Posted December 24, 2019 New Victory LabWorks LabWorks Artist Spotlight: ChelseaDee Harrison ChelseaDee first fell in love with theater when she was a kid. Now, she gets to create work for young audiences with New Victory LabWorks!
Posted December 13, 2019 New Victory LabWorks LabWorks Artist Spotlight: Laura Galindo Laura Galindo can’t wait to create her own new work for young audiences. Get to know Laura, her project and her creative process!
Posted November 20, 2019 New Victory LabWorks LabWorks Artist Spotlight: Jess Kaufman Throughout the season, we’re highlighting the talented artists who make up New Victory LabWorks. Next up is Jess Kaufman!
Posted October 4, 2019 New Victory LabWorks LabWorks Artist Spotlight: Sarah Dahnke Learn more about LabWorks artist Sarah Dahnke, her exciting project To Grow a Pomegranate and what first made her fall in love with theater.
Posted June 25, 2019 New Victory Season A Word About Age Recommendations We want to make sure theatergoers of all ages have as much fun choosing their shows as we do in bringing them to our stages.
Posted September 23, 2018 Schools A Day in the Life of a Research Teaching Artist For the past five years, I’ve collaborated with The New Victory Theater as a “Research Teaching Artist.” Let me walk you through a normal day.
Posted September 23, 2018 Schools Arts Education in the Community Being a TA, I travel the city hoping to provide a range of experiences that mirror the formative and meaningful experiences of my own youth.
Posted September 15, 2017 Schools Courtney J. Boddie on Theater for Young Audiences In the September of 2017, NYU Steinhardt’s Educational Theatre Program hosted a roundtable event to explore theater for young audiences in today’s world.
Posted May 23, 2017 Schools The Impact of Investing in Human Capital This unconventional investment in human capital has turned out to be beneficial to the research and to my own professional development.
Posted May 8, 2017 Schools The Impact of Re-thinking Research and Practice Increasingly, arts and cultural organizations are asked whether they contribute to the greater good. Answering that question is rarely simple, particularly at a time when public and private funders alike press organizations to prove that something they did actually caused the change that they would like to claim.