Metadata
Title
MATheatre Practice
Category
graduate
UUID
268bb719007c44f2ad4beb1f88050e70
Source URL
https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/courses/creative/theatrema/
Parent URL
https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/courses/
Crawl Time
2026-03-25T01:30:54+00:00
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MATheatre Practice

Source: https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/courses/creative/theatrema/ Parent: https://www.exeter.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/courses/

MA Theatre Practice

MA Theatre Practice

UCAS code 1234
Duration 1 year full time 2 years part time
Entry year 2026
Campus Streatham Campus
Typical offer View full entry requirements We will consider applicants with a 2:2 Honours degree or above in their first degree in Drama, Theatre Practice, Screen Writing, Performance Studies, English Literature or Creative Writing.
Contextual offers

Why study MA Theatre Practice at Exeter?

For theatre-makers, educators, and performance scholars, this MA offers rigorous training in physical and vocal performance, ensemble collaboration, directing and dramaturgy - equipping students to innovate and lead within contemporary theatre and performance contexts.

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Select date of entry Sept 2026

Select programme MA Theatre Practice full time MA Theatre Practice part time

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Fast Track (current Exeter students)

Open Days

Register your interest

Contact

Programme Director:Dr. Konstantinos Thomaidis

Web: Enquire online

Phone: +44 (0)1392 72 72 72

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Discover MA Theatre Practice at the University of Exeter.

4th in the UK for Drama, Dance and Cinematics

Complete University Guide 2026

Industry placement options

Opportunities for study in the field

6th in The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2026

For Drama, Dance and Cinematics

Entry requirements

We will consider applicants with a 2:2 Honours degree or above in their first degree in Drama, Theatre Practice, Screen Writing, Performance Studies, English Literature or Creative Writing. While we normally only consider applicants who meet this criterion, if you are coming from a different academic background which is equivalent to degree level, or have relevant work experience, we would welcome your application. Practical and/or professional experience may be taken as constituting the equivalent of a degree qualification.

Applicants are invited to submit a portfolio, including videos excerpts from previous performances or links to others types of material.

Please also see our guidance on essential documentation required for an initial decision on taught programme applications.

Entry requirements for international students

English language requirements

International students need to show they have the required level of English language to study this course.

The required IELTS test scores for this course fall under Profile B1.

Please visit our English language requirements page to view the required test scores and equivalencies from your country.

The course has enabled me to explore new creative possibilities which I have never had access to before. The lecturers are incredibly supportive and highly knowledgeable practitioners who are passionate about the arts and its future possibilities for you as a student.

“Dance like nobody's watching” - Completely let go of anything you “think” you know and be prepared to open yourself up to every possibility and more. Don’t be afraid to try something out because everyone else will be feeling that same hesitancy too.

I waited until the moment was right for me to jump into the unknown and do what I truly love. Having a “hidden disability” made me feel worried about “fitting in” or being “good enough” but it’s the best choice I have ever made and I have felt truly supported in my creative journey as an artist.

Read more from Carina

Carina

MA Theatre Practice

Course content

Our MA Theatre Practice nurtures the theatre scholar-practitioners of the future. You will be taught advanced skills in movement, voice, text, adaptation and devising and will be invited to work collaboratively and imaginatively across various types of performance.

This programme is ideal for anyone wishing to further their practical training, integrate this with the study of cutting-edge performance practices, and the cultivation of advanced research skills.

We regularly train students in Grotowski-based movement and voice work, Phillip Zarrilli’s psychophysical training, Asian body-mind practices (including yoga, t’ai chi and butoh), Meyerhold’s biomechanics, polyphonic singing, integration of movement and text, and Viewpoints. You will be introduced to contemporary performances practices, including site-specific theatre, intermedial performance, autobiographical work, physical theatre, and devised performance. Each year, students on this pathway can undertake a training residency outside the department, arranged by the university. In previous years, students have trained at Shakespeare’s Globe in London.

Programme staff are experts in actor training, directing and devising. They lead professional companies (e.g. RedCape Theatre) and regularly collaborate with world-leading theatre organisations (e.g. the Grotowski Institute in Poland, the National Theatre of Greece, ArtsCross International, LADA-Live Art Development Agency, the National Theatre Wales).

We offer a rich programme of esteemed visiting speakers and practitioners throughout the year. This frequently features workshops in clowning, puppetry, sound and dance. You will have access to the Exeter Digital Archives, one of the largest collections of recorded training and performance sessions in the world.

The modules below provide examples of what you can expect to learn on this degree course based on recent academic teaching. The precise modules available to you in future years may vary depending on staff availability and research interests, new topics of study, timetabling and student demand.

Modules

Please note that the module information displayed here is from a previous year and is subject to change.

