Professor Isser's Courses
 
Modern Drama
Shakespeare Through Performance
The Holocaust on Stage and Screen
Basic Acting
Fundamentals of Directing
 
Advanced Directing
Playwriting
Greek Drama
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MODERN DRAMA
This course surveys the major aesthetic movements of the last century utilizing dramatic texts and theoretical writings to illustrate successive paradigms. Movements such as Naturalism, Symbolism, Expressionism, Dadaism, Surrealism, Epic Theatre and the Absurd are examined through close readings of associated works. The works of Büchner, Ibsen, Chekhov, Strindberg, Jarry, Pirandello, Shaw, Brecht, and Beckett provide the cornerstones for discussion and investigation. Students will respond critically to the material by comunicating mastery of texts and concepts. Classes combine lectures and seminars that require student particpation.
[Course Syllabus]
 
SHAKESPEARE THROUGH PERFORMANCE
This class is predicated upon the conceit that Shakespeare--as a member of a producing theatre company--wrote his plays as theatrical artifacts and not literary works. To understand, appreciate and master the plays of the Bard, students must approach the texts as performance specimens. Functioning as scholarly artists in a laboratory setting, students--working from both the Folio and modern editions--will master the rudiments of Shakespearean performance, become acquainted with historical and contemporary staging conventions, investigate the notion of textual integrity and explore dramaturgical issues. Particular emphasis will be placed upon the desirability and/or need to subvert through performance problematic texts.
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[Course Syllabus]
 
THE HOLOCAUST ON STAGE AND SCREEN
 This course utilizes dramatic literature and film to examine the Nazi policies of genocide that were initiated and enacted before and during the Second World War. Various representational strategies are analyzed and contrasted in an effort to gauge the relative effectiveness of artists to come to terms with these ineffable events. Issues to be examined include the relationship between a dramatic text and its historical model, the problem of transfiguration, the applicability of a structural model for organizing texts, documentary versus dramatic enactment, varying national perspectives,the emergence of feminist and gay perspectives, and the problems of exploitation and revisionism.
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[Course Syllabus]

 

BASIC ACTING
 This is an extremely challenging course that synthesizes theoretical and practical components to introduce students to the art of acting. Students will be expected to perform as both scholars and practitioners as they learn the underlying fundamentals of acting and begin to master the basic principles of the craft. Students will participate in a series of exercises, games and improvisations to improve concentration, focus and creativity. In addition, students will perform two scenes with partners for in-class presentation and will participate in a public performance at the end of the semester. By the end of the course, students will be able to perform in a confident and competent manner while inculcating the theoretical ideas that form the basis for the Stanislavskian approach to acting.
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[Course Syllabus]
 
FUNDAMENTALS OF DIRECTING
  This course is an intensive introduction to the practice and theory of theatrical direction. Students will be expected to perform as both scholars and artists during the semester. The course intorduces the young artist to the rudiments of the directorial process and encourages creativity in a supportive and collaborative environment. Classroom and laboratory work is closely integrated as students are taken through each step of the production process. The course begins with a series of lectures that delineate the theory of directing as it has evolved over the past century. The ideas of seminal practitioners such as Stanislavsky, Craig, Meyerhold, Brecht, Clurman and Brook are explored. The students are then expected to put some of these ideas into play as they develop first their own short, original theatre piece and then mount a full one-act play.
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[Course Syllabus]

 

ADVANCED DIRECTING
This is an upper level course for students wishing to explore the theoretical and practical elements of the craft of directing. Students will function as scholarly artists in the production of a major theatrical work. In addition to mounting a work, students will explore the theory of directing, dramaturgy, and dramatic criticism. Students will conduct extensive scholarly research that will provide a theoretical underpinning for their practical work. Examples of work will be brought into the classroom to serve as laboratory specimens for critique and dissection.
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[Course Syllabus]
 
PLAYWRITING
The Playwriting Tutorial is a challenging practicum that expects students to function as scholarly artists in a workshop environment. The first goal of the class is to open your imaginations and to get you writing on a regular, disciplined basis. The second goal is to provide you with a few basics about the craft of writing and dramatic structure. To accomplish both of these objectives, we need to establish a creative, safe and open environment.
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[Course Syllabus]
 
GREEK DRAMA
 This class will introduce students to the theatricality and dramaturgy of Greek Drama. The texts will be viewed in translation as theatrical artifacts reflecting the values, politics, and religion of the Greek world. In addition, we will examine the impact of the plays upon the development of later Western drama. Students will function as scholarly artists in a seminar setting.
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