News & Events

Audition now for the Fall Term!

The Fall Term begins September 15. Sign up for your audition today.

New students wishing to study above our Level 1 class offerings are asked to audition before a faculty panel.
For audition schedule, details and sign up info, visit the Auditions & Prerequisites page.

Level 1 offerings are open to all without prerequisite or audition.

The Fall Term runs 10 weeks, September 15 – November 23. Fall Term registration begins August 1.

Interested in a trial class before registering? Audit classes this Summer to plan your Fall schedule. The fee for an audit is $20. Call 212-675-2370 for details and to schedule an audit.

THE CONDUCT OF LIFE

HB PERFORMANCE LAB

By  María Irene Fornés

Thursday July 17 – Sunday, July 20 | 8pm
(NOTE: Wednesday July 16 show has been cancelled)

HB Studio, First Floor Studio | 120 Bank Street
Free!  RSVP

With:
Juliya Abdulla
Peter Alexandrou
James Cottone
Catrin Lloyd-Bollard
Ibeth Massari

Directed by George Bartenieff
Stage Manager:
Yangdi Li
Assistant Stage Manager: Geralyn Cassidy

In Memoriam: Stuart Vaughan

VAUGHAN-obitHB notes with sadness the passing of Stuart Vaughan. We are honored and grateful for the time and wisdom Stuart shared with us this year.

A memorial/celebration of Stuart’s life is being planned for September at The Public Theatre.

“Stuart Vaughan, who directed the first productions of the New York Shakespeare Festival and later seeded several regions of the country with classic works, starting repertory theaters in Seattle and New Orleans and another that toured community centers and colleges, died on June 10 at his home in High Bridge, N.J. He was 88.

The cause was prostate cancer, his wife, Anne Thompson Vaughan, said.

As a director, Mr. Vaughan earned a reputation as a specialist in Shakespeare who professed a loyalty to the text and an aversion to what he called “revisionist approaches aimed at achieving ‘relevance.’ ” In the early 1960s, he directed a well-received “Hamlet” and “Henry IV” Parts 1 and 2 on Broadway.

But he was largely unknown when the producer Joseph Papp asked him to direct “Julius Caesar” and “The Taming of the Shrew” in 1956 at an amphitheater on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, the first two productions of what became a New York summer tradition — free Shakespeare outdoors…”

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In Memoriam: Pennie duPont

Pennie_HB notes with sadness the passing of Pennie (Helen Quinn) duPont on Friday, our longtime friend and colleague.

Helen Quinn (Pennie) duPont, 75, of Greenwich Village, New York passed away peacefully at the Methodist Country House in Wilmington, Delaware on June 13, 2014.

Pennie was born in Johnstown, PA in1939 to the late Helen L. Rodgers and James Q. duPont. She is survived by her sister Deborah duP. Riegel of Wilmington, and by two brothers, P. Coleman duPont of Wilmington and Jamie MacKenzie of Taconic, Connecticut. She is also survived by two nieces, two nephews, two grand nieces and one grand nephew.

Pennie graduated from Miss Porter’s School in Farmington, Connecticut and Bradford Junior College in Haverhill, Massachusetts before going on to the Yale Drama School in New Haven, Connecticut. After attending The Yale Drama School, Pennie studied with Uta Hagen in New York and then worked in theater both on and off Broadway. A meticulous, knowledgable, and universally respected professional who brought her experience to many domains, Pennie’s career also included casting major motion pictures such as The Karate Kid, Peggy Sue Got Married, and Arizona Dream for directors Fred Schepisi, John Avildsen, Francis Ford Coppola and Emir Kusturica. She also did the west coast casting on Star 80 for Bob Fosse and Annie for John Huston. She was a founder of the City Center Young Peoples Theater and produced The Shrinking Bride off Broadway, introducing Danny de Vito.

Pennie began casting films when Ray Stark hired her to do a search for Annie. She did five other films for Stark; then went to work for Daniel Melnick’s IndiProd, casting such films as Roxanne and Quicksilver. She worked for Columbia and Tri Star in Los Angeles until returning to New York. She co-hosted the television show The Good Life with John Newcomb, syndicated in the US and Australia. As a writer, she sold a number of screenplays, including the award-winning Torn Between Two Fathers, an ABC after school special.  During the 90’s, she directed and produced short archival films for The New York School of Interior Design.

Pennie also taught acting and directing at NYU, both in New York City and Singapore, and at the Lee Strasberg Theater and Film Institute. One of the high points of her career was a project with Karen Ludwig to produce and direct Uta Hagen’s Acting Class, a renowned teaching documentary of her incomparable teacher and friend.

Pennie was a member of WAC; a feminist activist group of the late 80’s and early 90’s which organized actions around reproductive rights and equal pay. She loved going to movies, rowing on the Gowanus Canal in Brooklyn and just being outdoors. She will be deeply missed by all her family, friends, neighbors, students and colleagues. The family would like to recognize the extraordinary care given Pennie by all the staff at the Methodist Country House and Compassionate Care Hospice.

Services are private. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to:  HB Studio,
120 Bank Street, 
New York, NY 10014.

Acting in Accent: General American – Apply today!

Taught by Amanda Quaid, this is an advanced workshop for foreign actors who are working towards auditioning and performing using an American Accent. It is suitable for actors who are already proficient in the signature sounds of General American English who want to bridge the gap to scene study and auditions:

Acting in Accent: General American
Tuesdays & Thursdays
July 8, 10, 15 & 17
10am – 12pm, $145
Applications due June 24!

EATING AND DRINKING

A STAGED READING

By Susan Eve Haar

Saturday and Sunday, June 14 & 15 | 7 pm (please note updated performance time!)
HB Playwrights Theatre | 124 Bank Street
Free! | RSVP

A character driven family piece that starts at the unveiling of the patriarch’s gravestone and ends with the family in a new constellation, watching a little girl swing into the future.

Performed by: Judith Roberts, Denny Dale Bess, Graeme Gillis, Diana Ruppe, and Julie Fitzpatrick.

Directed by: Abigail Zealey Bess

ABOMINATION

FIRST FLOOR STUDIO PERFORMANCE PROJECT

By Jason Jung

Saturday June 21 | 8pm
Sunday June 22 | 5pm
Saturday June 28 | 5pm & 8pm
Sunday June 29 | 5pm
HB First Floor Studio | 120 Bank Street
Free! | RSVP

After being implicated in a gay sex scandal, Rev. Adam Pressley seeks refuge from the media by escaping the Ozark Mountain cabin of his mentor and surrogate father, Rev. Tom Teagan. But Pressley’s attempts to hide are undone by Teagan’s constant questioning. Old wounds and unspoken fears boil and unravel their friendship as the two men come face-to-face with their inner demons and each other.

Directed by Adam Delia

With Misha Braun and Will W. Warren

This program is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support nysca_60px
of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.

 

ROOMS

A movement project of The Hagan Core Training programHaganCoremovement140604

Wednesday June 11 | 7pm
HB First Floor Studio | 120 Bank Street
Free!

Directed by: Michael Blake

Performed by: Andres Delgado, Sara Shatzel, Maral Tatar, Stephan Shmidt, Diana Huntley, Tara Moore, Andrew Ryan, Hugo Sousa