Map of studies
Bachelor's Degree in Performing Arts and Screen Acting (In English)
- ECTS – European Credit Transfer System
- OB – Mandatory
- FB – Basic training
- FBC – Common Basic Training
- FBR – Basic Branch Training
- PE – External Practices
- RAC – Credit Recognition
- TFG – Final Degree Project
Year 1
Improvisation and Acting foundations
Approach to acting from a state of relaxation and with a firm sense of attention. Improvisation, imagination and observation as fundamental tools of the acting technique. Techniques to develop psycho-physical states and reactions to sensory stimuli. The conflict, events and active analysis of a text. Improvisation. Introduction to character work. Relationships. Words.
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBR
Screen Acting Foundations
Introduction to the actor's work in audiovisual media. Fundamental theoretical concepts that assist the actor in extracting the necessary elements from the analysis of a script to apply them in acting. Basic techniques and concepts of working in front of a camera, and in different shot sizes.
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBR
Acting Project II
Performing from dramatic and comic scenes. The student's approach to the character and the conflicts created around him/her. Introduction to realistic acting techniques, based on an approach to the text through improvisation. Learning acting tools that build the foundations for further developments. Methodology geared towards a highly practical training, in which students mount different stage projects.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
Vocal Technique II
Introduction to the basic tools of vocal technique that allow the projection of the voice and its application to the scenic word, that is, to the spoken text.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Music and Singing I
Aspects of music, rhythm and hearing, vocal technique and hygiene, to teach the future actor how to maintaina healthy voice and bring it to peak performance.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
Movement and Gesture
Elements and techniques to build the relationship between expressive movement and acting. Course content includes the teaching of the principles of movement (balance, proprioception and coordination); the qualities of movement; movement segmentation and combination, association and dissociation; objective and abstract gestural acting; physical expressivity to project images or psychophysical states; ensemble work; and collaborative focus.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Dancing Basic Moves
Introduction to the technical tools of different dance styles, for the purposes of integrating these resources into acting, and primarily for the correct use of the main acting methods: body and voice. Rhythm, spatial composition, improvisation, creation and performance of short choreographies that are meant to be properly integrated into a stage context.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Dramatic Literature II
Dramatic texts' immersion through the reading and grammatical, artistic and literary analysis of historically significant works. Introduction to the study of dramatic literature from its origins to the present day.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
History of Performing Arts
Introduction to the history of the performing arts from a chronological perspective covering their birth and conception to the present day.
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBC
film and acting
Outstanding milestones in the history of cinema: pre-cinema (pioneers and first film narratives), European cinema (avant-garde, German expressionism, Soviet cinema), silent cinema in Hollywood, pre-war cinema in Europe, Italian neorealism, meetings of Salamanca and new Spanish cinema, nouvelle vague and renewal of North American productions.
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBR
Professional Ethics and Equality
This course works on the awareness of the expressive tools of each artistic discipline, and the ability to create and dialogue. Students manage their own creative project through to its completion, with teamwork, leadership and by relinquishing individual vision in favor of the result of the project, search for an individual and collective language, ethical values, shared responsibilities, creative freedom, critical thought and self -criticism.
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBC
Computer Technology Applied to the Performing Arts
Basic knowledge of hardware, software and internet applied to the needs of professionals in the Performing Arts. Office technology tasks in any format, as a collaboration and online, the commercial and marketing potential of social networks, creation of a web page, video editing, image and video resolution.
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBC
Year 2
building a character
Tools to create solid and coherent characters, separate from the performer's own personality. Exploration of acting through play and facing one's own mistakes. Acting training, both physical and vocal, based on rhythm, space and energy dynamics.
