Incite/Insight Spring 2018 Volume 2 | Page 22

22 As theatre educators, we understand the inherent flexibility of our form. As the great pedagogs and theoreticians of our craft—from Augusto Boal to Peter Brook to Viola Spolin to Jerzy Grotowski— have embraced, the theatre is a place where the essential resources are of genuine human connection. A theatre education is not about where you go; it’s about what you do there. Further, in America, we have the groundwork of the 1960s’ regional theatre movement instilling the spirit that America’s national theatre need not live in one or two coastal cities, but instead in regions around the country. These points are greenlights for a higher education revolution in American theatre—where our field can encourage an ecosystem of debt-free theatre students in locations around the country. Such a revolution can open up the opportunities for institutional competition; whichever program can provide the most valuable (and least costly) training can become the most desired in the field. Fully- funded graduate programs imply a respecta