Graduating theatre arts students present their capstone work in the Senior Theatre Festival
For more than 20 years, one rite of passage has awaited Puget Sound theatre arts majors each spring鈥攁nd it isn鈥檛 graduation. The Senior Theatre Festival is something of a trial by fire, but Loggers are well prepared to take the stage and not easily singed.
The culmination of two semesters of work, the festival presents multiple full-length, staged productions over several weekends each April and May. The productions are selected, cast, produced, and directed by graduating majors in the theatre arts department, their work serving as their senior theses and capstone projects.
鈥淏y the time you鈥檝e graduated in the theatre arts department, you鈥檝e experienced a wide variety of different roles within a particular production or class, or in a research capacity,鈥 says Molly McLean 鈥19. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e seeing many different sides of theater research and production so that you have a really well-rounded approach to understanding theater.鈥
As one of the leads in The Lady鈥檚 Not for Burning by Christopher Fry, as well as the play鈥檚 dramaturg, Molly has spent the semester learning, researching, and annotating the show. She even wrote her honors thesis on it. 鈥淭here aren鈥檛 many verse plays in English that are popular other than Shakespeare,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 filled with joy and love, and that鈥檚 all expressed through the text. People tend to think of this kind of play as silly or unimportant. What we鈥檙e trying to do is crack it open and [find] our way into the play.鈥