Jack Ferver, assistant professor of theater and performance at Bard College, was featured in the New York Times in an article about choreographer Martha Graham, whose work Ferver highlights in what the Times calls an “excellent exhibition” at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. The exhibition curated by Ferver, Martha Graham: The Mother of Psychological Dance, traces the arc of Graham’s groundbreaking career, centering her visionary approach to dance as psychological expression.
Jack Ferver Featured in the New York Times
Jack Ferver, assistant professor of theater and performance.
Jack Ferver, assistant professor of theater and performance at Bard College, was featured in the New York Times in an article about choreographer Martha Graham, whose work Ferver highlights in what the Times calls an “excellent exhibition” at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. The exhibition, Martha Graham: The Mother of Psychological Dance, takes place in five acts and addresses Graham’s sense of theatrical timing and structure. Gia Kourlas writes that the work of Graham’s that Ferver “responds to most and considers most necessary now involves Graham’s deep interest in psychology—how dance originating in an inner life was not only different, but radical.”
The centennial exhibition curated by Ferver traces the arc of Graham’s groundbreaking career, centering her visionary approach to dance as psychological expression. Graham transformed the dancing body into a vessel for inner life, using movement to externalize emotion, memory, and the unconscious. “There was such an ask that Graham had for her audience,” Ferver told Kourlas. “I feel that what Freud gave to modern psychology is what Graham gave to dance.”
Bard’s Theater and Performance Program offers an interdisciplinary, liberal arts-based approach to the making and study of theater and performance, and embraces a wide range of performance practices, from live art and interactive installation to classical theater from around the globe.
Tania El Khoury, distinguished artist in residence, associate professor in theater and performance, and director of the Center for Human Rights and the Arts at Bard College, has been honored by two residencies, one with the École Universitaire de Recherche ArTeC, a research school that supports experimental practices, and one with Fabrique Chaillot, a selective program at Théâtre Chaillot within the French National Theater of Dance.
Bard Scholar Tania El Khoury Honored With Two Residencies
Tania El Khoury.
Tania El Khoury, distinguished artist in residence, associate professor in theater and performance, and director of the Center for Human Rights and the Arts at Bard College, has been honored by two residencies, one with the École Universitaire de Recherche ArTeC, a research school that supports experimental practices, and one with Théâtre Chaillot, a program within the French National Theater of Dance. In April, El Khoury was appointed as one of three leading international scholars invited annually by ArTeC whose work involves a transdisciplinary approach. During this residency in Paris, she delivered a public lecture in French, led a public workshop, provided feedback to MA students, and participated in a creative research event with Performing Knowledge, where she is an associate artist.
El Khoury’s residency through Fabrique Chaillot, a selective program at Théâtre Chaillot within the French National Theater of Dance, provided her with three weeks to develop her new work, Choreography of State. The project deconstructs the embodied gestures of law enforcement and border patrol to reveal the dramaturgy of state violence. This multimedia installation performance approaches choreography as a forensic practice, inviting women choreographers from diverse practices around the world to create dance notations as evidence of power structures: scores of resistance to be activated by performers and embodied by the audience in a celebration of self-defense. Choreography of State is coproduced by the Théâtre Chaillot in Paris and the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College, as part of Evidence, an international festival by the Fisher Center LAB. The work will premiere at Théâtre Chaillot in Paris from October 8–10, 2026, with its US premiere at Evidence, Fisher Center LAB, at Bard College from December 4–6, 2026.
Beto O'Byrne, visiting artist in residence in theater and performance at Bard College, has been awarded a Franklin Research Grant by the American Philosophical Society. O'Byrne’s grant will support archival research and ethnographic fieldwork in San Antonio and Austin, Texas, toward the development of Forget the Alamo, a research-driven theatrical work reexamining the mythology surrounding the Alamo and the Texas Revolt.
