
Little Shop of Horrors | April 7-14, 2023
Howard Ashman and Alan Menken's wacky musical parody of B-grade sci-fi takes over Drayton Hall Theatre April 7-14!
Stay in the know about upcoming performances, key dates and learn about program accolades from the University of South Carolina's award-winning theatre program.
Howard Ashman and Alan Menken's wacky musical parody of B-grade sci-fi takes over Drayton Hall Theatre April 7-14!
Recipient of Chicago's Jefferson Award for Best Play in 2018, The Light is a visceral, real-time roller coaster ride that sees a loving relationship rocked by allegations of sexual assault.
Ryan Stevens' plays were a regular presence on USC stages while they were a student. Now, the professional playwright/director's work comes back home to be featured in our Ten Minute Play Festival.
Five wildly diverse short plays will share the stage for four eclectic performances in our "10 Minute Play Festival" February 23-26 at the Lab Theatre.
A 2016 Critics' Pick (New York Times, Time Out), "Small Mouth Sounds" is a unique, largely silent theatrical experience that will leave you "moved, refreshed and even enlightened" (New York Times).
Our brand new outdoor venue, the Shakespeare Festival Stage, will make its debut with this production, directed by guest artist Devin Haqq, October 2-9!
Carly Siegel is one of 13 students who worked on and off camera to create "Hero," a feature-length film produced by the Department of Theatre and Dance.
The Department of Theatre and Dance has received a $100,000 grant from the SC Film Commission to produce "Hero," being filmed this summer at UofSC and around Columbia.
MFA scenic design candidate Mona Damian Ulmu spent the third year of her graduate program working at NYC's historic LaMaMa E.T.C, earning a NY Times mention in the process.
Professional theatre director Carolyn Howarth is directing Shakespeare's ageless tale that still has the raw power to connect in visceral ways.
Three privileged young adults experience 48 fateful hours at the dawn of the materialistic Reagan Era in this uncompromising play by Academy Award-winning author Kenneth Lonergan.
Melanie Marnich's harrowing yet inspiring retelling of the story of the "radium girls" will be presented at Longstreet Theatre.
We spoke with theatre major Jennifer Lucas O'Briant, a non-traditional student, about her divergent path to UofSC and her serendipitous role in "Tiny Beautiful Things."
Nia Vardalos' adaptation of Cheryl Strayed's best-selling book "Tiny Beautiful Things" is, as Variety described, "a theatrical hug in turbulent times."
Mary Zimmerman's profoundly moving adaptation of classic Greek myth, hailed in 2002 as the "theatre event of the year," comes to the Lab Theatre October 28-31.
Sharp-edged wit meets madcap farce in legendary playwright Simon's hit 1988 comedy, coming to the Drayton Hall Theatre stage October 15-22.
We're excited to announce a new slate of live, in-person performances for our 2021-2022 season!
Nick Payne's mind-bending drama telling the story of one couple's romantic journey through the lens of quantum theory comes to Longstreet Theatre April 22-25.
Four female icons of 19th century literature wage a raucous war on the traditions of their time in Jaclyn Backhaus’ inventive comedy, being performed April 9-17 at UofSC’s Drayton Hall Theatre.
We return to live, in-person performance this March with a one-of-a-kind outdoor production of the hit comedy "The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)," staged under the stars on the Russell House patio.
Qui Nguyen's wildly popular comedy-adventure will come to streaming devices for free November 6-15.
Amid social-distancing restrictions, students and faculty of the Department of Theatre and Dance are forging new ways to connect with audiences and each other.
We will open our 2020-2021 performance season October 1-4 with an online production of Caryl Churchill's critically-acclaimed play, Love and Information.
Theatre and Dance faculty Jim Hunter and Tanya Wideman-Davis will helm a free conversation-style webinar to discuss how the COVID-19 pandemic has led to new approaches to theatre and dance education and performance.
To help high school drama teachers during the COVID-19 crisis, UofSC Theatre faculty offered free online workshops to teen students and discovered an audience hungry to learn.