The Hollywood Reporter has ranked the School of Drama at the University of North Carolina School of the Arts (UNCSA) at No. 5 in the world.
The May 24 issue ranks UNCSA in the five top undergraduate schools along with 25 MFA programs. It notes that UNCSA has "a great track record for finding its grads agents and managers," and cites alumni Anna Camp, Anthony Mackie and Lucas Hedges.
"We're thrilled that the iconic Hollywood Reporter continues to recognize the strength of our Drama program, and the strides that our alumni are making in the entertainment industry," said UNCSA Chancellor Lindsay Bierman. "I am amazed - but not surprised - how many of our graduates are cast right out of school in major movie and television roles."
School of Drama Dean Carl Forsman said that the ranking speaks to UNCSA's rigorous conservatory program, which emphasizes classical training with the development of technical skills to shape versatile, in-demand actors. "Our resident faculty are doing a great job preparing talented young artists for the competitive landscape that is stage, screen and online today, this isn't unusual," Forsman said. "We'll sometimes have students leave school to shoot a film or TV series before graduation."
Another example is 2016 graduate Dylan Arnold, who filmed the critically acclaimed TV mini-series When We Rise (as Young GilBert Baker) during his last semester in school. When We Rise also features fellow Drama alumni Mary-Louise Parker '86, Alex Reznik '01 and Jonathan Majors '12.
Lucas Hedges, who attended the School of Drama as a college freshman in 2015-16, is an exceptional example. Taking a year off school, he shot Manchester by the Sea, earning an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor. He also filmed Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri and Lady Bird, and appeared in Yen off-Broadway.
For his performance in Yen, Hedges is due to receive a prestigious Theatre World Award on June 5, which recognizes superb debut performances in Broadway or off-Broadway plays. Past recipients of the award include alumni Parker, who won for Prelude to a Kiss in 1990 and is perhaps best known for Showtime's Weeds; Wesley Taylor '08, who won for Rock of Ages in 2009 and went on to TV's Smash; and Jennifer Ehle '88, who won for The Real Thing in 2000 and is nominated for a 2017 Best Actress Tony Award for Oslo.
Also nominated for a Tony Award this year is Drama alumnus and Oslo playwright J.T. Rogers '90. Oslo has already been named best play of the season by the N.Y. Drama Critics Circle, the Lucille Lortel Awards, the Drama League and the Outer Critics Circle, and on May 22 won an Obie for best new American theatre work.
In the past five years, applications to the School of Drama have nearly doubled. 2016 saw a new record of 580 applications, and 36 students were accepted. A typical fall class of undergrads is 28.
"In addition to our faculty, I believe our success lies in the rich performance opportunities we offer our students in major productions ranging from comedy to Shakespeare to musical theatre, staged workshops, and student films," he said. The students also have the opportunity to work with a host of guest directors, including most recently alumna Gaye Taylor Upchurch, Timothy Douglas, Jesse Berger, Jack Cummings, Nicole Watson and Gus Kaikkonen.
Alumni such as Parker, Joe Mantello (Tony and Obie-winning director), and Peter Hedges (Oscar-nominated screenwriter and director) also have visited campus recently to work with students.
Other examples of recent alumni success include:
2014 graduate Gus Halper landed the lead role in the 2015 TV pilot The Kingmakers and made his Sundance debut in 2016's Goat. He was nominated for a 2017 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical for Ride the Cyclone and has been cast as Erik Menendez in Law & Order: True Crime - The Menendez Murders.
2014 graduate Elizabeth Lail was cast right out of school as Princess Anna in the hit TV series Once Upon a Time, and in 2016 as Amy Hughes in Dead of Summer.
Tyler Lea '11 starred in the Tony Award-winning show The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time from 2015-16 on Broadway.
Dane DeHaan graduated in 2008, and two years later was featured in the HBO series In Treatment, followed by a starring role in the sci-fi film Chronicle. He recently starred in Gore Verbinski's A Cure for Wellness, and will soon be seen in the much-anticipated Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets.
A year after he left school in 2005, Erich Bergen joined the touring company of Jersey Boys as Bob Gaudio, which he parlayed into the Clint Eastwood film version in 2014. He's now seen as Blake in TV's acclaimed Madam Secretary.
The Hollywood Reporter also has recognized other UNCSA programs. THR ranked the UNCSA School of Filmmaking at No. 15 in the country in August 2016, while the UNCSA School of Music was ranked No. 5 among the top 25 music schools in November 2016.
The University of North Carolina School of the Arts is America's first state-supported arts school, a unique stand-alone public university of arts conservatories. With a high school component, UNCSA is a degree-granting institution that trains young people of talent in dance, design and production, drama, filmmaking, and music. Established by the N.C. General Assembly in 1963, the School of the Arts opened in Winston-Salem ("The City of Arts and Innovation") in 1965 and became part of the University of North Carolina system when it was formed in 1972.
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