Department of Dramatic Arts
802 Bolton Rd., Unit 1127
Storrs, Connecticut 06269-1127
Phone: 860-486-1623
Fax: 860-486-3110
Email: dassia.posner@uconn.edu
Web Site: www.dassiaposner.com
DR. DASSIA POSNER is Assistant Professor-in-Residence
in Theatre History and Dramatic Literature at the University
of Connecticut and Dramaturg at the Connecticut Repertory
Theatre. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Davis
Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard in 2009.
She earned her Ph.D. in Drama at Tufts University in 2007,
her M. A. in Theatre, also at Tufts (2003), and her B.A. in
Theatre and Russian at Bates College (1994). Her interests
include dramaturgy, history of directing, Russian and European
avant-garde theatre, Russian émigré art and
performance, popular entertainment, classical Japanese theatre,
and puppetry history and performance.
Dr. Posner is a director, teacher, scholar, dramaturg, actress,
and puppeteer. She is committed to scholarship informed by
practice and to performance enhanced by historical context.
Her work has been published in Theatre Survey, Slavic and
East European Performance, Communications from the International
Brecht Society, Theatre Research International and Puppetry
International. Articles and book chapters include “Performance
as Polemic: Tairov’s 1920 Princess Brambilla at the
Moscow Kamerny Theatre,” "A Theatrical Zigzag:
Doctor Dappertutto, Columbine’s Scarf, and the Grotesque,"
“Spectres on the New York Stage: The (Pepper’s)
Ghost Craze of 1863” (in Representations of Death in
Nineteenth–Century U.S. Writing and Culture), “An
Alternative Theatre: Russian Women Pioneers in Puppetry,”
and an English translation of a Russian Petrushka play. In
her current research, she is preparing for publication her
book manuscript The Director’s Prism: E. T. A. Hoffmann
and Russian Modernist Directors and is continuing her postdoctoral
work on Russian-American visual artist Boris Chaliapin. Future
projects include a study of Soviet productions of American
plays in the 1920s and 30s. She is a contributing editor for
Puppetry International.
Dr. Posner has taught at Tufts University, Boston University
and Boston College and as an artist-in-residence in Dneperopetrovsk,
Ukraine. After studying acting and directing at the Moscow
Art Theatre School, she also worked as a simultaneous oral
interpreter for the Stanislavsky Summer School in Cambridge,
MA. Her directing credits include adaptations of stories by
Nikolai Gogol and Gabriel García Márquez, as
well as numerous large-scale pageants and parades. She has
been a puppeteer for over a decade, performing in operas directed
by Amy Trompetter at St. Ann's for the Children's Free Opera
and Dance of New York; with Bread and Puppet, Underground
Railway Theatre, the Puppeteer's Cooperative, Back Alley Puppet
Theatre; and for First Night, Boston's annual New Year's parade.
She is the founder of Luna Theatre, a visual theatre company
that combines folk tales, traditional Bulgarian folk music
and devised work, using masks and shadow puppets as expressive,
creative forms.
Dr. Posner's work has been recognized with fellowships and
grants from Harvard University, the Council on Library and
Information Resources/ Mellon Foundation, the Somerville and
Cambridge Arts Councils, the Boston Cultural Council, and
Puppeteers of America. In 2003, she was featured on Boston
Magazine's "Hot List" of visual and performing artists
and she was recently awarded the Order of Diaghilev for contribution
to Russian culture.
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