The School of Theatre at California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) is now offering students the chance to study experience design and themed entertainment as part of its BFA Design and Production Programme.
The institute already works closely with several themed entertainment companies including Walt Disney Imagineering (WDI), BRC Imagination Arts, Paramount, Universal, The Goddard Group, On Track Themes, Thinkwell, and RGH Entertainment.
This new specialisation aims to develop students’ technical ability and creative vision. Throughout the course they will be encouraged to develop ‘a unique creative process, as they work alongside artists and thinkers across all disciplines’.
According to CalArts, theatre makers are particularly suited to what it describes as ‘the unique landscape positioned between design and collaborative storytelling’.
The brainchild of Walt and Roy Disney
The BFA Programme in Design and Production has been designed to offer a foundation grounded in project-based learning, supported by a rigorous theoretical and critical studies framework. Students are exposed to a variety of collaborative practices such as live performance, film, dance, themed entertainment, immersive environments, social and civic entrepreneurship.
CalArts has been operating for nearly half a century and has been ranked as the top US college for students of the arts by Newsweek/The Daily Beast. The institute was the brainchild of Walt Disney and his brother Roy as a way of nurturing future generations of creative talent. They wanted to remove the walls that traditionally separated the various creative disciplines and encourage artists from different spheres to mix and collaborate. The two men were convinced that this joined-up way of working would facilitate the sparking of new ideas and methods.
Opened in 1970, the college offers a wide range of undergraduate and graduate degree programmes through six schools—Art, Critical Studies, Dance, Film/Video, Music, and Theatre.
Image shows immersive environment created for FantĂ´mas: Revenge of the Image (CalArts Centre for New Performance). Credit: Rafael Hernandez. Courtesy of CalArts.