The College of Performing Arts at The New School Announces 2024-2025 Performance Season
The College of Performing Arts - Mannes, Jazz, Drama at The New School
Announces 2024-2025 Performance Season
Highlights Include:
September 30: Mannes Orchestra in World Premiere of New Work by Jihwan Yoon, Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique, with Mannes Violist Yuchen Lu as Soloist in Hindemith’s Der Schwanendreher
October 14: The Westerlies, School of Jazz & Contemporary Music Ensemble-in-Residence, perform Frisell, Holcomb, Horvitz
October 18-19: Mannes Opera Season Opener features a newly realized version of Don Giovanni
October 24: The New School Studio Orchestra performs the Music of Bob Brookmeyer
October 25: (Un)Silent Film - Orange Road Quartet performs Philip Glass score live to Tod Browning’s classic film, Dracula, with pianist and conductor Michael Riesman
October 26: Pianographique featuring Maki Namekawa and Dennis Russell Davies with Live Visuals by Cori O’Lan
Music by Philip Glass (U.S. Premiere), Steve Reich, and Laurie Anderson
November 1: Mannes Orchestra & The New York Choral Society in Richard Einhorn’s Voices of Light with Silent Film The Passion of Joan of Arc at Alice Tully Hall
October 31-November 2: School of Drama presents World Premiere of The Ruminants
November 8-9: Mannes Opera Presents
Vinkensport, or the Finch Opera – Composed by David T. Little, Libretto by Royce Vavrek (N.Y.C. Premiere)
The Infinite Energy of Ada Lovelace – Composed by Kamala Sankaram, Libretto by Rob Handel
November 14: JACK Quartet, Mannes Ensemble-in-Residence
Modern Medieval: Music by Taylor Brook, Vincente Atria, Austin Wulliman, Johnny MacMillan, and Juri Seo
November 21-23: School of Drama presents Anne Carson's Translation of Euripides' Orestes
November 25: Mannes American Composers Ensemble led by David Fulmer
Music by Carola Bauckholt, Augusta Read Thomas, Matthew Ricketts, George Lewis, and Pierre Boulez, plus Mannes student Ryan Brideau
December 5: The New School Studio Orchestra presents Ellington’s The Nutcracker Suite
December 9: Mannes Orchestra at Alice Tully Hall in the U.S. Premiere of Adolphus Hailstork’s Ndemara, the N.Y.C. Premiere of Marion Bauer’s Rarely Performed Symphony No. 1, and David Diamond’s Symphony No. 2
December 11: Sandbox Percussion, Mannes Ensemble-in-Residence, presents World Premiere of Michael Torke’s BLOOM in Concert
February 28: Mannes Orchestra gives the World Premieres of JL Marlor’s Saltwater Lung and Alex Glass’s The World Inside, both winners of the Martinů Prize, with Sibelius’s The Wood Nymph
March 7 & 8: Mannes Opera presents Handel’s Alcina
Directed by Sam Helfrich and Conducted by Geoffrey MacDonald
March 31-April 1: Mannes Sounds presents The Dybbuk, or Between Two Worlds; a Chamber Opera by Ofer Ben-Amots, Based on the Play by S. Ansky
April 2: Mannes American Composers Ensemble led by David Fulmer
Music by Matthias Pintscher, Pierre Boulez, Augusta Read Thomas, and Gyorgy Ligeti, plus a Mannes student work TBA
April 11: Mannes Orchestra at Alice Tully Hall in Viet Cuong’s Re(new)al featuring Sandbox Percussion
Plus John Zorn’s Contes de Fées featuring Violinist Stefan Jackiw and Berio’s Sinfonia
May 2: The New School Studio Orchestra presents U.S. Premiere of Carla Bley’s Escalator Over the Hill
September-May: Residencies at The Stone at The New School
Featured Artists include Craig Taborn, Raven Chacon, Cyro Baptista, Zeena Parkins, Thurston Moore, Ikue Mori, Uri Caine, Theo Bleckmann, Annie Gosfield, Fred Frith, Mary Halvorson, and many more
Complete Performance Calendar: www.newschool.edu/performing-arts/performance-calendar
For Complete Program Descriptions, See the End of this Press Release.
For Press Tickets Contact: Christina Jensen, christina@jensenartists.com
New York, N.Y. – The College of Performing Arts - Mannes, Jazz, Drama at The New School announces performance highlights for its 2024-2025 season. The College of Performing Arts – the Mannes School of Music, the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music, and the School of Drama – is a hub for vigorous training, bold experimentation, innovative education, cross-disciplinary collaboration and world-class performances. Students are mentored by the legendary faculty, artists and professional performing partners within New York City's vibrant artistic community, gaining hands-on experience performing across the city and around the world. Presenting approximately 900 performances each year by students, faculty and guest artists, nearly all of which are free and open to the public, the Mannes, Jazz, Drama season provides an incredible performing arts resource for New Yorkers and visitors alike.
“It’s hard to imagine that the founders of our performing arts schools could have foreseen a season of performances like this. From our world renowned ensembles in residence, the long overdue United States premiere of Carla Bley’s Escalator Over the Hill, Philip Glass’s score with the legendary 1931 film Dracula, or one act operas by our composition faculty members David T. Little and Kamala Sankaram, this season of works by our wonderful students, faculty, and guest artists will offer something special no matter what genre or style you are interested in. We are incredibly excited to bring this season to audiences through the metro New York region,” said Richard Kessler, Executive Dean of the College of Performing Arts and Dean of Mannes School of Music.
Performances by students, faculty and guest artists at the College of Performing Arts break new ground, pushing the boundaries of convention and reinventing traditional forms. Highlights this season include the (Un)Silent Film series presenting Tod Browning’s classic film Dracula with Philip Glass’s score performed by Orange Road Quartet, the Cuker and Stern Graduate String Quartet-in-Residence, with pianist and guest conductor Michael Riesman on October 25; the Namekawa-Davies Duo (Maki Namekawa and Dennis Russell Davies) in Pianographique featuring music by Philip Glass, Laurie Anderson, and Steve Reich, with real-time visualizations by Cori O’Lan, on October 26; performances by celebrated Mannes/School of Jazz Ensembles-in-Residence The Westerlies, Sandbox Percussion, and JACK Quartet throughout the season; the world premiere of The Ruminants directed by School of Drama faculty member Ana Margineanu from October 31 through November 2; Mannes Opera’s double bill featuring one-act operas by David T. Little and Kamala Sankaram on November 8 and 9; the New School Studio Orchestra performing Duke Ellington’s The Nutcracker Suite on December 5; the Mannes Orchestra performing at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall in a concert featuring Sandbox Percussion in Viet Cuong’s percussion concerto Re(new)al and John Zorn’s violin concerto with Stefan Jackiw on April 11; and the New School Studio Orchestra in the U.S. premiere of jazz great Carla Bley’s rarely heard landmark album Escalator Over the Hill on May 2.