Visiting Artist in Residence Beto O'Byrne Awarded Franklin Research Grant
Beto O'Byrne. Photo by Thomas Dunn
Beto O'Byrne, visiting artist in residence in theater and performance at Bard College, has been awarded a Franklin Research Grant by the American Philosophical Society. O'Byrne’s grant will support archival research and ethnographic fieldwork in San Antonio and Austin, Texas, in collaboration with Radical Evolution Performance Collective, toward the development of Forget the Alamo. This research-driven theatrical work reexamines the mythology surrounding the Alamo and the Texas Revolt, restoring Tejano, Black, and Indigenous perspectives long marginalized from state-sanctioned narratives, and grounding the performance in culturally specific aesthetics rooted in Tejano, Mexican American, and carpa traditions.
Established in 1933, the Franklin Research Grant program supports noncommercial research in all areas of knowledge. Awards are designed to help meet various related costs, such as for travel to libraries and archives, the purchase of microfilm, photocopies, or equivalent research materials, fieldwork, and laboratory research expenses.
Bard’s Theater and Performance Program offers an interdisciplinary, liberal arts-based approach to the making and study of theater and performance, and embraces a wide range of performance practices, from live art and interactive installation to classical theater from around the globe.
Bard Professor Tania El Khoury Awarded 2026 Creative Capital Award
Tania El Khoury, distinguished artist in residence, associate professor in theater and performance, and director of the Center for Human Rights and the Arts at Bard.
Tania El Khoury, distinguished artist in residence, associate professor in theater and performance, and director of the Center for Human Rights and the Arts at Bard College, has won a 2026 Creative Capital Award in support of her project, A Choreography of State Violence. Her project was amongst 49 new works chosen from a pool of 4,546 applications from all 50 states and regions in the United States. Creative Capital, a nonprofit organization dedicated to championing artistic freedom of expression by supporting individual artists across the United States, confers the award in recognition of original, ambitious project proposals for new artistic ideas, and supports artists by providing project funding of up to $50,000 each, professional development services, and community-building opportunities.
El Khoury’s project, A Choreography of State Violence, is an installation performance that examines state violence from a choreographic perspective, exploring how what are perceived as incidental and individualized cases of violence perpetrated by the state are, in fact, conceptualized and rehearsed with calculated dramaturgy.
“Creative Capital remains unwavering in our mission to support individual artists creating new work as a powerful catalyst for freedom of thought and freedom of expression in our democracy,” said Christine Kuan, president and executive director of Creative Capital. The Creative Capital Award will in 2026 support the creation of 49 new works in visual arts, film, dance, theater, music/jazz, and literature, as well as technology, multidisciplinary, and socially engaged forms in all disciplines.
Tania El Khoury creates interactive and immersive installations and performances that reflect on the production of collective memory and the cultivation of solidarity. Her work is activated by tactile, auditory and visual traces collected and curated by the artist and her collaborators, and they are ultimately transformed through audience interaction. El Khoury’s work has been translated to multiple languages and shown in 35 countries across 6 continents in spaces ranging from museums to cable cars. She is the recipient of the Herb Alpert Award, the Soros Art Fellowship, the Bessies Outstanding Production Award, the International Live Art Prize, the Total Theatre Innovation Award, and the Arches Brick Award.
Bard Alumna Anne Bogart ’74 Inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame
Anne Bogart ’74.
American theater and opera director and cofounder of SITI Company Anne Bogart ’74 was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame on November 17. In order to receive the award, the only nationally recognized hall of fame honoring lifetime achievement in the American theater, the awardee must have given 25 years distinguished service to the American theater and at least five major production credits on Broadway. Bogart, who studied drama and dance at Bard and received an honorary doctorate of fine arts from the College in 2014, teaches at Columbia University, where she is a professor and head of the directing concentration.
In December 2022, Bard’s Fisher Center presented the world premiere of SITI Company’s reimagining of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, codirected by Anne Bogart and Tony Award winner Darron L West. The work, commissioned by the Fisher Center, was the final production in SITI Company’s 30th anniversary “Finale Season.”
