

BA Acting
About this course
Acting is a craft and an art simultaneously, demanding technical mastery of the body, voice and imagination alongside the intellectual and emotional capacity to inhabit other lives with honesty and specificity. Training as an actor means learning to be present, to listen, to transform, and to communicate the inner life of a character in ways that resonate with an audience. These are skills that take years of disciplined practice to develop, and the conservatoire-style approach to training exists precisely because this kind of work cannot be rushed or diluted. At the University of Winchester this three-year full-time programme is delivered with a conservatoire-style intensity of focus, as the course description explains. The teaching staff bring experience from working as actors, directors, stage managers and technicians around the world, which means your training is grounded in the realities of professional theatre rather than in an abstract curriculum. You will develop your voice, movement, characterisation and ensemble skills progressively, encountering a range of theatrical traditions and styles and learning to bring your own artistry to each. The work is demanding and immersive. You will spend considerable time in the studio, in rehearsal and in performance, and you will be expected to engage with the intellectual and critical dimensions of the craft as well as its practical aspects. Understanding why plays are structured as they are, what a director's vision requires of an actor, and how to analyse a text for its performative possibilities are all part of the training. Graduates pursue careers in professional theatre, television, film, radio and digital media, as well as in applied theatre, education, community arts and devised performance. The conservatoire model prepares you for the discipline and self-direction that a professional career in acting requires. Some graduates continue to postgraduate study or further specialist training, and others find that the skills they develop transfer naturally into related creative roles including directing, writing, casting and arts facilitation.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (63% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
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 →