Founded in 1916 by America’s first great violin recitalist and noted educator, David Mannes, and pianist and educator Clara Damrosch Mannes, the Mannes School of Music is a standard-bearer for radically progressive music education, dedicated to supporting the development of creative and socially engaged artists. Through its undergraduate, graduate, and professional studies programs, Mannes offers a curriculum as imaginative as it is rigorous, taught by a world-class faculty and visiting artists. Distinguished Mannes alumni include the 20th-century songwriting legend Burt Bacharach, the great pianists Michel Camilo, Richard Goode, Murray Perahia, and Bill Evans, acclaimed conductors Semyon Bychkov, Myung-Whun Chung, JoAnn Falletta, and Julius Rudel, beloved mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade, as well as the great opera stars of today, Yonghoon Lee, Danielle de Niese, and Nadine Sierra.
Led by conductor David Hayes and known for its bold and adventurous programming, the Mannes Orchestra has been hailed by The New York Times as an orchestra whose quality is “a revelation,” and for its “intensity of focus.” Exploring the concept of the “radical orchestra” during the 2024-2025 season and seeking to amplify the work of underrepresented composers, this year’s programming features composers who went beyond traditional orchestral structures to explore new ground in sound and structure. The Mannes Orchestra’s season opens on September 30 with a concert featuring two prizewinning students – composer Jihwan Yoon, winner of the Martinů Prize and violist Yuchen Lu, winner of the 2024 George and Elizabeth Gregory Concerto Competition – plus Berlioz’s epic Symphonie Fantastique. As part of its ongoing partnership with the New York Choral Society, the orchestra will perform Voices of Light, a work by Richard Einhorn paired with legendary silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc, at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall on November 1. The orchestra returns to Alice Tully on December 9 to give the U.S. premiere of Adolphus Hailstork’s Ndemara, the New York City premiere of Marion Bauer’s rarely performed Symphony No. 1, and David Diamond’s Symphony No. 2. The orchestra’s spring season opens on February 28 with the world premieres of Mannes alumni JL Marlor’s Saltwater Lung, winner of the Martinů Prize in 2023, and The World Inside by Alex Glass, winner of the 2024 Martinů prize, presented with Sibelius’s rarely performed The Wood Nymph, Op. 15. On April 11 at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, the Mannes Orchestra performs Viet Cuong’s Re(new)al with Sandbox Percussion, Berio’s Sinfonia, and John Zorn’s violin concerto Contes de Fées featuring Stefan Jackiw.
Under the leadership of Managing Artistic Director Emma Griffin, Mannes Opera is a dynamic training program for operatic artists, marked by a curiosity for new and a devotion to craft. The program utilizes opera as a medium for exploration, improvisation, and creation, providing students with extensive performance opportunities and practice. Mannes Opera’s season opens on October 18 and 19 with a jewel box production of W.A. Mozart’s Don Giovanni, arranged by Danyal Dhondy, realized by Griffin and Mannes faculty member Cris Frisco at a crisp 100 minutes. The Opera in Concert double bill on November 8 and 9 features a duo of one-act operas by Mannes faculty members and prolific composers, David T. Little (Vinkensport, or the Finch Opera with libretto by Royce Vavrek, New York City premiere) and Kamala Sankaram (The Infinite Energy of Ada Lovelace with libretto by Rob Handel), directed by New School Drama alum Alison Pogorelc. SCENEWORKS FALL24 on December 6 and 7 at the Auditorium at 66 West 12th Street offers a delightful serving of operatic scenes; program to be announced. On March 7 and 8, Mannes Opera presents Handel’s Alcina at The Gerald W. Lynch Theater, directed by Sam Helfrich and conducted by Mannes alumnus Geoffrey MacDonald. On May 9, Mannes Opera gives an invite-only workshop presentation of Hildegard, a new opera by Sarah Kirkland Snider, in collaboration with Beth Morrison Projects.
The 2024-2025 season at the Mannes School of Music also includes performances that are part of the Mannes Sounds Festival, founded in 1999 by piano chair Pavlina Dokovska, which presents more than 20 concerts by Mannes students, faculty and guest artists annually at venues and institutions across New York City; such as The Dybbuk, or Between Two Worlds, a chamber opera by Ofer Ben-Amots based on the play by S. Ansky, presented on March 31 and April 1 at the Center for Jewish History in partnership with the American Society of Jewish Music and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, directed by Stephen Brown-Fried, and performed by students from Mannes and the College of Performing Arts. In addition, chamber music students’ achievements each semester will be highlighted in two Mannes Chamber Music Festivals in fall (November 7-14) and spring (April 8-15). The season also features fall (November 25) and spring (April 2) performances by the Mannes American Composers Ensemble – founded in 2012 by Lowell Liebermann and now led by David Fulmer, representing works by iconic American and new and upcoming composers. This season's artistic curation and programming includes four innovative initiatives for the Ensemble; a two-year composer-in-focus workshop, collaboration and integration with the Vocal Performance Department, student composer commissioning projects, and collaboration with the International Contemporary Ensemble and JACK Quartet.
The School of Jazz and Contemporary Music is renowned across the globe as the most innovative school of its kind, offering students an artist-as-mentor approach to learning. The world’s leading contemporary and jazz musicians, like Reggie Workman, Mary Halvorson, Arturo O’Farrill, Joel Ross, Immanuel Wilkens, Jane Ira Bloom, and more, work with students to hone their craft and create groundbreaking music. At the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music, students are immersed in the creative epicenter of New York City and are supported by a faculty of renowned professionals who challenge them to expand the boundaries of their art form, experiment with sound, and use creative voice for change. The school’s approach is unique, allowing students to choose their own teachers and create their own ensembles. This education with agency provides students with the tools and experience needed to navigate and thrive as performing arts professionals. All groups rehearse, record, and perform live (with livestream) every semester.