- Credits: 9
- Character: FBR
Filming and Auditioning
Application of realistic and basic techniques for the audiovisual medium. Analysis of comedy and drama scripts; casting; practice of film and television scenes; dynamics of audiovisual filming; viewing and analysis of one's own work,
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBR
Acting Project II
Performance and staging of classical and contemporary scenes, with particular consideration given to the construction of characters and staging, both individually and with the rest of the cast. In-depth character analysis. Students will learn physical and emotional techniques to achieve an authentic and honest interpretation.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
Vocal Technique II
Development of a psychophysical awareness, leading to the expansion of breathing capacity and range. Liberation of the sound channel. Strengthening the voice, increasing sonority and resonance. Elements and techniques of vocal expression and their application to dramatic texts.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Music and Singing II
Vocal training, performance and modern singing techniques. Focus on the singer's posture, constriction versus retraction, psychomotor function of sound and conscious phono-respiratory coordination. Hygiene and resources for the conservation and care of the vocal apparatus. Introduction to musical theatre.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
Body and Masks
Stage presence developed through physical body habits as the essence of character. The mask as a tool to enhance the expression of the body, adding value to the stage work. Styles of expressive interpretive movement. The rehearsal and practice space as a means to create stage pieces.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Contemporary dance
Acting work with the body as a tool for the development of creative capacity. Contemporary dance techniques; collective choreography and improvisation. Understanding of acting skills linked to the physical movement required for a performance. Encounter between the message and the concrete emotions on both a theoretical and practical level.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Make-up and Character Development
Knowledge of the morphological and formal elements of the face for the characterization in acting, as well as make-up, hairdressing and styling that make possible the appropriate physical transformation of the actor. Stylism in theatre, photography, cinema and television.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Dramatic Literature II
Study and review of some of the most important dramatic texts in the history of literature, from the 18th century to the present day. Linking research to the social, political and artistic movements of aesthetics. Main authors; analysis and understanding of texts and artistic movements; introduction and discussion of modern dramatic literature from the 18th century to the new theater and postmodernism.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Script and Playwriting I
Basic tools for playwriting. Short writing exercises based on artistic stimuli and external observation. Development of a sense of criticism and teamwork. Adaptation of a theatrical text to an audiovisual format using typical script narrative elements. Communication of an idea from the creation of the logline.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Art History and Aesthetics
History of art and the main aesthetic ideas through time, in a theoretical-practical approach with some emphasis on the theatrical and scenographic event. Lecture content focused on artistic practice, styles and specific creations; practical content focused on different creative exercises built on major concepts related to the theoretical reflection on artistic activity throughout history. Connection to contemporary issues.
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBR
Theory of Acting
History of stage acting: the major theories of the theater since the 20th century, the contexts in which different methods appear, paradigms of acting derived from them, integration of proposed acting techniques.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
ModernLanguage
This course prepares students to pass the TFI (Test de Français International) official language exam. Learning in groups according to language level. Students learn the main tactics and strategies for each of the two sections of the exam (listening and reading). Students who are in possession of a valid B1-level or higher French language level certificate accepted by the Rey Juan Carlos University (URJC).
- Credits: 6
- Character: FBC
Year 3
Stage Acting
Literary language and stage language. The Here and Now. listening. boost. organicity. Quality of movement. Conscious convention. Ensemble work. The technical-interpretive structure.
- Credits: 9
- Character: OB
Screen Acting
Analysis of complex scripts. Film narrative and editing. Development of complex characters. Screen acting by genre. Onscreen historical drama. Screening and analysis of artistry. Technical work with green screen and extreme situations. Utilities and examples in the industry. Practical introduction to virtual interaction.
- Credits: 9
- Character: OB
Acting Project II
Introduction to contemporary theater. Text and pretext. Introduction to stage dramaturgy and semiotics. Approach to the personal creation of a work. Specific work on a dramatic proposal. Phases of creation of a show.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
vocal training
The vocal process (phonation). From word to text. The voice on stage. Verse II: punctuation-pauses-phrasing.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
musical theater
Introduction to the history of musical theater. Singing and vocal technique applied to theater. Acting in musical theater. Theatrical and musical creation.