Bard’s Theater and Performance Program offers an interdisciplinary, liberal arts-based approach to the making and study of theater and performance, and embraces a wide range of performance practices, from live art and interactive installation to classical theater from around the globe.
Two Bard College Professors Receive 2025 Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant
L–R: Drew Thompson, photo by Alessandro Fresco; and Miriam Felton-Dansky, photo by Ashley Smith/Wide Eyed Studios
Miriam Felton-Dansky, associate professor and director of Bard College’s undergraduate Theater and Performance Program, and Drew Thompson, associate professor of Africana and Historical Studies at Bard and associate professor at Bard Graduate Center, have received 2025 Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grants. Felton-Dansky was awarded a grant in the category of Articles for “Vetting Regimes: The US Politics of Artist Visas from the Berlin Wall to the Muslim Ban,” and Thompson was awarded a grant in the category of Books for Coloring Surveillance through Polaroids: The Poetics of Black Solidarity and Sociality.
In its 2025 cycle the Arts Writers Grant has awarded a total of $1,040,000 to 31 writers. The program supports writing about contemporary art and aims to ensure that critical writing remains a valued mode of engaging with the visual arts. The grant has funded over 450 writers over 20 years, providing more than $13.5 million of support. “The Arts Writers Grant honors excellence in the field, and celebrates the generative role arts writing plays in creative and intellectual spheres,” said Joel Wachs, president of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Felton-Dansky will receive a grant in support of her research into the history and evolution of US visa classifications for international performing artists. Her article will examine how the O and P visa systems, established in 1990, have shaped which performers can enter the US to present work on American stages and how these administrative processes have evolved over the past three decades. The research traces the origins of these visa categories and their role in international cultural exchange, drawing on archival materials, immigration policy analysis, and case studies from the performing arts sector.
“This project emerged from conversations with valued colleagues in the arts community at Bard, which I am proud to be a part of,” Felton-Dansky said. “I am honored by the meaningful recognition and support of this grant, which will allow me to pursue my research about the politics of international artist visas at a time when conversation about our immigration system has never been more urgent. My work on the article will feature prominently in my forthcoming book, The January Years: Infrastructures of New Performance in New York.”
Thompson will be awarded a grant in support of his book project, Coloring Surveillance through Polaroids: The Poetics of Black Solidarity and Sociality, which studies the practices of Black artists in order to understand the role of Polaroids in African and African-American histories. The book explores why Black artists use Polaroids and what their projects reveal about the relationships between Polaroids and Black life, in the context of everyday histories of labor, activism, and artistic expression. Artists under study for the project include Dawoud Bey, Lorna Simpson, Zarina Bhimji, Kay Hassan, Djabulani Dhlamini, Anthony Barboza, Zun Lee, and others.
“I am grateful for the support and community that the Arts Writers Grant provides,” Thompson said. “The prestigious honor is an opportunity to be more expansive and imaginative with my curatorial and writing practice. I developed many of the ideas behind this project through my undergraduate and graduate teaching, a testament to the creativity and spirit of collaboration that flourishes at Bard.”
Jack Ferver’s My Town Reviewed in the New York Times
Assistant Professor Jack Ferver.
My Town, a semi-autobiographical show written by Bard Assistant Professor of Theater and Performance Jack Ferver, was reviewed in the New York Times. The play, a one-person retelling of Our Town by Thornton Wilder, follows a schoolteacher and interrogates rural American life through dance-theater. Gia Kourlas writes that My Town, which Ferver performed at NYU Skirball last week, is “purposefully enigmatic” and “a feat of constant storytelling and choreography.”
Ferver discusses their inspirations for My Town, including industrialization, Martha Graham’s choreography, and the Wizard of Oz. They say the questions that animate Our Town, and by extension My Town, are, ‘How are you living? And are you really paying attention? Are you present?’”