The College of Performing Arts' newest large ensemble, the New School Studio Orchestra (NSSO), is composed of students from the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music and Mannes School of Music, performing music from a wide variety of genres including jazz, soul, pop, and improvised music. The NSSO kicks off its three-concert season on October 24 with an evening dedicated to the compositions and arrangements by the great jazz trombonist and composer Bob Brookmeyer. Ellington and Strayhorn’s beloved The Nutcracker Suite will be presented during the holiday season on December 5. The U.S. premiere of Carla Bley’s rarely performed but hugely influential Escalator Over the Hill, described by Rolling Stone as “an international musical encounter of the first order,” is the epic close to this season’s series, led by Arturo O'Farrill on May 2, 2025.
"This is an exciting season for the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music,” says Keller Coker, Dean, School of Jazz and Contemporary Music and Associate Dean, College of Performing Arts. “The New School Studio Orchestra presents the U.S. Premiere of Carla Bley's rarely performed Escalator Over the Hill in May and starts off the fall in a big way with music by Bob Brookmeyer in October and Ellington's beloved Nutcracker Suite in December – I can't wait for people to hear this group. We have a boygenius Ensemble for the first time, and our Fall Ensemble Festival features Reggie Workman's John Coltrane Ensemble, the Carla Bley Ensemble directed by Arturo O'Farrill, and the Waterfalls 90s R&B Ensemble directed by Marlon Saunders, as well as groups helmed by Immanuel Wilkins, Jane Ira Bloom, Joel Ross, Mary Halvorson and more. Folks should come get in the room with these talented musicians."
The (Un)Silent Film series has been critical in advancing the resurgence of film screenings with live music and has been hosted by Matthew Broderick, Bill Irwin, Rob Bartlett, Ed Rothstein, and Michael Bacon. (Un)Silent Film nights have presented the world premieres of works composed for The Birds and The Immigrant (by Nathan Kamal and Alexis Cuadrado respectively), a New York premiere of a score by Hollywood composer Craig Marks for the film Sherlock, Jr., and Charlie Chaplin's original scores for Gold Rush and other Chaplin classics. This season, in addition to Dracula on October 25, the series presents Safety Last!, an American silent romantic-comedy film from 1923 starring Harold Lloyd and produced by Hal Roach, and Kid Auto Races [at Venice], also known as The Pest, a 1914 American film starring Charlie Chaplin with music by Carl Davis performed by Mannes' (Un)Silent Orchestra, conducted by David Fulmer on April 25.
The Stone at The New School, named by Time Out New York as one of the best jazz clubs in New York City, serves as an artist-centric community for experimental and avant-garde artists. With concerts every Wednesday through Saturday evening, The Stone at The New School continues the tradition of the landmark non-profit performance space founded in 2005 by Artistic Director John Zorn, within a greatly improved space. The 2024-2025 season features a varied roster of artists from Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore to renowned concert and new music violinist Jennifer Choi. This season showcases notable New School faculty members such as MacArthur Genius Grant recipient Mary Halvorson; Cyro Baptista, who has shared the stage with the likes of Paul Simon and David Byrne; and Fay Victor, praised in The New York Times for inventing “her own hybrid of song and spoken word, a scat style for today’s avant-garde.” The 2024-2025 season also marks the premiere of the Students at The Stone series featuring performances by current New School students, where audiences can hear the future of the experimental music scene.
The School of Drama is the creative home to a dynamic group of actors, directors, writers, creative technologists, and multi-disciplinary theater artists. With a focus on authenticity of expression, the school’s curriculum confronts today's most pressing societal issues through the making of theater, film, and emerging media. From October 31-November 2, the School of Drama presents the world premiere of The Ruminants at Bank Street Theater, directed by faculty member Ana Margineanu. The Ruminants is a new play that explores protest, privilege, and the lasting effects of one's actions, which was developed as part of the 2023-2024 Farm Theater College Collaboration Project. Each year, the School of Drama invites regionally, nationally, and internationally recognized guest artists to share their artistic, collaborative, and philosophical approaches to theater-making with students in its groundbreaking MFA in Contemporary Theatre and Performance program. This year marks the return of members of Ping Chong and Company (PCC), longtime collaborators with the School of Drama and the College of Performing Arts, on November 4. Rooted in the company's mission to “create[s] theater and art that reveal beauty, invention, precision, and a commitment to social justice,” PCC engaged students in their “Undesirable Elements” series, an ongoing practice of creating interview-based theater works that explore culture, identity, and belonging in specific communities. From November 21-23 at Bank Street Theater, the School of Drama presents an innovative rendition of Euripides' Orestes, translated by poet, translator, and essayist Anne Carson and directed by Ashley Kelly Tata. The APEX Festival will take place over two weekends at Bank Street Theater, April 25-26 and May 2-3, and will spotlight eight projects serving as graduating MFA Contemporary Theatre and Performance students' capstone offerings. The School of Drama also continues its dynamic partnership with Naked Angels, a prominent figure in New York City’s theater community. The esteemed 1st Mondays at The New School series, entering its second year, is a vital platform for emerging playwrights from Naked Angels’ Tuesdays@9 community to showcase their work and for School of Drama students to interact with and learn from these emerging talents, gain insights into the process of creating and workshopping new plays, and forge meaningful connections within the industry.
“The diversity of works this season includes a new translation of a classic Greek text, a world premiere play that resonates deeply with the present moment, collaborations with leading arts organizations in New York City, and a festival of new and exciting multidisciplinary works from our graduate student cohort,” says Jermaine Hill, Dean, School Of Drama and Associate Dean, College of Performing Arts. “These offerings demonstrate the depth and breadth of artistic exploration at the School of Drama and exemplify our commitment to being a destination that celebrates and epitomizes the best of our student artists in a variety of genres, mediums, and forms. We welcome you to join us for this bold and exciting production season.”
Performances at The New School’s College of Performing Arts are free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted. Some events require advance registration. View the full calendar of performances at the College of Performing Arts – including Mannes School of Music, School of Jazz and Contemporary Music, and School of Drama – for details on how to attend.