*180 credits of compulsory modules\ \ a - Choose either CDFM001 Dissertation - Written or CDFM002 Dissertation - Practice (you cannot choose more than one module from this group)

DRAM167 Contemporary Performance Practices is pre-requisite for DRAM168 Performance Practice Project*

Compulsory modules

Code Module Credits
DRAM103 Cultural Adaptation 30
DRAM167 Contemporary Performance Practices: Training 45
DRAM168 Performance Practice Project 45
CDFM002 Dissertation - Practice [See note a] 60
CDFM001 Dissertation - Written [See note a] 60

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Fees

2026/27 entry

UK fees per year:

*£12,650 full-time; £6,325 part-time*

International fees per year:

£25,550 full-time; £12,775 part-time

Scholarships

The University of Exeter offers a wide range of scholarships to support your education, with £7 million available for international students applying to study with us in the 2026/27 academic year, including our prestigious Exeter Excellence Scholarships *. We also provide awards for sport, music and other achievements, as well as regional and partner scholarships with organisations such as Chevening, The Beacon Trust and the British Council. For more information on scholarships and other financial support, please visit our scholarships and bursaries page.

University of Exeter Alumni Scholarship

We are pleased to offer University of Exeter alumni beginning a standalone postgraduate programme in 2026/27 with us a scholarship towards the cost of your tuition fees. Full details can be found here.

*Terms and conditions, including deadlines, apply. See our website for details..

Find out more about tuition fees and funding »

Teaching and research

Depth and breadth of our practices

Our MA Theatre Practice introduces you to significant international practices and the core aspects of the theatre-maker’s craft: physical and vocal training, ensemble-making and collaboration, dramaturgy, directing and devising, space, props and technology.

Structure of teaching

In Term 1 you will explore the variety, richness and range of training practices, with chances for you to focus on the particular elements that most interest you.

In Term 2 and in your dissertation, you will be able to specialise, deepen and hone your understanding of one or more key areas of performance practice.

Toolkit development

You will regularly take part in ‘Toolkit’ sessions with visiting specialists, masterclasses and training.

You can gain further skills through a training residency with a professional theatre organisation, allowing you to experience different approaches to performance taught by professionals in the field.

In the second part of the year, you will create and perform a full-length project (solo or ensemble), with support by our expert staff and tech team. If you choose, you can perform your pieces to festivals of theatre work hosted by the University of Exeter, including the T3 Festival.

Praxis and reflective practitioner training

You will encounter key theory readings and engage in critical dialogue about them. As the practical elements increase via project-based learning, you will reflect upon your own practice using these readings, theories and resources.

This opportunity to self-reflect is as valuable for students who come into the MA with a substantive body of practice as it is for students with more limited experience. We value that each learning journey is unique.

Seminar modules and your research

In your theoretical modules, you will examine key topics in contemporary performance and skills for researching a topic of your choosing. In ‘Cultural Adaptation’ you will discuss how performance is made across cultures, and discover theatre-makers, applied-theatre practitioners and theorists influencing international performance. You will be introduced to a range of skills to help you design, prepare and conduct your own research.

For your ‘Dissertation’, you will conduct in-depth research in your chosen area of interest, guided by a supervisor. This can be fully written, or you can select a practice-based dissertation: for example, performance and writing, workshops and writing, or work placement and writing.

Assessment

You will benefit from a balanced range of assessments, including presentations, essays, project proposals, annotated bibliographies, and performances. Your learning process throughout the term is an important part of practice-based assessments and is taken into consideration in the marking.

Read more

Dr Erin Walcon

Lecturer in Applied & Educational Theatre

Dr Konstantinos Thomaidis

Associate Professor in Drama, Theatre & Performance

Professor Rebecca Loukes

Associate Professor of Performance Practice

Emily Kreider

MFA Theatre Practice Programme Director

Dr Erin Walcon

Lecturer in Applied & Educational Theatre

Erin is Co-Director of Doorstep Arts, a non-profit arts education organisation based in Torbay, providing sustainable long-term participatory arts engagement opportunities for children and young people in an area of statistically low socio-economic status. For Doorstep Arts, Erin administers and produces 14 ongoing drama groups across youth clubs and schools. Erin is a regional producer for Battersea Arts Centre's Collaborative Touring Network and was former Artistic Director of Devon Youth Theatre. Erin serves as the Chair of the Torbay Arts in Schools Network (the regional Cultural Education Partnership) and also serves on the board of Theatre Alibi.

Erin researches participatory arts, social justice, community engagement and theatre in education, and is a regular contributor to blogs and other open-access, public-friendly platforms.

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Dr Erin Walcon

Lecturer in Applied & Educational Theatre

Erin is Co-Director of Doorstep Arts, a non-profit arts education organisation based in Torbay, providing sustainable long-term participatory arts engagement opportunities for children and young people in an area of statistically low socio-economic status. For Doorstep Arts, Erin administers and produces 14 ongoing drama groups across youth clubs and schools. Erin is a regional producer for Battersea Arts Centre's Collaborative Touring Network and was former Artistic Director of Devon Youth Theatre. Erin serves as the Chair of the Torbay Arts in Schools Network (the regional Cultural Education Partnership) and also serves on the board of Theatre Alibi.

Erin researches participatory arts, social justice, community engagement and theatre in education, and is a regular contributor to blogs and other open-access, public-friendly platforms.

