The following is a list of accredited, degree-granting acting programs at colleges and universities in the United States and the United Kingdom. It includes schools that grant either a degree in acting or a degree in another major that has an acting component or concentration. In general, B.A.and M.A.programs are more academic in nature (though they may offer a performance component or concentration),while Bfa and Mfa programs focus on training professional performers.An A.A.is a two-year junior-college degree.The list also includes nondegree acting programs that have a structured curriculum.THEATERUndergraduateALABAMAAuburn UniversityDepartment of Theater, 211 Telfair B. Peet Theatre, Auburn, Al, 36849-5422. Dan Larocque, chair, theatre@auburn.edu; http://media.cla.auburn.edu/theatre; (334) 844-4748; B.A. in theater, Bfa in musical theater, performance, design/tech, and management. Auburn University, MontgomeryDepartment of Communication and Dramatic Arts, P.O. Box 244023, Rm 223 Liberal Arts, Montgomery, Al,...
- 3/18/2010
- backstage.com
GLAAD has found the main gays on TV.
Today GLAAD released their 14th Annual Diversity report, previewing the 2009-2010 television season. Using a slightly different methodology than their recent post-mortem, the Network Responsibility Index on representation released over the summer, it paints a mixed picture of what Glbt viewers can expect when they turn on their televisions this fall.
For the purposes of this study, GLAAD breaks down television into broadcast, cable, reality and animation. Then the 600 characters on primetime are broken down further into six primary groups: Drama Lead/Supporting, Drama Recurring, Comedy Lead/Supporting, Comedy Recurring, Animated, and Reality.
This differs from their other report which tracked appearances across aired hours by simply tracking the character’s future existence.
GLAAD President Jarrett Barrios
The short summary is that broadcast networks are gaining representation, but that cable actually took a major hit on the number of characters, largely due...
Today GLAAD released their 14th Annual Diversity report, previewing the 2009-2010 television season. Using a slightly different methodology than their recent post-mortem, the Network Responsibility Index on representation released over the summer, it paints a mixed picture of what Glbt viewers can expect when they turn on their televisions this fall.
For the purposes of this study, GLAAD breaks down television into broadcast, cable, reality and animation. Then the 600 characters on primetime are broken down further into six primary groups: Drama Lead/Supporting, Drama Recurring, Comedy Lead/Supporting, Comedy Recurring, Animated, and Reality.
This differs from their other report which tracked appearances across aired hours by simply tracking the character’s future existence.
GLAAD President Jarrett Barrios
The short summary is that broadcast networks are gaining representation, but that cable actually took a major hit on the number of characters, largely due...
- 10/1/2009
- by lostinmiami
- The Backlot
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