

BA Acting
About this course
Acting is a discipline that demands total commitment of the body, voice, imagination and intellect. It asks you to inhabit other lives with honesty, to understand why people behave as they do under pressure, and to communicate that understanding to an audience in a shared physical space or through a camera lens. Far from being simply a performance skill, acting trains powers of observation, empathy and expressive precision that are genuinely rare and broadly valued. At the University of Surrey you will follow a three-year full-time programme rooted in professional practice. You will develop your technical range across a variety of performance traditions and learn to work as a collaborative ensemble member as well as an individual artist. Voice and movement sit at the heart of the training, and you will be encouraged to find the physical and vocal life of each character you explore rather than defaulting to habit or surface impression. Surrey has been integrating digital skills and an awareness of artificial intelligence into its programmes, reflecting the evolving landscape of the creative industries and equipping you with the kind of adaptability that employers increasingly seek. Textual analysis, rehearsal process, devising work from scratch and navigating direction are all part of the experience. You will encounter material from a wide range of periods and cultural contexts, building a repertoire of approaches that prepares you for the breadth of work you may encounter as a professional. The programme is designed to develop not just the actor but the thinking, self-aware artist who can make informed creative choices. Graduates typically pursue careers in theatre, television, film, radio and digital media, as performers, theatre-makers or collaborative artists. The skills developed through actor training are also valued in adjacent fields including education, community arts, corporate communications, casting and arts administration. Some graduates go on to postgraduate training, conservatoire courses or specialist programmes in directing, writing or applied theatre, finding that an undergraduate grounding in performance opens many routes into the wider creative and cultural sector.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 25 respondents (87% response rate)
What comes next? 🎓
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai →