|

Dramatic
Writing Program
Contact:
Professor
Gaylyn
Studlar, Director
Program in Film and Video Studies
2512 Frieze Building 1285
(734) 764-0147
Wendy Hammond, Coordinator
Assistant Professor, Theatre and Drama
Lecturer, English Language and Literature
3541B Frieze Building 1285
(734) 936-2414
(734) 647-7693
May
be elected as an interdisciplinary concentration program
Professors
Beaver (Film and Video),
Brater (English Language and Literature), Fredricksen (Theatre and Drama), Konigsberg (Film and Video), Studlar (Film and Video)
Associate
Professors
Gordon (Theatre and
Drama), Neville-Andrews (Theatre and Drama)
Assistant
Professors
Hammond
(Theatre and
Drama)
Lecturers
Burnstein
(Film and Video), Lawson (Film and Video), Loeser (Film and Video),
Rayher (Film and Video), Sarris (Film and Video)
The
Dramatic Writing Program is a cross-college, interdisciplinary
undergraduate concentration (A.B.) between the Program
of Film and Video Studies and the departments of English and Theater and is administered by a Faculty Oversight Committee. The concentration
is designed to enrich, coordinate, and make visible the creative
work emerging from playwriting and screenwriting classes at the
University, as well as to provide an intellectually resonant
forum for the historical and analytical study of forms of writing
intended for production on the stage or screen.
The
integration of the disciplines of playwriting and screenwriting
into a joint concentration in Dramatic Writing unites two artistic
endeavors which logically belong together in an academic context
just as they are united in the cultural world. This concentration
centralizes the study of dramatic writing as text and as art
form, providing students with a logically structured concentration
that emphasizes a global approach to the analysis, study, and
creation of dramatic texts. The curriculum for the Dramatic Writing
concentration provides strong historical and theoretical grounding
that stresses the inter-relatedness of the intellectual study
and creative production of dramatic texts. It is our belief that
better writers are made of those who are well read, but also
of those who have the opportunity to be immersed in the creative
production of texts for the stage or for the moving image (film,
video, studio television, digital images). Studying the liberal
art of dramatic writing can make a better, more thoughtful reader
and viewer of the students in this concentration who may ultimately
decide to pursue a career other than that of professional author.
The goal of this concentration, then, is not merely to produce
technically skilled screenwriters and playwrights, but also to
acquaint student writers with the full range of excellent plays,
films, and productions that have preceded them.
The
Dramatic Writing Program ensures an integrated and creative approach
to dramatic texts and provides formal advisory guidance to writers
who are presently on their own and may be constructing an arbitrarily
assembled course of study rather than receiving comprehensive
training. The program provides student playwrights with as full
a command of their craft as possible through the optional playwriting
sequence (6 credits). Similarly, screenwriting is studied as
it emerges from both visual and literary forms. Students may
gain more extensive creative experience in screenwriting through
the sequence devoted to this dramatic art. The program seeks
to enrich the training of students interested in screenwriting
by exposing them to the building-block fundamentals of theatrical
form (scene and act construction, dialogue, character, theme)
while broadening the instruction our playwrights receive by having
them study the virtues of cinematic technique (story, pace, editing,
visual composition).
Valuable
forums offer students the opportunity to see their work in production
and promote our integrated approach to the creation and study
of dramatic texts. Students will have a public forum for presenting
productions from their work at Theater's regularly-presented
Shorts Festival and Film and Video Studies' End of the Semester
Student Festival.
Undergraduate
Committee. Students
who wish to consult or petition the program regarding any requirement
should submit a written request addressed to the Program Undergraduate
Committee, 2512 Frieze Building.
The
Avery and Jule Hopwood
Awards in Creative Writing. Under the terms of the
will of Avery Hopwood, a member of the Class of 1905, the annual
income from a generous endowment fund is distributed in prizes
for creative work in four fields: dramatic writing, fiction,
poetry, and the essay. Competition is open to qualified students
enrolled in any school or college of the University. Entrants
must, however, be enrolled in a designated writing course elected
through the Department of English Language and Literature, Residential
College, the Program in Film and Video Studies, or the Department
of Theatre. For full information about the conditions of competition
contact the Hopwood Program Associate, 1006 Angell Hall, 764-6296.
The
Leonard and Eileen Newman Prize for Dramatic Writing. Students enrolled
in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts may submit
dramatic writing - screenplays, stage plays, or teleplays - for
consideration to the Leonard and Eileen Newman Prize for Dramatic
Writing. The winner will receive an award of $1000, to be announced
as part of the Hopwood Awards ceremony. Full information about
entry is available in The Program in Film and Video Studies office,
2512 Frieze Building. 764-0147.
Prerequisites
to the concentration.
Theater 211/English 245/RC
Hums. 280, Introduction to Drama and Theater, and
Film and Video Studies
200, Introduction to Film, Video, and Television Production.
Application
is selective. It should be made to the concentration through
submission of the student's writing portfolio, with a letter
of application copies of course transcripts, and letters of recommendation
from two faculty members.
Concentration
Program. 30
credits as follows:
- Core
Courses:
- Theater
242. Directing II
- English 327. Playwriting
II
- Film
and Video 310.
Screenwriting I
- Specialization:
At
the 400 level of writing coursework, students specialize in either
Playwriting or Screenwriting and choose one of the following
sequences:
- Sequence
in Playwriting
(6 credits). English
427, Playwriting and one of the following: Theater 420, Playwriting
toward Production; English
428, Senior Thesis Tutorial; Theatre
430, Theater Senior Playwriting Tutorial (Thesis).
- Sequence
in Screenwriting
(6 credits). Film and
Video 410, Advanced Screenwriting and one of the following:
Film and Video 423, Practicum for the Screenwriter or Film-Video
489, Film and Video Senior Screenwriting Tutorial (Thesis).
- Electives
and Cognates
(15 credits):
- Six
credits chosen from the following general surveys of
drama, theater, or film:
English
443,
444,
447,
448,
449; Theatre
321,
322,
423; Film/Video
350,
360
- Nine
credits chosen from the following drama, theatre or film history,
criticism, and/or theory courses:
- Any
course listed in 3a not used to meet the 3a requirements
- Comparative
Literature 436
- English
317,
319,
367,
368,
445,
446,
450, 467
- Film/Video
361,
366,
414,
420,
440,
441,
442,
455,
460,
461,
470
- French
440
- German
330,
331
- Music
History and Musicology 413
- Musical
Theatre 441, 442
- Russian
463, 470
- Theatre 402
Honors
Concentration. The
Honors Program in Dramatic Writing is open to seniors who have
a GPA of 3.5 or higher in their University courses and who have
demonstrated both the interest and capacity to carry out the
independent work required to complete an Honors thesis during
their senior year. Applications should be made by Spring of the
junior year.
Advising.
Students
who may be interested in a concentration in Dramatic Writing
are encouraged to consult with a Program advisor. Appointments
for Gaylyn Studlar can be scheduled in 2512 Frieze Building,or
by calling 764-0147. Appointments for Wendy Hammond can be made
by calling 647-7693. .
University
of Michigan
| College of LS&A | Student
Academic Affairs | LS&A
Bulletin Index
This
page maintained by LS&A Academic Information and Publications, 1228 Angell Hall
Copyright
© 2000 The Regents
of the University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA +1 734 764-1817
Trademarks of the University of Michigan may not be electronically or otherwise altered or separated from this document or used for any non-University purpose. |