The College of Performing Arts at The New School – 2024-2025 Season Highlights
Cross-College Collaborations
February 21 at 7:30pm: A Celebration of Black History
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Co-Produced by the College of Performing Arts Committee for Equity, Inclusion, and Social Justice
Free with registration
Artists from across the College of Performing Arts join together to celebrate Black History through music and theatrical performance, in a special gathering of song, dance, theater, oration and community. The evening is curated by Charlotte Small and features special guests and performers from the Mannes School of Music, the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music, the School of Drama, and special guests. Last year’s inaugural performance featured Dr. Cornel West, Cyrus Chestnut, Arturo O'Farrill, Power Silhouette, The School of Jazz and Contemporary Music Gospel Choir, School of Drama actors, and more. This season’s special guests are to be announced.
Mannes School of Music
September 30 at 7:30pm: Mannes Orchestra Fall Season Opener
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Mannes Orchestra, led by conductor David Hayes, opens its season with a concert featuring two prizewinning students plus Berlioz’s epic Symphonie Fantastique. Violist Yuchen Lu, winner of the 2024 George and Elizabeth Gregory Concerto Competition, will perform Hindemith’s dramatic Der Schwanendreher. The orchestra gives the world premiere of In the Mirror…for Orchestra by Jihwan Yoon, winner of the Martinů Prize for his unique voice and originality in musical composition for orchestra. The Martinů Prize is named in honor of former Mannes faculty member, distinguished composer Bohuslav Martinů.
October 3 at 7:30pm: Mannes Wind Symphony performs Adams, Copland, Piazzolla and Rodrigo
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
Anchored around John Adams' challenging and seldom performed Grand Pianola Music, this exciting program features works by some of our greatest composers of Latin and American music. With the support of a full wind ensemble throughout, this concert dances between varied Spanish, American, and Latin American styles all originating from the last century. The Spanish/Latin compositions by Rodrigo and Piazzolla center around traditional clave rhythms. Copland's Quiet City works with rhythmic freedom and lush, open chords that support the solo voices of trumpet and English horn.This "American" sound is also evident in the use of Adams' harmonic language, coupled with a minimalistic, yet complex, rhythmic drive. The addition of two harmonious pianos and three voices give new range to the sound of a wind ensemble, making Grand Pianola Music a unique, masterful composition like no other.
October 18 & 19 at 7:30pm: Mannes Opera presents Don Giovanni by W.A. Mozart, arranged by Danyal Dhondy
The Auditorium on 12th Street | Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall | 66 West 12th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Mannes Opera season opener is a classic realized anew. This Don Giovanni (1788) (by W.A. Mozart, arranged by Danyal Dhondy), is presented in a crisp 100 minutes, with an ensemble of piano, string trio, and trombone. Featuring the sonorous acoustics of The New School’s art deco auditorium on 12th street, the jewelbox production created by Mannes Opera Managing Artistic Director Emma Griffin and faculty member Cris Frisco serves Mozart’s music and Da Ponte’s storytelling with a twist of horror.
October 25 at 7:30pm: (Un)Silent Film – Philip Glass’s Dracula in Concert conducted by Michael Riesman
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The acclaimed Philip Glass score to Tod Browning's 1931 film classic, Dracula, originally composed for the Kronos Quartet, will be performed by the Orange Road Quartet, the Cuker and Stern Graduate String Quartet in Residence, with pianist, guest conductor and music arranger Michael Riesman, music director of the Philip Glass Ensemble.
October 26 at 7:30pm: Pianographique performed by Maki Namekawa & Dennis Russell Davies with visuals by Cori O’Lan
The Auditorium on 12th Street | Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall | 66 West 12th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Namekawa-Davies Duo present Pianographique, an exciting evening of music featuring works by Maki Namekawa and Dennis Russell Davies’ personal friends Philip Glass, Laurie Anderson, and Steve Reich, with real-time visualizations by Cori O’Lan. The concert features Steve Reich’s iconic Piano Phase (1967), two pieces by Laurie Anderson including Song for Bob, and a second half comprised of works by Philip Glass, including the American premiere of Elergy for the Present (2020), music from The Truman Show, and Four Pieces for Two Pianos which Glass composed for the Namekawa-Davies Duo.
November 1 at 7:30pm: Mannes Orchestra & The New York Choral Society in Richard Einhorn’s Voices of Light with Silent Film The Passion of Joan of Arc
Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center | 1941 Broadway, N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The New York Choral Society presents Voices of Light, a work by New York native Richard Einhorn, for orchestra, soloists, and chorus. This compelling piece will be paired with the legendary silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc, which chronicles the trial and torment of Joan of Arc. Starring the famous Comédie Française actress Renée Falconetti, this recently restored 1928 film offers a unique opportunity for both film and music lovers to experience the movie on a large screen at Alice Tully Hall, in partnership with the Mannes Orchestra.
November 7-14: Fall Mannes Chamber Music Festival
Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Chamber Music Festival is a special weeklong series of performances highlighting Mannes students’ accomplishments in chamber music over the course of a semester, showcasing Mannes’ new specialized and diversified chamber music courses, new community partnerships, and performance opportunities. Register once for the week with CHAMBERPASS!
November 8-9: Mannes Opera presents Opera in Concert Double Bill
Vinkensport, or the Finch Opera – composed by David T. Little, libretto by Royce Vavrek (New York City Premiere)
The Infinite Energy of Ada Lovelace – composed by Kamala Sankaram, libretto by Rob Handel (Commissioned by Opera Ithaca)
November 8 at 7:30pm and November 9 at 2:00pm
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
Mannes Opera presents an Opera in Concert double bill featuring the works of Mannes faculty members and prolific composers David T. Little and Kamala Sankaram, directed by New School Drama alum Alison Pogorelc, offering an operatic lens into the strange world of human experience. Vinkensport, or The Finch Opera (2010/2018), composed by David T. Little on a libretto by Royce Vavrek, receives its New York City premiere. Vinkensport is a bitter-sweet comedy in one act, which explores obsession, desire, and the need to win, through the frame of an obscure Flemish folk sport, “finch-sitting.” Trained finches race to sing the most “susk-e-wiets” over the course of an hour. As they compete, the joys, sorrows, delusions and all-too-stark realities of their trainers are revealed.