Bard’s Theater and Performance Program offers an interdisciplinary, liberal arts-based approach to the making and study of theater and performance, and embraces a wide range of performance practices, from live art and interactive installation to classical theater from around the globe.
Bard Student Production of Brecht’s Puntila and Matti Reviewed in the Millbrook Independent
A mainstage production of Puntila and Matti, His Hired Man (1948) by Bertolt Brecht, conducted by the Theater and Performance Program at Bard, was reviewed in the Millbrook Independent. Directed by Rebecca Wright and performed at the Fisher Center’s LUMA Theater, Brecht’s play was based on stories by playwright Hella Wuolijoki and translated by Ralph Mannheim. “This excellent and robust student production, set in Finland, evokes striking, trenchant parallels to our contemporary situation in the United States, where power has been translated from a dysfunctional democracy to totalitarian improvisation,” writes Kevin T. McEneaney.
Bard’s Theater and Performance Program offers an interdisciplinary, liberal arts-based approach to the making and study of theater and performance, and embraces a wide range of performance practices, from live art and interactive installation to classical theater from around the globe.
Jack Ferver’s Dance Performance My Town Included in a New York Times Roundup
Jack Ferver.
The upcoming dance performance My Town by Assistant Professor of Theater and Performance Jack Ferver was included in a roundup by the New York Times. In “10 Things We’re Excited About This Fall,” the Times showcased theater and artistic performances happening throughout the country over the next few months. This included My Town, Ferver’s dance-theater piece which will be performed at the NYU Skirball Center on November 21–22.
My Town is a queer reimagining of Thorton Wilder’s play Our Town. The Times describes the performance as “Ferver’s surreal brand of dark humor” that presents “a raw and exacting piece of dance-theater that looks at small-town life, [exploring] a more haunting side of existence.” Ferver has taught at Bard since 2013 in the Theater and Performance Program and the graduate Vocal Arts Program.
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater4:00 pm – 5:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard College Theater & Performance Program presentsPuntila and Matti, His Hired Man by Bertolt Brecht Based on stories by Hella Wuolijoki Translated by Ralph Manheim Directed by Rebecca Wright
Saturday, October 25, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard College Theater & Performance Program presentsPuntila and Matti, His Hired Man by Bertolt Brecht Based on stories by Hella Wuolijoki Translated by Ralph Manheim Directed by Rebecca Wright
Saturday, October 25, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard College Theater & Performance Program presentsPuntila and Matti, His Hired Man by Bertolt Brecht Based on stories by Hella Wuolijoki Translated by Ralph Manheim Directed by Rebecca Wright
Friday, October 24, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard College Theater & Performance Program presentsPuntila and Matti, His Hired Man by Bertolt Brecht Based on stories by Hella Wuolijoki Translated by Ralph Manheim Directed by Rebecca Wright
Friday, October 24, 2025 – Sunday, October 26, 2025
Fall 2025 Mainstage Production LUMA Theater www.fishercenter.bard.edu LUMA Theater
Thursday, September 25, 2025
A Conversation with Designer and Producer Lisa Renkel, Facilitated by Ash K. Tata and Ben Coonley OTTAWAY THEATER5:00 pm – 6:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 Lisa, an Emmy Award-winning producer and multi-departmental designer based in New York City, thrives on collaborative design. Her diverse portfolio spans from Broadway productions to music world tours and architectural installations, showcasing her passion for innovative storytelling through visuals. Her designs include: New York: N/A - A New Play (Lincoln Center), AfterRite (Met Opera), Emojiland The Musical (The Duke) (Drama Desk, Lucille Lortel, and Outer Critics Awards), Soundcake (Lincoln Center), Queens Girl in the World (Theatre Row), The Revolving Cycles… (The Duke), She Persisted (Sheen Center), Broadway Bares (BC/EFA). Regional: Frozen and Beautiful (Maltz Jupiter), Espejos: Clean (Hartford Stage), Dom Juan (Bard), Justice (Arizona Theatre Company), Eureka Day and Yoga Play (Syracuse Stage), Reefer Madness (New 42), Indecent and Merrily We… (Cape Rep). In addition, Lisa has served as an associate on Broadway productions such as Tina: The Tina Turner Musical, Here Lies Love, and Junk.
