix of contemporary, classical, young audience theatre, and new works mounted in various theatres. Actors may also be cast in additional productions, TTS collaborations with local theatres, student productions, and independent or curricular film or TV projects with DePaul’s School of Cinematic Arts.
Study Abroad (option and additional cost): Typically done following the third year of the BFA Acting program, The Greece Summer Acting Intensive, held on the island of Hydra, provides comprehensive training in performance, dramaturgy, storytelling, movement arts, and voice. Students immerse themselves in both ancient and contemporary Greek culture while contending with the island's natural environment. The program includes classes, workshops, and rehearsals, with a field trip to Mycenae and a performance at Epidaurus. Students present their ensemble-created play to local audiences and end the program with tours of Athens, including the Acropolis and Delphi, connecting deeply with the origins of Western theatre. Watch a video about this program here!