The Infinite Energy of Ada Lovelace (2019), composed by Kamala Sankaram with a libretto by Rob Handel, follows Ada, Countess of Lovelace and Lord Byron's daughter, who has been asked to help Charles Babbage with his work on the Difference Engine. She struggles between her work in mathematics and upholding her reputation as a wife, mother, and public figure. The revolutionary concepts that she put forth in her notes about the potential ability of the Engine to carry out an algorithm led Ada to be considered the world’s first computer programmer. The Infinite Energy of Ada Lovelace is presented through special arrangement with UIA Talent Agency and Just a Theory Press.
November 14 at 7:30pm: JACK Quartet, Mannes Ensemble-in-Residence presents Modern Medieval
The Auditorium on 12th Street | Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall | 66 West 12th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
JACK Quartet's Modern Medieval program explores the connections of musicality and thought between European composers of the past and the voices of music today, featuring works by JACK members Christopher Otto and Austin Wulliman, as well as Vicente Atria (JACK Studio Commission), Taylor Brook, Johnny MacMillan, and Juri Seo (JACK Studio Commission).
November 25: MACE – Mannes American Composers Ensemble
The Auditorium on 12th Street | Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall | 66 West 12th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
Founded in 2012 by composer Lowell Liebermann, MACE represents works by iconic American composers such as Elliott Carter, Milton Babbitt, John Zorn, George Lewis, Augusta Read Thomas, Philip Glass, John Adams, and Steve Reich, as well as works by young, and up-and-coming composers. Composer and conductor David Fulmer has been directing the Ensemble since 2016 and has presented a kaleidoscopic lens of different aesthetics and styles, while exploring diverse musical programs of established 20th and 21st century masterpieces, together with presentations of newly commissioned works and premieres. On November 25, MACE gives the world premiere of a new work by Mannes student Ryan Brideau, alongside music by Carola Bauckholt, Augusta Read Thomas, Matthew Ricketts, George Lewis, and Pierre Boulez.
December 6 & 7: Mannes Opera presents SCENEWORKS FALL24
The Auditorium on 12th Street | Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall | 66 West 12th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
Under the leadership of Managing Artistic Director Emma Griffin, Mannes Opera is a dynamic training program for operatic artists, marked by a curiosity for new and a devotion to craft. The program utilizes opera as a medium for exploration, improvisation, and creation, providing students with extensive performance opportunities and practice. On December 6 and 7, Mannes Opera presents a delightful serving of operatic scenes; program to be announced.
December 9 at 7:30pm: Mannes Orchestra at Alice Tully Hall
Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center | 1941 Broadway, N.Y.C.
Tickets
The Mannes Orchestra, led by conductor David Hayes, presents an evening of pioneering American composers. The program includes the N.Y.C. Premiere of Marion Bauer’s rarely performed Symphony No. 1, which was composed between 1947 and 1950 but was never performed during the composer’s lifetime. It finally had its world premiere performance in 2022 in Syracuse, NY. The concert features the U.S. premiere of Adolphus Hailstork’s Ndemara for two horns, two oboes, and strings, which was premiered in Paris in 2017. The piece is inspired by a bright star, prominent in the summer sky, called Ndemara or “The Sweetheart Star” by the Shona, and Ntshuna or “The Kiss Me Star” by the Tswana – its appearance is said to indicate when lovers should part ways, before being discovered by their parents. David Diamond’s Symphony No. 2 completes the program – widely lauded as a mid-twentieth century masterwork; it was composed in the midst of World War II and premiered by the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1944.
December 11 at 7:30pm: Sandbox Percussion, Mannes Ensemble-in-Residence, performs World Premiere of Michael Torke’s BLOOM
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
Mannes Ensemble-in-Residence Sandbox Percussion, a Brooklyn-based percussion ensemble of established leaders in contemporary art music, has teamed up with the acclaimed composer Michael Torke for BLOOM, a new piece composed for the group, which they will premiere at The New School. Sandbox's recording of BLOOM was released on Ecstatic Records on August 30, 2024. BLOOM uses a series of interlocking rhythms that create a groove when played together, using each player’s drums (non-pitched instruments), and vibraphone and marimbas (pitched). “Just as shoots of plants push through dirt erupting in blooms, the vibes and marimbas burst forth from the drums,” writes Torke in his program notes. Michael Torke’s work has been described as "some of the most optimistic, joyful and thoroughly uplifting music to appear in recent years" (Gramophone).
February 5 at 7:00pm: Final Round of The George and Elizabeth Gregory Concerto Competition
Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Final Round of The George and Elizabeth Gregory Concerto Competition for the 2024-2025 academic year is open to the public. The finalists will perform their entire pieces, and the winners will be announced live by the panel of judges. In addition to a public performance with the Mannes Orchestra on Friday, February 28, the first-prize winner will receive a financial award of $4,000. The two runners-up alternates will also be announced, each receiving $500.
February 28 at 7:30pm: Mannes Orchestra Spring Season Opener
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Mannes Orchestra, conducted by Mannes alumnae Mina Kim and Laura Gentile, gives the world premiere performances of two recent Martinů Prize composers and Mannes alumni – JL Marlor’s Saltwater Lung (2023 winner) and Alex Glass’s The World Inside (2024 winner). The Martinů Prize is given annually in honor of the distinguished composer and former Mannes faculty member Bohuslav Martinů. Sibelius’s rarely performed tone poem The Wood Nymph, Op. 15 completes the program. Premiered in 1895, it subsequently fell into obscurity with few performances in the 20th century, before finally being published in 2006.
March 7 & 8 at 7:30pm: Mannes Opera presents Handel’s Alcina
The Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College, 524 West 59th Street (between 10th & 11th Avenues), New York, N.Y
Event Information
Witchcraft, transformation, love-sick fools, magic rings – all taking place on an island. Alcina (1773) is one of Handel’s three operas based on Ludovico Ariosto’s epic work, Orlando Furioso (1516). The opera is a wild, messy story of love and deception – a fairy tale with magic that accurately describes the pain and exaltation of falling in love. Mannes Opera is thrilled to work with director Sam Helfrich, and to welcome back esteemed Mannes alumnus Geoffrey MacDonald as conductor with the Mannes Opera Orchestra.
