Classes in puppetry were first taught at UConn in 1964 by
Professor Frank W. Ballard, who had joined the faculty of
Theatre Department as a set designer and technical director
eight years earlier. After three years, the demand for these
courses had grown so drastically that the department had to
limit enrollment in puppetry classes.
Professor Ballards first full-length puppet
production, The Mikado, was presented on the stage
of the Harriet S. Jorgensen theatre as one of the departments
Mainstage productions. UConn soon became one of only two (soon
to be three) universities in the country offering a BFA degree
in puppet arts and the only institution in the country offering
masters degrees (both MA and MFA) in the field.
Graduates of the puppetry program perform and design for many
theatres around the world. They appear in, build for and manage
internationally recognized television programs (such as Between
the Lions) and films, write books, design toys, teach
children, and direct prominent schools and museums.
In 1990, Bart. P. Roccoberton, Jr. succeeded
Frank Ballard as Director of the Puppet Arts Program. In addition
to the full-stage Puppet Productions that are mounted for
the Departments Connecticut Repertory Theatre, puppetry
majors are encouraged to mount their own productions, which
are presented at the university and toured to schools, museums
and theatres. Nearly 500 student puppet productions have been
presented since 1964.
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