
BA Acting for Theater and Film
Start date
Course length
Program Overview
The BA Acting for Theater and Film offers intensive, practice-led training for performance across stage, film, and television. Delivered through an eight-semester curriculum, the program integrates acting technique, voice, movement, and performance creation in an immersive conservatory-style environment.
Grounded in rigorous acting and creative inquiry, the program emphasizes collaboration, ensemble practice, and experiential learning within professional-style rehearsal and production environments. Alumni will be equipped to pursue careers as actors, directors, producers, content creators, and theater educators across stage, screen, and digital media.
In Partnership With:
Learning Objectives
- Train as versatile actors and theater-makers with advanced skills in acting, voice, movement, and performance for stage, screen, and digital platforms.
- Apply professional performance techniques through intensive, practice-led training aligned with contemporary industry standards.
- Create, collaborate, and innovate, producing original work as performers, directors, producers, and creative artists.
- Engage in interdisciplinary practice, integrating acting with digital media, content creation, and emerging performance forms.
- Develop sustainable professional careers, informed by global performing arts traditions, enriched by local cultural contexts, and driven by industry-focused career development.
Exit Award
Intermediate Diploma in Acting for Theater and Film
Assessment Methods
- Performance Critique: Assessment of live and screen performances.
- Written Reflection: Critical analysis of artistic practice and creative development.
- Project Evaluation: Assessment of original creative work across performance and production.
- Showreel Review: Industry-aligned evaluation of professional promotional materials.
- Class Participation: Ongoing assessment of engagement, collaboration, and professionalism.
Admission Criteria
The process consists of two sections. Only shortlisted applicants will be invited to progress to Section Two, which includes the live audition and monologue requirements.
Required Application Materials:
Video Submission
Applicants must submit a short video (maximum 3 minutes) structured in two parts:
- Personal Introduction — A brief introduction outlining your motivation for training, reasons for applying to the BA Acting program, and your interest in the creative arts sector.
This submission enables the panel to understand your ambition, communication skills, creative thinking, and potential as a developing artist.
Monologue Submissions (Required)
Please see below for audition requirements. Full monologue preparation and self-tape guidance is available in the Applicant Portal.
Audition Requirements
All applicants must complete an audition as part of the admissions and scholarship consideration process.
Audition Format
Auditions are conducted via In Person audition or video submission.
Acting Audition Submission
Applicants must prepare two contrasting monologues, each 1-2 minutes in length:
- One monologue selected from the BA Acting Audition Library
- One monologue of the applicant's own choosing
All monologues must be performed in English.
Performance Focus
Audition pieces should demonstrate:
- A clear emotional connection to the character
- Vocal clarity and effective use of spoken text
- Thoughtful and intentional physical choices
- A sound understanding of the dramatic text
What the Audition Panel Is Looking For
The audition panel assesses potential rather than perfection. In particular, applicants are evaluated on:
- Imagination and creativity in the interpretation of character and text
- Curiosity about the craft of acting and openness to exploration
- Engagement with the wider world, reflected through material choice and interpretive insight
- Willingness to take creative risks and respond to direction (where applicable)
The audition process is designed to identify applicants with the capacity to grow, develop, and thrive within a rigorous, conservatory-style training environment, rather than those presenting a finished product.
Admission requirements, program structures, and program-specific requirements are subject to review and may be updated or changed at any time without prior notice. Applicants are advised to visit the program page at the time of admission for the most current information.
What to Expect
- Collaborative, inquiry-based ensemble learning, driven by shared investigation, problem-solving, and collective creative practice at the core of actor training.
- Practice-led, experiential training that integrates rigorous rehearsal with reflection, enabling students to apply technique within authentic performance and production contexts.
- Immersive, professional-style learning environments, including rehearsal rooms, studios, and performance spaces, where students actively test, analyze, and refine their craft.
- Meaningful industry engagement, offering real-world insight, professional exposure, and the business and entrepreneurial skills needed to build, sustain, and shape careers in the performing arts sector.
Program Modules
- Acting for Camera
- Acting Graduation Production
- Acting Technique
- Arabic and World Theatre Styles
- Arabic Communication & Cultural Expression
- Audition Technique
- Auditioning for Film & Television
- Career Preparation: Producing and Creating Theatre
- Combat for Camera
- Content Creation for the Creative Arts
- Creative Enterprise and Cultural Leadership
- Directing for Stage and Film
- Foundation English for Academic Success
- Generative AI in Cultural and Creative Practice
- Improvisation for Camera
- Improvisation Techniques
- Industry and Networking: Business Essentials for Theatre and Film
- Introduction to Stage Direction and Design
- Islamic Practices
- Professional English for the Creative Industries
- Saudi Art and Culture
- Shakespeare: Text and Performance
- Shoot for the Edit: Film and Television Production
- Stage Combat
- The Business of Creative Practice
- The Reel Actor
- Theatre in Education
- Voice Production and Speech
- Voiceover for Gaming and Radio
- World Art and Culture
Career Path After the Program
Career opportunities include, but are not limited to:
- Actor (Theater, Film, Television, and Digital Media)
- Voiceover Artist
- Acting Coach
- Director (Stage and Screen)
- Producer
- Casting Director
- Stage Manager
- Theater Educator / Teaching Artist
- Content Creator / Digital Performer
- Creative Producer or Project Lead
- Theater Maker / Devised Performance Artist
