Production Practice/Rutgers Theater Company
The Rutgers Theater Company (which
includes the Jameson Project) is a resident company of student actors,
designers, directors, playwrights, stage managers, and technicians whose work
is guided by master teachers and other accomplished professionals. Production practice is fully integrated with
the curriculum of the Department of Theater Arts.Theatrical productions are tightly organized, collaborative events that require each participant to fulfill his or her
responsibilities.
Rehearsal and Production Conflict
Master of fine arts (M.F.A.) and bachelor of fine arts (B.F.A.) students' presence is
required for evening and weekend work throughout the production process. Some productions require commitments during
holidays, vacation periods, and/or religious holidays. Students are not excused from any
responsibilities, rehearsals, or performances for any reason, unless specifically
approved in advance and in writing by the Department of Theater Arts Executive
Committee. Under no circumstances will students be released from a technical
rehearsal, dress rehearsal, or performance. Should a potential conflict not be approved, the student will need to
clear that conflict, because their presence will be required.
Casting and Production Assignment Policy
The theater arts program at the Mason Gross School of the Arts
prepares students for the wide variety of roles that they will encounter in the
professional entertainment industry: theater, film, and television. The goal is to develop highly skilled and
versatile theater artists.
Theater, film, and television encompass
the full range of human behavior and experience, and there will be times when
students may be asked to perform in roles or work on plays that may contain
language and describe situations distasteful to some. Students in the Mason Gross School of the Arts
Department of Theater Arts must be able to portray characters and work on plays,
even if the values and beliefs therein may be at significant odds with their own.
Students in the program are not at liberty to
choose the assignments or roles that they are cast in according to how congruent
they are with their personal belief systems. In addition, altering a text or
changing the language of a play in order to sanitize language or character
behavior creates an inauthentic performance of the play that falsifies the
artistic integrity of the playwright's work. It also cheats the audience who came to see a legitimate performance of
the play. Altering the text of a play is
unacceptable in our program and will result in a failing grade for the work in question and ultimately in dismissal from the program.
Actors are required to attend all
auditions for which they are called. If
a student wishes to audition for a role for which they have not been called,
the student may request an audition. At
the discretion of the head of directing, the student may be granted the
audition.
All issues of nudity or smoking in rehearsals and
performances (including special effects) must be approved by the executive committee in order to make sure that departmental policies are followed. The stage manager or director prepares a photocopy of the relevant pages in the script,
highlighting necessary nudity or smoking, and provides the executive committee
with a copy as well as an explanation of the request.
Nudity during a performance may be permitted if
it is essential to the logic of the play, but it may not be gratuitous. Actors cannot be required to perform in the
nude. During casting, only the student's primary acting teacher may discuss performing
in the nude with the actor. The
director cannot have this conversation with the actor. The chair/artistic director is the final
arbiter of taste and adherence to executive committee policy. An actor's
refusal to perform nude will not affect his or her casting. If nudity is to occur,
the department will post a sign in the theater lobby and box office window,
so that patrons with sensitivity to nudity may be apprised.
Smoking during a performance is only permitted within strict limits if it is essential to the action and logic of the play. If smoking is to occur, the department will post a sign in the theater lobby and box office window so that patrons with sensitivity to smoking may be apprised. If smoking is approved, the ventilation systems will be run during those scenes and during intermissions to dilute the concentration of smoke in the atmosphere. This may cause noise that would affect the audience's ability to hear some of the scene. An actor's refusal to smoke will not affect his or her casting. Nontobacco products will be used if the materials are lit.
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