Profile page

Dr Konstantinos Thomaidis

Associate Professor in Drama, Theatre & Performance

Konstantinos performs internationally. Credits include: Hamlet in Ophelia, Interrupted (The Grotowski Institute, Poland / UK tour), Raskolnikov in What Happened to the Tyrant? (Camden People’s Theatre, UK), Perlimplin in Lorca’s Don Perlimplin and Belisa (Ora Theatre, Greece), Chi Chi Bunichi (National Theatre of Iasi, Romania, UK and Poland tour). Directing credits include: Semele by Handel (London and Berlin), A Voice Has. A Voices Does. A Voice Is. and Portable Soundscapes (New Theatre Royal, Portsmouth). Recently, he was Voice Consultant to Sophocles’ Trackers (Epidaurus) and Music Director for David Greig’s The Events (National Opera of Greece).

He has taught actor training, movement and voice at the Estonian Academy of Theatre and Music, the GEOKS Center in Bali, the Norwegian Theatre Academy and the Drama School of the National Theatre of Greece. He co-edits the Journal of Interdisciplinary Voice Studies and Routledge Voice Studies.

Profile page

Professor Rebecca Loukes

Associate Professor of Performance Practice

Rebecca is a professional director, leading industry- and public-facing work. She is joint Artistic Director of award-winning company RedCape Theatre. She co-created and performed in The Idiot Colony Project, which was performed 96 times across 30 UK venues (including the Institute for Contemporary Arts, London, Warwick Arts Centre, Birmingham Rep and Plymouth Theatre Royal). The piece won a Scotsman Fringe First and Total Theatre Award for Visual Theatre in 2008. Other projects include 1 Beach Road and Be Brave and Leave for the Unknown; both received funding by the Arts Council England, toured extensively and were favourably reviewed.

She is a regular collaborator of ArtsCross, a long-term initiative bringing together academics, artists and producers across cultural, national and artistic borders (partners include: Beijing Dance Academy, Taipei National University of the Arts, Shanghai Theatre Academy and Hong Kong Academy of the Performing Arts). She researches histories of performer training, with a particular focus on women’s legacies, and co-edits Routledge’s Perspectives in Performer Training.

Profile page

Emily Kreider

MFA Theatre Practice Programme Director

Emily is a US/UK-based award-winning teacher, creative practitioner, and leader in practice and experiential learning, who joined the University of Exeter's Drama department in 2014. She currently serves as the Director of the MFA Theatre Practice programme, where her teaching approach is characterised as responsive, experiential, inclusive, and student-led. Her research interests include practice-as-research, applied theatre, and the development of innovative pedagogical methods within drama education.

Profile page

Facilities

Alexander Building

As one of the largest and best-equipped Drama programmes in the country, we have excellent teaching and performance spaces. Our course is part is part of the Communications, Drama and Film Department, including facilities for film and TV film, media suites for post-production, a screening space, a podcast recording studio, and state-of-the-art studio spaces for training and performance.

The Drama Department is based on the Streatham campus. All of the practical spaces are for use only by Communications, Drama and Film students, giving us a high degree of flexibility.

Alexander Building

The Alexander Building was custom-designed for Drama and was opened in 2007 to great acclaim. It houses the main reception for students, staff offices, 2 brand new sprung-floored studios, 3 additional studios (including filming studio and screening space), 2 seminar rooms, 2 sound studios, meeting rooms, computer suites, workshops and a large costume store. The postgraduate computer suite is accessible 24 hours.

White House

The White House is a mansion building containing many original architectural features, and now contains 3 large airy rehearsal spaces and staff offices.

Roborough

The Roborough Studios provides three large fully-equipped adaptable studio spaces along with a seminar room and technical facilities (including a podcast recording studio), and is used for large-scale performances and events as well as regular rehearsals and practical sessions.

Careers

An MA Theatre Practice from Exeter enables you to develop a wide range of skills, such as those involved in creativity and public performance; research; analysis and source assessment; writing and verbal communication; managing and interpreting information; and developing ideas and arguments.

There are many career options open to students including acting, directing, performing, teaching and technical roles. Graduates also find work in other areas outside of theatre and performance: e.g., website design, press relations, magazine editing, copywriting, account managing, national health practice, law, and journalism.

Selected Alumni

Previous graduates lead performance companies around the world, including:

Others work for arts organisations, including:

Several graduates have become university lecturers in institutions including:

Read more about recent alumni news>>

Read more

My course is the perfect progression, having studied at Exeter as an Undergraduate. The course has offered me the opportunity to develop as a practitioner and researcher, and has an excellent balance between practice and theory work.

The postgraduate community here at Exeter is hugely supportive, and I feel very lucky to be part of such a wide-ranging and fascinating community of researchers.

I have undertaken two extra-curricular internships within the Drama department – one working with Professor Jerri Daboo on her work for the British Asian Theatre Project; and second with Professor Rebecca Loukes for her theatre company RedCape Theatre.

I feel my course and overall experience at Exeter has contributed significantly towards my development professionally, and there are multiple pathways which I am considering – including professional work, or a PhD.

Read more from Rosaline

Rosaline

MA Theatre Practice

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