March 31-April 1: Mannes Sounds presents The Dybbuk, or Between Two Worlds; a Chamber Opera by Ofer Ben-Amots, Based on the Play by S. Ansky
Center for Jewish History | 15 West 16th St., NYC
Event Information
Through his haunting and evocative score, Ofer Ben-Amots offers an operatic retelling of S. Ansky’s masterpiece of the Yiddish theatrical canon. Wracked with grief for her beloved, Leah, the daughter of a wealthy merchant, recounts her love of a young scholar who died on learning of her betrothal to another man. On the day of the wedding, she becomes possessed by an evil spirit, known in Jewish folklore as a dybbuk. In order to exorcize the spirit and save Leah’s soul, the village must learn the spirit’s true origin. A partnership with the American Society of Jewish Music and YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, directed by Stephen Brown-Fried and performed by students from Mannes and the College of Performing Arts, The Dybbuk is certain to excite your spirits.
The Mannes Sounds Festival, founded in 1999 by Pavlina Dokovska, chair of the piano department, presents more than 20 concerts annually performed by Mannes’ talented students, as well as master classes and lectures by distinguished faculty members and renowned guest artists. The events are held at prestigious venues and institutions across New York City.
April 2 at 7:30pm: MACE – Mannes American Composers Ensemble
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
Founded in 2012 by composer Lowell Liebermann, MACE represents works by iconic American composers such as Elliott Carter, Milton Babbitt, John Zorn, George Lewis, Augusta Read Thomas, Philip Glass, John Adams, and Steve Reich, as well as works by young, and up-and-coming composers. Composer and conductor David Fulmer has been directing the Ensemble since 2016, and has presented a kaleidoscopic lens of different aesthetics and styles, while exploring diverse musical programs of established 20th and 21st century masterpieces, together with presentations of newly commissioned works and premieres. On April 2, MACE gives the world premiere of a student work TBA, alongside music by Matthias Pintscher, Pierre Boulez, Augusta Read Thomas, and Gyorgy Ligeti.
April 8-15: Spring Mannes Chamber Music Festival
Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Chamber Music Festival is a special weeklong series of performances highlighting Mannes students’ accomplishments in chamber music over the course of a semester, showcasing Mannes’ new specialized and diversified chamber music courses, new community partnerships, and performance opportunities. Register once for the week with CHAMBERPASS!
April 11 at 7:30pm: Mannes Orchestra at Alice Tully Hall with Sandbox Percussion & Violinist Stefan Jackiw
Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center | 1941 Broadway, N.Y.C.
Event Information
The Mannes Orchestra, led by conductor David Hayes, brings a program featuring Mannes Ensemble-in-Residence Sandbox Percussion performing Viet Cuong’s Re(new)al, to Alice Tully Hall. The piece, which is dedicated to Sandbox Percussion, is inspired by renewable energy initiatives. Cuong writes, “Re(new)al is a percussion quartet concerto that is similarly devoted to finding unexpected ways to breathe new life into traditional ideas, and the solo quartet therefore performs on several ‘found’ instruments, including crystal glasses and compressed air cans. And while the piece also features more traditional instruments, such as snare drum and vibraphone, I looked for ways to either alter their sounds or find new ways to play them. For instance, a single snare drum is played by all four members of the quartet, and certain notes of the vibraphone are prepared with aluminum foil to recreate sounds found in electronic music. The entire piece was conceived in this way.” The concert also features John Zorn’s violin concerto, Contes de Fées, performed by Stefan Jackiw. Composed in 1999 at the turn of the millennium, Contes de Fées is one of Zorn’s classical masterworks. Building on this season’s theme of exploring the radical orchestra – unusual orchestrations and non-standard symphonic structures – the program includes Luciano Berio’s Sinfonia, which includes eight amplified singers embedded within the orchestra.
April 25 at 7:30pm: (Un)Silent Film – Safety Last! & Kid Auto Races
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
(Un)Silent Film presents Safety Last!, an American silent romantic-comedy film from 1923 starring Harold Lloyd and produced by Hal Roach, and Kid Auto Races [at Venice], also known as The Pest, a 1914 American film starring Charlie Chaplin. See the iconic shot of Lloyd hanging from the clock (Safety Last!), and the pivotal moment in cinema where the camera breaks the fourth wall as Chaplin plays spectator at a "pushcar" race in Venice (Kid Auto Races). Mannes' (Un)Silent Orchestra conducted by David Fulmer brings these scores to life in live performances. With extra attention paid to phrase structure, articulation, and temporal coordination, the scores by long-time friend of The New School Carl Davis will leap off the page.
May 7 at 7:30pm: Mannes Orchestra Conductors’ Recital
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The Mannes Orchestra showcases and celebrates graduating conductors William Cabison and Hae Lee, who curated this program featuring Kodály’s Hungarian folk dance-inspired Dances of Galánta, Rimsky-Korsakov’s Capriccio espagnol, Op. 34, based on Spanish folks melodies, and Prokofiev’s Symphony No. 7, Op. 131.
The School of Jazz and Contemporary Music
September 25-27 and November 3-December 12: The School of Jazz and Contemporary Music Fall Ensemble Festival
Jazz Performance Space at The New School | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
Walk-up/First come, first-served seating
Event schedule
Featuring ensembles led by Reggie Workman, Immanuel Wilkens, Joel Ross, Mary Halvorson, Jane Ira Bloom, Arturo O'Farrill, and many more. Don't miss these artist led ensembles featuring the musicians of now and tomorrow, in the intimate setting of the Jazz Performance Space at The New School.
October 14 at 7:30pm: The Westerlies, School of Jazz & Contemporary Music Ensemble-in-Residence
Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The origins of The Westerlies go back to the high school bandrooms of Seattle, Washington, where the four original members first met and came of age together. In this program, the ensemble returns to their roots to celebrate music from their hometown, including Wherein Lies the Good, an expansive work by Robin Holcomb originally written for solo piano, as well as works by her contemporaries Wayne Horvitz, Bill Frisell, and Ron Miles.
October 24 at 7:30pm: The New School Studio Orchestra – Music of Bob Brookmeyer
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The College of Performing Arts' newest large ensemble, the New School Studio Orchestra (NSSO), is composed of students from the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music and Mannes School of Music, performing music from a wide variety of genres including jazz, soul, pop, and improvised music. The NSSO kicks off its three-concert series with compositions and arrangements by the great jazz trombonist and composer Bob Brookmeyer, from across his long career. Nick Marchione, guest artist. Conducted by Keller Coker.