- Credits: 4,5
- Character: OB
stage combat
Body awareness. Objective gesture in acting. Abstract gesture in acting. Construction and applications. Physical architecture. Creation of stage combat and character works using movement and space.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Choreography
Techniques of choreography applied to musical theater. Classical ballet. Jazz dance. Modern dance. Contemporary dance. Theater dance. Ethnic dance. Folklore. Expressivity in dance.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Script and Playwriting II
The dramatic text: analysis and structure; process of evolution of a story, sequencing and climax; genre; fictional construction. Script: versions and types; structure (shot list and dialogues); development of an original script.
- Credits: 4,5
- Character: OB
Film Narrative and Editing
Narrative techniques. Camera and object movements. continuity. Sequence. Space and time. Narrative voice. Pre-production. Production. Post-production.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Technology Applied to the Performing Arts
Overview of the history of technology applied to the performing arts. Technologies according to field of application. Practical stage design project using technologies. Preparation throughout the course + presentation of the projects.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
Intellectual Property Law
Intellectual property in relation to the performing arts and acting. Author's rights. Tools used in the negotiation of artist contracts. International property rights. Phases of artistic creation from a legal standpoint. Collective management of author's rights. Systems of protection of intellectual property rights.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Audiovisual and Performing Arts Industry
Definition and history of the cultural and creative industries. Financing in the theatrical and audiovisual industries. Production processes. Exhibition and distribution channels, theatrical tours. Strategy analysis and orientation. Analysis of the national and international theatrical and audiovisual industries. Markets and fairs.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Year 4
Stage/Screen Creative Project
Specific work on a dramatic/audiovisual research proposal. Personal approach to an audiovisual and/or stage creation. Phases in the creation of a stage or audiovisual work.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
Entrepreneurship, Management and Professional Career
Applied theater: definition; theater pedagogy; socio-cultural activity; coaching for actors; creation and improvement of companies and organizations. Business initiatives: strategic plan and definition; methodology. Cultural management: foundations; organisms; theatrical production; basic ideas of Technique applied to theater.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
TV Hosting Workshop
The role of TV host. Interviews: preparation, question list, techniques of interpersonal connection, listening techniques, improvisation, techniques for being interviewed. The program rundown. Reading the news: tone, rhythm and naturalness; teleprompter; handling floats/live voice over; connections and disconnections; summaries. TV programs.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Dramaturgy Workshop
Theoretical foundations: brief history of dramaturgy and staging; semiotics of theater; nature and polysemy of the sign in theater; the stage code. Dramaturgy and staging: information and documentation; elements of dramatic form and theme, contemporary reading; aesthetic and style; instruments of stage significance. Application in practice.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Dubbing Workshop
The history of dubbing. Synchrony. Interpretation. Vocal pitch. Dubbing equipment and techniques. Dramatic films. Animated movies. Singing in dubbing. The narrator. Embellishing the voice.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
Acrobatics Workshop
Body, time-space: the silence of action; rotation on an axis; mental and muscle impulses; unsteady balance; falls and tumbles. Group compositions: simple acrobatic figures with catcher; articulated groups; synchronized fights; group fights. Objects: tumbles and falls on and with objects. Styles and their application: combat and geometry; the duel and melee; comic acrobatics and stage fighting; film acrobatics/stunts.
- Credits: 3
- Character: OB
External Internship
The purpose of business internships is to obtain practical experience that helps towards insertion into the labor market and raises the future employability of students, contributing to their full education and training, and providing them with knowledge of the work methodologies in the field of performing arts and screen acting and improving the development of technical, methodological, personal and participatory methodologies.
- Credits: 21
- Character: OB
Academic Recognition of Credits
Attendance to artistic, cultural, student and cooperation events of the school, and artistic entrepreneurship.
- Credits: 6
- Character: OB
Undergraduate Thesis Project
In the Undergraduate Thesis Project, students produce an individual, original, and autonomous work under the guidance of a professor, in which they apply and develop the knowledge and skills they have acquired in their Degree.
- Credits: 9
- Character: OB