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职称:Program Director, Theatre Arts Program
所属学校:University of Pennsylvania
所属院系:Theatre Arts Program
所属专业:Drama and Dramatics/Theatre Arts, General
联系方式:(215) 573-2658
Marcia Ferguson received her Ph.D. in theatre from the City University of New York Graduate Center and has an MFA in acting and a BA in English. She has taught, acted and directed professionally in theatre, film and television in Philadelphia, New York, Rome and Tokyo, and in Philadelphia has taught at Temple University, Swarthmore College, and Penn. Areas of specialization include cultural studies and intercultural theatre, performance studies, commedia dell'arte, movement for actors, and improvisation. She has published essays and criticism in journals and newspapers including Theatre Journal, Western European Stages, The Christian Science Monitor, and Slavic and Eastern European Performance. At Penn she has taught Acting, Advanced Acting, Directing, Dark Comedy in Theatre and Film, Theatrical Science, Backstage Drama, Performing Science, Improvisation: History, Theory, Practice, Introduction to Theatre, Western Drama, Connections: Theatre and Film, The Edinburgh Project, and Renaissance to Realism. She has conducted movement workshops at various schools and universities, and has studied voice and movement with Meredith Monk in New York, at Lispa in London, and with Pig Iron in Philadelphia. In Rome, Italy she directed Ionesco's Man with Bags and Dacia Maraini's Dialogue with a Prostitute, and in Tokyo, Japan (where she acted in various soap operas and variety shows, such as Kato-chan Ken-chan), she directed Lone Star, Laundry and Bourbon, and The Good Doctor. For Penn's Theatre Arts Program she has directed Cloud Nine, Fringe Inge (The Tiny Closet and The Rainy Afternoon, also performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival), Quake, The Trojan Women: A Love Story (with colleague James Schlatter), Pride's Crossing, for which she composed the original music, The Good Times are Killing Me, Playboy of the Western World, and Fefu and Her Friends. She devised an original performance piece, Diving in Backwards, with collaborator Lourdes Blansfield, and is currently devising two new projects for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2015, as director and co-creator.
Marcia Ferguson received her Ph.D. in theatre from the City University of New York Graduate Center and has an MFA in acting and a BA in English. She has taught, acted and directed professionally in theatre, film and television in Philadelphia, New York, Rome and Tokyo, and in Philadelphia has taught at Temple University, Swarthmore College, and Penn. Areas of specialization include cultural studies and intercultural theatre, performance studies, commedia dell'arte, movement for actors, and improvisation. She has published essays and criticism in journals and newspapers including Theatre Journal, Western European Stages, The Christian Science Monitor, and Slavic and Eastern European Performance. At Penn she has taught Acting, Advanced Acting, Directing, Dark Comedy in Theatre and Film, Theatrical Science, Backstage Drama, Performing Science, Improvisation: History, Theory, Practice, Introduction to Theatre, Western Drama, Connections: Theatre and Film, The Edinburgh Project, and Renaissance to Realism. She has conducted movement workshops at various schools and universities, and has studied voice and movement with Meredith Monk in New York, at Lispa in London, and with Pig Iron in Philadelphia. In Rome, Italy she directed Ionesco's Man with Bags and Dacia Maraini's Dialogue with a Prostitute, and in Tokyo, Japan (where she acted in various soap operas and variety shows, such as Kato-chan Ken-chan), she directed Lone Star, Laundry and Bourbon, and The Good Doctor. For Penn's Theatre Arts Program she has directed Cloud Nine, Fringe Inge (The Tiny Closet and The Rainy Afternoon, also performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival), Quake, The Trojan Women: A Love Story (with colleague James Schlatter), Pride's Crossing, for which she composed the original music, The Good Times are Killing Me, Playboy of the Western World, and Fefu and Her Friends. She devised an original performance piece, Diving in Backwards, with collaborator Lourdes Blansfield, and is currently devising two new projects for the Edinburgh Fringe Festival 2015, as director and co-creator.