December 5 at 7:30pm: The New School Studio Orchestra – Duke Ellington’s The Nutcracker Suite
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
The NSSO celebrates the holidays with music from Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn’s The Nutcracker Suite, featuring jazz interpretations of themes from Tchaikovsky’s beloved 1892 ballet. The Smithsonian Jazz Program writes of The Nutcracker Suite in an article for the Smithsonian, “Ellington and Strayhorn did not simply place jazz rhythms over Tchaikovsky's music. Instead, they picked up the notes, recast the beats, communed with the themes, and recreated the work, turning it into something that was at once completely their own and completely Tchaikovsky's. In doing so, they showed that while music may be the universal language, it is spoken with many accents (and therein lies the fun).” Featuring guest artists Nick Marchione. Conducted by Keller Coker.
May 2 at 7:30pm: The New School Studio Orchestra – Carla Bley’s Escalator Over the Hill
John L. Tishman Auditorium | 63 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
On May 2, the NSSO led by Arturo O'Farrill and Keller Coker, presents the U.S. premiere performance of Carla Bley’s landmark 1971 album, Escalator Over the Hill. J.D. Considine captures the essence of Bley’s iconic work, writing in TIDAL magazine, “Whenever the topic of Great Albums of the 1970s crops up, certain titles invariably recur. There’s Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours, Stevie Wonder’s Innervisions, the Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main St., Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew, Pink Floyd’s The Wall, Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall. But while reading through the recent tributes to the great jazz composer and pianist Carla Bley, who died on Oct. 17, [2023] at age 87, I was reminded of the masterwork that’s always missing from those lists: Bley’s Escalator Over the Hill…Escalator Over the Hill goes well beyond the usual boundaries of genre. In addition to bracing bursts of free jazz, there are cabaret songs, snatches of country music, deep dives into jazz fusion, an excursion into Hindustani pop, elements of ambient music and nods to New York minimalism.”
The Stone at The New School Residencies & Student Concerts
Wednesdays-Saturdays at 8:30pm
The Glassbox Theater | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
$20 at the door, no advance sales
Information
The Stone at The New School serves as an artist-centric home and community for experimental and avant-garde artists, where they can perform what they want without any interference. With concerts every Wednesday through Saturday evening, The Stone at The New School continues the tradition of the landmark non-profit performance space founded in 2005 by Artistic Director John Zorn, within a greatly improved space.
September 4-7: Trey Spruance
September 11-14: Craig Taborn
September 18-21: Sara Serpa
September 25-28: Peter Evans
October 2-5: Matt Mitchell
October 9-12: Yura Lee
October 15: The Stone Student Concert
October 16-19: Laura Ortman
October 23-26: Yuka C. Honda
October 30-November 2: Cyro Baptista
November 6-9: Raven Chacon
November 12: The Stone Student Concert
November 13-16: Zeena Parkins
November 20-23: Anna Webber
December 4-7: Thurston Moore
December 11-14: Ikue Mori
January 2-4: Marta Sanchez
January 8-11: Mary Halvorson
January 15-18: Ingrid Laubrock
January 22-25: Ches Smith
January 29-February 1: Jorge Roeder
February 5-8: Larry Ochs
February 11: The Stone Student Concert
February 12-15: Uri Caine
February 19-22: Matthew Shipp
February 26-March 1: Wendy Eisenberg
March 4: The Stone Student Concert
March 5-8: Micah Thomas
March 19-22: Theo Bleckmann
March 26-29: Kate Gentile
April 2-5: Zoh Amba
April 8: The Stone Student Concert
April 9-12: Annie Gosfield
April 16-19: William Parker
April 23-26: Jad Atoui
April 30-May 3: Fay Victor
May 7-10: Kweku Sumbry
May 14-17: Ned Rothenberg
May 12-24: Fred Frith
May 28-31: Ben Goldberg
School of Drama
October 31-November 2: World Premiere of The Ruminants
Bank Street Theater | 151 Bank St., N.Y.C.
October 31, November 1, November 2 at 7:30pm & November 2 at 2:00pm
Free with registration
Directed by Ana Margineanu, School of Drama faculty
Written by Dipti Bramhandkar
With only weeks left in her senior year, Bekka wonders if she has done enough to impact animal rights at her university. As the president of Animal Rights Now (ARN), she has organized numerous protests, but nothing seems to change. Determined to leave her mark, she plans a bold action that no one can ignore. But what will the cost be for those who join her and the animals she tries to help? The Ruminants is a new play that explores protest, privilege, and the lasting effects of one's actions. The Ruminants was developed as part of the 2023-2024 Farm Theater College Collaboration Project, with three universities: Austin Peay State, Shenandoah, and Middle Tennessee State University.
November 4 at 7:30pm: Guest Artist Series – Ping Chong and Company
The Glassbox Theater | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
Free with registration
Each year, the School of Drama invites regionally, nationally, and internationally recognized guest artists to share their artistic, collaborative, and philosophical approaches to theater-making with students in its groundbreaking MFA in Contemporary Theatre and Performance program. This year marks the return of members of Ping Chong and Company, longtime collaborators with the School of Drama and the College of Performing Arts. Rooted in the company's mission to “create[s] theater and art that reveal beauty, invention, precision, and a commitment to social justice,” PCC engaged students in their “Undesirable Elements” series, an ongoing practice of creating interview-based theater works that explore culture, identity, and belonging in specific communities. This production – an original student-devised ensemble-based piece centered on creative producing and community-engaged practice – culminates PCC’s residency.
November 21-23: Orestes
Bank Street Theater | 151 Bank St., N.Y.C.
November 21-23 at 7:30pm & November 23 at 2:00pm
Free with registration
Written by Euripides
Translated by Anne Carson
Directed by Ashley Kelly Tata, SDC Member
In this exciting reimagining of Orestes, the poet, translator, and essayist Anne Carson gives birth to a wholly new experience of the classic Greek triumvirate of vengeance. Anne Carson’s watershed translation of a death-dance of vengeance and passion is not to be missed, combining contemporary language with the traditional structures and rhetoric of Greek tragedy. “I’m interested in having the chorus members step out from the chorus into any of the roles to focus on the communal in the performance of this work and explore the idea that any member of a community can be the protagonist of the narrative, says Ashley Kelly Tata, director. “Ultimately, Orestes should serve what I think is so urgent about the piece right now: these are young people playing out the story of a history of violence that they have inherited from the generations before them.”
