Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not in this world directly, but a friend’s kid went to Temple and an acquaintance is at Northwestern. Just a few more to check out!
Northwestern alum here (not in the theater dept.) and the OP said her kid does not want cold weather. Northwestern is cold and there can be months of gray snow turning black as it sits around. I loved it there (and I'm from the warm South!) but a kid who was seriously not interested in cold-weather regions shouldn't go to NU unless the program there is so compelling for her that it's a clear first choice despite the weather. The theater department is incredible but the quality of life the student prefers is crucial too.
I know that some people have health problems that flare up in the cold and see to be in warm weather. I can’t imagine someone resilient enough to make it in TV, theater or film who’d be worried about cold weather.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So listen, schools are great but what's the end run? You major in theater, presumably, to act. Focusing so much on the college seems somewhat disconnected from the path to the ultimate thing. Which one of these choices gets you closest in proximity to the thing?
Again, was not looking for these types of opinions on theater as a course of study. There are absolutely colleges that create a path into the theater and performing arts world.
Was not commenting on course of study. My own DS is theater at NYU Tisch and I am a director. So definitely was not suggesting college is not a path. Was suggesting the choice of college should match the desired path in the most effective way. We chose NYU (over UCLA, USC and DePaul) because their approach to entering the business seemed more in line with his goals, as well as physical proximity to jobs and auditions and networking. That's what I mean. This is 2023 and content drives everything, so I think the field is actually the economy driver of both now and the future. So go for it, but just dig into how connected the school is to the business. not just the training.
PP, thanks for this (NP). What do you think of WestConn? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So listen, schools are great but what's the end run? You major in theater, presumably, to act. Focusing so much on the college seems somewhat disconnected from the path to the ultimate thing. Which one of these choices gets you closest in proximity to the thing?
Again, was not looking for these types of opinions on theater as a course of study. There are absolutely colleges that create a path into the theater and performing arts world.
Was not commenting on course of study. My own DS is theater at NYU Tisch and I am a director. So definitely was not suggesting college is not a path. Was suggesting the choice of college should match the desired path in the most effective way. We chose NYU (over UCLA, USC and DePaul) because their approach to entering the business seemed more in line with his goals, as well as physical proximity to jobs and auditions and networking. That's what I mean. This is 2023 and content drives everything, so I think the field is actually the economy driver of both now and the future. So go for it, but just dig into how connected the school is to the business. not just the training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So listen, schools are great but what's the end run? You major in theater, presumably, to act. Focusing so much on the college seems somewhat disconnected from the path to the ultimate thing. Which one of these choices gets you closest in proximity to the thing?
Again, was not looking for these types of opinions on theater as a course of study. There are absolutely colleges that create a path into the theater and performing arts world.
Was not commenting on course of study. My own DS is theater at NYU Tisch and I am a director. So definitely was not suggesting college is not a path. Was suggesting the choice of college should match the desired path in the most effective way. We chose NYU (over UCLA, USC and DePaul) because their approach to entering the business seemed more in line with his goals, as well as physical proximity to jobs and auditions and networking. That's what I mean. This is 2023 and content drives everything, so I think the field is actually the economy driver of both now and the future. So go for it, but just dig into how connected the school is to the business. not just the training.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So listen, schools are great but what's the end run? You major in theater, presumably, to act. Focusing so much on the college seems somewhat disconnected from the path to the ultimate thing. Which one of these choices gets you closest in proximity to the thing?
Again, was not looking for these types of opinions on theater as a course of study. There are absolutely colleges that create a path into the theater and performing arts world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So listen, schools are great but what's the end run? You major in theater, presumably, to act. Focusing so much on the college seems somewhat disconnected from the path to the ultimate thing. Which one of these choices gets you closest in proximity to the thing?
I cannot speak to OP's child's specific situation (as a performer) but I know someone who got a full ride to the Emerson BFA program for technical theater and I can't speak highly enough for how it set her up to have an effective career. Besides arts classes, they had required classes on creating a professional business of yourself (everything from designing logos/resumes/portfolios to doing taxes, accounting, etc.) and opportunities for students to work toward union membership so they were set to join the working world when they graduated. I hope OP and their child are looking into the network/union work opportunities and business classes that are offered at whatever program they choose to go with, although I will say that most of the artists I know did spend at least part of their 20s working secondary jobs until they either switched careers or found something stable. The only one I know who didn't was at American Ballet Academy and went straight into a company.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So listen, schools are great but what's the end run? You major in theater, presumably, to act. Focusing so much on the college seems somewhat disconnected from the path to the ultimate thing. Which one of these choices gets you closest in proximity to the thing?
I presume these are very rich people, and they want the college experience for their kids.