Overview
Bruce Levitt has been a Professor in the Department of Performing and Media Arts at Cornell University since l986. He served as Chair of the Department from l986 to l995 during which time he oversaw the final phases of construction of the Schwartz Center for Performing Arts and, together with the faculty and staff, restructured the academic and productions programs of the department.
Previous to assuming the Chair of the Department at Cornell Dr. Levitt headed the MFA programs in Acting at the University of Iowa and served as program coordinator of the MFA program in Directing at Columbia University.
Professor Levitt has had a distinguished career as a freelance director in New York and regionally, and has been involved with the development of dozens of new plays in the United States, Canada, and Europe. Recent credits include Cornell productions of The Cherry Orchard, The Glass Menagerie, Strider, A Lie of the Mind, Equus, The Three Sisters, Cocoanuts, Beat Box Bard, Hamlet, and the American premier of David Edgar's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Dr. Levitt is a former chair of the New York State Council on the Arts Theatre Panel. From 1995 to 2001 Levitt served as the Producing Artistic Director of The Heart of America Shakespeare Festival in Kansas City, where he has directed productions of Romeo and Juliet, Richard III, Love's Labour's Lost, Macbeth, King Lear, and Measure for Measure, which won the 1999 Kansas City Drama Desk Award for best direction. Professor Levitt teaches several levels of acting classes, text analysis, solo performance, and directing. He was elected to membership in the National Theatre Conference in 2008.
At Cornell, Levitt has collaborated in community-based projects with the Lehman Alternative Community School, John O’Neal, Roadside Theatre, Urban Bush Women, Michael Keck, and members of the American Festival coalition. He co-teaches a course in community engagement with Scott Peters, Co-Director of Imagining America and faculty member in Development Sociology and Shorna Allred, faculty member in Natural Resources.
Levitt is a facilitator for the Phoenix Players Theatre Group, an organization founded by incarcerated men at Auburn Maximum Security Prison. He has been with the group fourteen years, meeting with them weekly, and assisting them on their journey of transformation through the use of theatre techniques. Levitt has assisted in devising four original pieces that the group has performed for invited audiences. Maximum Will, the group’s second piece was performed in April of 2012 at Auburn Correctional Facility and its development is the basis for the documentary Human Again. The group expanded its membership in 2013 and in May of 2014 performed its third original piece titled An Indeterminate Life. In May 2016, The Phoenix Players presented their fourth original piece, This Incarcerated Life, the full video of which can be found on the Phoenix Players website. PPTG’s most recent piece: The Strength of Our Convictions: The Auburn Redemption is now posted on the PPTG website. His two most recent articles about the Phoenix Players co-authored with Nick Fesette, assistant professor at Oxford College, can be found at the following links: Pedagogies of Self-Humanization: Collaborating to Engage Trauma in the Phoenix Players Theatre Group and Rehearsing Transformation in an American Prison. An interview with Levitt and Lorraine Moller of RTA can be found here.
In August 2016, Levitt was the recipient of Cornell's first Engaged Scholar Prize.
Visit the Phoenix Player’s Theatre Group Web Site.
Research Focus
Levitt's research focuses on the development of new plays and the adaptation of pre-existing material and original autobiographical material into original theatrical pieces. He also has his own New York City-based theatre company, MIRTH, which produces work off-Broadway. He also works on issues of incarceration and theatre in prisons and is a facilitator for the Arts, Justice, and Safety Coalition: https://www.theconfinedarts.org/arts-justice-safety-coalition.html
In the news
- PMA Professor Bruce Levitt’s Collaborative Film to Screen at the Haworth New York Showroom
- BIOphelia: A Performance-Infused Scholarship Symposium
- Art Workshop by Isaac I. Scott and a Screening of BEFORE TIME / AFTER TIME
- Student grant board funds social justice community projects
- PMA Professor Bruce Levitt Quoted in Article about Michael Rhynes, a Recently Exonerated Performer
- PMA Professor Bruce Levitt's Film Selected to Screen at the Arts In Action Festival in New York City
- Film Screening: Before Time / After Time on May 3 at 7:30 pm
- A Mingled Yarn A Devised Play, May 4th 5:45 p.m.
- Learn & travel with Cornell alumni, faculty this summer
- Students, formerly incarcerated people publish book of creative works
- Prison education alums work with undergrads on theater piece
- New Engaged Research Grants awarded to 14 partnerships
- Professor Emeritus David Bathrick dies in Germany at 84
- Dick Archer, man behind Cornell stage productions, dies at 71
- New play addresses activism, intent and justice
- 'Adored' PMA senior lecturer dies at 79
- Rising from the ashes: redemption through theater at Auburn prison
- At the Heart of Humanity
- Free screening of humorous and heartbreaking documentary
- Cornell Council for the Arts supports 35 new projects
- ‘Human Again’ screening offers look at prison theatre group
- Bruce Levitt awarded inaugural Engaged Scholar Prize
- Cornell student actors bring prisoners' writings to life
PMA Courses - Fall 2024
- PMA 3000 : Independent Study
- PMA 4670 : Shakespeare's Hamlet: The Seminar
- PMA 4671 : Funny Business: Stand Up Comedy and Its Social, Political, and Cultural Importance
- PMA 4950 : Honors Research Tutorial I