In addition, Lisa is a senior producer and creative director at POSSIBLE, Lisa's expertise extends to world music tours, opening ceremonies, and even mobile game development for luxury brands like Louis Vuitton. Her focus lies in integrating storytelling with cutting-edge technology, fostering client and artist relationships, and strategic planning for industry success. Her creative and producer credits include: Music: The Eagles (Las Vegas Sphere), Nicki Minaj – Pink Friday 2 (World Tour), Lady Gaga – Chromatica (World Tour) and Enigma Residency, Esports World Cup Opening Ceremony ft. Post Malone, League of Legends Worlds Opening Ceremony ft. Lil Nas X (Emmy-award), Ariana Grande – Sweetener (World Tour & Coachella Headline) and Don’t Look Up (Film), Childish Gambino (Coachella Headline), Louis The Game Mobile Game (Louis Vuitton). A graduate of UNC School of the Arts and an active member of USA829, Lisa's dedication to her craft shines through in her ability to blend compelling narratives with advanced technology. Explore more of her work at voidprisma.com.
Saturday, September 20, 2025
Workshop Performance by Lucas Baisch, directed by Kedian Keohan ’16, with a team of student collaborators. RESNICK STUDIO, FISHER PAC2:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 Untitled E-Waste Play charts the Silicon Valley’s electronics industry by plunging back into California’s timeline of extraction. Through the supernatural and the strange, missionaries, gold miners, farmers, and programmers all converge on one rhyming idea: “history” is forever speculative.
Admission free, no reservations required.
Sunday, April 20, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater4:00 pm – 5:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard Theater & Performance Program presents Good Penny by DN Bashir, Assistant Professor of Theater & Performance at Bard College, and directed by Katherine Wilkinson.
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard Theater & Performance Program presents Good Penny by DN Bashir, Assistant Professor of Theater & Performance at Bard College, and directed by Katherine Wilkinson.
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard Theater & Performance Program presents Good Penny by DN Bashir, Assistant Professor of Theater & Performance at Bard College, and directed by Katherine Wilkinson.
Friday, April 18, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 The Bard Theater & Performance Program presents Good Penny by DN Bashir, Assistant Professor of Theater & Performance at Bard College, and directed by Katherine Wilkinson.
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
Fisher Center, Studio North6:00 pm – 7:30 pm EDT/GMT-4 How do artists, comedians, and performers respond to crises? What tools and opportunities do comedy and laughter offer political and social movements in their confrontations with fascism and supremacy? Comedian and performance artist Morgan Bassichis, a longtime member of Jewish Voice for Peace, shares their experience at the intersection of comedy and political organizing.
Morgan Bassichis is a comedic performer who has been described as “fiercely hilarious” by the New Yorker. They are touring their current show, Can I Be Frank?, about the queer performance artist Frank Maya. Recent shows include A Crowded Field, which explored the use and abuse of Jewish holidays. Morgan is co-editor with Jay Saper and Rachel Valinsky of Questions to Ask Before Your Bat Mitzvah, published by Wendy’s Subway.
Sunday, March 9, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EST/GMT-5 A weekend of performances created by the graduating seniors of Bard’s Theater & Performance Program.
Saturday, March 8, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5 A weekend of performances created by the graduating seniors of Bard’s Theater & Performance Program.
Saturday, March 8, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater2:00 pm – 3:00 pm EST/GMT-5 A weekend of performances created by the graduating seniors of Bard’s Theater & Performance Program.
Friday, March 7, 2025
Fisher Center, LUMA Theater7:30 pm – 8:30 pm EST/GMT-5 A weekend of performances created by the graduating seniors of Bard’s Theater & Performance Program.