Department of Theatre & Drama
Upcoming Events
Your Name Is a Song
Newman StudioWalgreen Drama Center
Free - no tickets required
Department of Theatre & Drama students present assistant professor Shavonne Coleman’s adaptation of the children’s book Your Name Is a Song, originally written by Jamilah Thompkins-Bigelow for a single public performance on North Campus.
John Proctor Is the Villain
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
Reserved Seating $35 / $29 | Students $16 (fees included)
As a group of high schoolers in a small Georgia town analyze Arthur Miller’s The Crucible in their literature class, they find echoes of the play in their own lives and – with laughter, fury, and heartbreak – grapple with complicated questions of trust, betrayal, and the abuse of power.
John Proctor Is the Villain
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre
Reserved Seating $35 / $29 | Students $16 (fees included)
As a group of high schoolers in a small Georgia town analyze Arthur Miller’s The Crucible in their literature class, they find echoes of the play in their own lives and – with laughter, fury, and heartbreak – grapple with complicated questions of trust, betrayal, and the abuse of power.
A Few Good Men
Power Center for the Performing Arts
Reserved Seating $35 / $29 | Students $16 (fees included)
This compelling courtroom drama explores complicated ideas of honor, duty, and truth in a case about a Marine Corps hazing incident that went horribly wrong – and who should pay the price. This play launched Aaron Sorkin’s career and later became a blockbuster film.
A Few Good Men
Power Center for the Performing Arts
Reserved Seating $35 / $29 | Students $16 (fees included)
This compelling courtroom drama explores complicated ideas of honor, duty, and truth in a case about a Marine Corps hazing incident that went horribly wrong – and who should pay the price. This play launched Aaron Sorkin’s career and later became a blockbuster film.
A Few Good Men
Power Center for the Performing Arts
Reserved Seating $35 / $29 | Students $16 (fees included)
This compelling courtroom drama explores complicated ideas of honor, duty, and truth in a case about a Marine Corps hazing incident that went horribly wrong – and who should pay the price. This play launched Aaron Sorkin’s career and later became a blockbuster film.
A Few Good Men
Power Center for the Performing Arts
Reserved Seating $35 / $29 | Students $16 (fees included)
This compelling courtroom drama explores complicated ideas of honor, duty, and truth in a case about a Marine Corps hazing incident that went horribly wrong – and who should pay the price. This play launched Aaron Sorkin’s career and later became a blockbuster film.
Our Oz
Arthur Miller TheatreWalgreen Drama Center
General Admission by Floor $35 | Students $16 (fees included)
A reimagination of The Wizard of Oz through a BIPOC and queer lens, as devised by professors José Casas (head of playwriting minor, Theatre & Drama) and Jake Hooker (head of drama at the Residential College) and U-M students. Intersectional and interdisciplinary, this project explores and experiments with the tropes and images of multiple renditions from the Land of Oz as originally conceived by L. Frank Baum.
Our Oz
Arthur Miller TheatreWalgreen Drama Center
General Admission by Floor $35 | Students $16 (fees included)
A reimagination of The Wizard of Oz through a BIPOC and queer lens, as devised by professors José Casas (head of playwriting minor, Theatre & Drama) and Jake Hooker (head of drama at the Residential College) and U-M students. Intersectional and interdisciplinary, this project explores and experiments with the tropes and images of multiple renditions from the Land of Oz as originally conceived by L. Frank Baum.
Our Oz
Arthur Miller TheatreWalgreen Drama Center
General Admission by Floor $35 | Students $16 (fees included)
A reimagination of The Wizard of Oz through a BIPOC and queer lens, as devised by professors José Casas (head of playwriting minor, Theatre & Drama) and Jake Hooker (head of drama at the Residential College) and U-M students. Intersectional and interdisciplinary, this project explores and experiments with the tropes and images of multiple renditions from the Land of Oz as originally conceived by L. Frank Baum.