April 25-26 & May 2-3: APEX Festival
Weekend 1: April 25-26 at 7:30pm; April 26 at 2:00pm
Weekend 2: May 2-3 at 7:30pm & May 3 at 2:00pm
Final programs and venues to be announced
APEX Festival is a collective, artistic activation of the Bank Street Theater and surrounding spaces by graduating MFA Contemporary Theatre and Performance students. Eight distinct projects serve as each student's capstone offering as well as a public introduction to their work as it exists at this stage in their development. In celebration, the School of Drama invites The New School community, communities surrounding The New School, and communities beyond to experience a collection of performative artworks that push the boundaries of discipline and form.
Anticipated performances include: A TIME (June Seo); the starry-eyed (Lars Montanaro; Lacuna(e) (Catalina Cofone Polack); Unsay (Moira Zhang); Guanahani (Neka Knowles); Ernestine (Jasmine Kiah); Ameliaorated (Alina Burke); Eros Without Love (working title, Anamaría Willars)
September-April: Naked Angels 1st Mondays at The New School
September 30, December 9, February 3, March 17, April 21 at 7:00pm
Walk-up only/No advance registration.
Event Information
The School of Drama continues its dynamic partnership with Naked Angels, a prominent figure in New York City’s theater community. The esteemed 1st Mondays at The New School series, entering its second year, is a vital platform for emerging playwrights from Naked Angels’ Tuesdays@9 community to showcase their work and for School of Drama students to interact with and learn from these emerging talents, gain insights into the process of creating and workshopping new plays, and forge meaningful connections within the industry. The 1st Mondays at The New School series will run through the 2024-25 season and include in-person readings of full-length plays.
September 30: Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
December 9: The Glassbox Theater | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
February 3: Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
March 17: Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
April 21: Ernst C. Stiefel Hall | Arnhold Hall | 55 W. 13th St., N.Y.C.
About the College of Performing Arts at The New School
The College of Performing Arts at The New School was formed in 2015 and draws together the Mannes School of Music, the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music, and the School of Drama. With each school contributing its unique culture of creative excellence, the College of Performing Arts is a hub for cross-disciplinary collaboration, bold experimentation, innovative education, and world-class performances.
The 1,000 students at the College of Performing Arts are actors, performers, writers, improvisers, creative technologists, entrepreneurs, composers, arts managers, and multidisciplinary artists who believe in the transformative power of the arts for all people. Students and faculty collaborate with colleagues across The New School in a wide array of disciplines, from the visual arts and fashion design, to the social sciences, public policy, advocacy, and more.
The curriculum at the College of Performing Arts is dynamic, inclusive, and responsive to the changing arts and culture landscape. New degrees and coursework, like the new graduate degrees for Performer-Composers and Artist Entrepreneurs are designed to challenge highly skilled artists to experiment, innovate, and engage with the past, present, and future of their artforms. New York City’s Greenwich Village provides the backdrop for the College of Performing Arts, which is housed at Arnhold Hall on West 13th Street and the historic Westbeth Artists Community on Bank Street.
Founded in 1916 by America’s first great violin recitalist and noted educator, David Mannes, and pianist and educator Clara Damrosch Mannes, the Mannes School of Music is a standard-bearer for radically progressive music education, dedicated to supporting the development of creative and socially engaged artists. Through its undergraduate, graduate, and professional studies programs, Mannes offers a curriculum as imaginative as it is rigorous, taught by a world-class faculty and visiting artists. As part of The New School’s College of Performing Arts, together with the School of Jazz and Contemporary Music and the School of Drama, Mannes makes its home on The New School’s Greenwich Village campus in a state-of-the-art facility at the newly renovated Arnhold Hall.
The School of Drama is the creative home to a dynamic group of actors, directors, writers, creative technologists, and multi-disciplinary theater artists. With a focus on authenticity of expression, the school’s curriculum confronts today's most pressing societal issues through the making of theater, film, and emerging media. The School of Drama’s faculty is made up of award-winning actors, playwrights, and directors who bring a currency of professional experience, artistic training, and project-based learning into the classroom. The multidisciplinary MFA and BFA degree programs bring together rigor, creativity, and collaborative learning to create work marked by professionalism, imagination, and civic awareness. The school takes inspiration from the greats who walked its halls in the past, including Marlon Brando, Harry Belafonte, and Vinnette Carroll, as well as more recent graduates, like Adrienne C. Moore, Jordan E. Cooper, and Jason Kim.
The School of Jazz and Contemporary Music is renowned across the globe as a center for progressive, innovative artists. Considered the most innovative school of its kind, it offers students an artist-as-mentor approach to learning. The world’s leading contemporary and jazz musicians, like Matt Wilson, Mary Halvorson, Linda May Han Oh, Jane Ira Bloom, and more, work with students to hone their craft and create groundbreaking music. This is a rare place where students can pursue what makes you a unique contemporary musician. We encourage students to explore their own talents and reach across disciplines to construct new rhythms, inventive compositions, and original means of expression. There are nearly 80 ensembles students can play in each semester. Outside the classroom, New York City becomes a performance hall. Play in clubs, concert halls, and venues throughout New York and in festivals and exchange programs around the world. Start your professional performance career now through our Gig Office; we have the largest music internship program in New York. You can work with producers, editors, and recording artists of the highest caliber. Students will be immersed not only in the newest music but also in the nuances of how the music industry runs. Our curriculum allows students to infuse their music education with elements of design, literature, history, journalism and more. You can take courses offered at the Mannes School of Music, Parsons School of Design, and Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts. In addition, we have created a number of project-based interdisciplinary classes, such as an exploration of sound-image relationships in early 20th-century multimedia art, offered by Parsons and Jazz. The results of this university-wide interconnectivity can be seen in the success of our alumni in a range of genres and categories of creative work, both in and outside of music.
Founded in 1919, The New School was established to advance academic freedom, tolerance, and experimentation. A century later, The New School remains at the forefront of innovation in higher education, inspiring more than 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students to challenge the status quo in design and the social sciences, liberal arts, management, the arts, and media. The university welcomes thousands of adult learners annually for continuing education courses and public programs that encourage open discourse and social engagement. Through our online learning portals, research institutes, and international partnerships, The New School maintains a global presence.