Meghan Brodie, ’00

Associate Professor of Theater

Dr. Meghan Brodie was Ursinus’s first Theater major, first student to study abroad at Oxford, and Phi Beta Kappa valedictorian of the class of 2000 with a degree in English and Theater. She earned her Master’s and Ph.D. degrees from Cornell University. Meghan teaches dramatic literature, theater history, and dramaturgy and also works as a director, dramaturg, and playwright. She has previously taught at Cornell, Colgate, and the University of Southern Maine. Meghan’s scholarly work addresses intersections of theater and feminist, gender, and sexuality studies. She directed the English-language world premiere of In the Underworld, a darkly comic operetta written by Germaine Tillion while in the Ravensbrück  concentration camp during WWII. Other directing credits include work by dramatists such as Diana Son, Ellen McLaughlin, Emma Donoghue, Sarah Ruhl, Angela Carter, Holly Hughes, Charlotte Jones, and Paula Vogel. Meghan has previously written about queer casting and feminist directing, co-edited two anthologies of performance pieces written by LGBTQ youth and allies, and partnered with the Remember the Women Institute on several projects about women, theater, and the Holocaust.  

Department

Theater & Dance

Degrees

  • B.A., Ursinus College
  • M.A., Ph.D., Cornell University

Teaching

Theater Studies

Theater 400: Senior Seminar: The Living Newspaper

Theater/Gender, Women’s, & Sexuality Studies 315: Butches, Bitches, and Buggers: Modern Queer Drama

Theater 301W: History of World Theater and Drama II

Theater 300W: History of World Theater and Drama I

Theater/Gender, Women’s, & Sexuality Studies 215: Dramatic Dames: Plays By & About Women

Theater 205: Text Detectives

Theater 100: Introduction to Theater

CIE 100: Common Intellectual Experience I

Theater Practice

Theater 275: Performance & Production

Theater 001-008: Performance Practicum

Independent Studies & Summer Research Fellowships

Theater 491 & 492W: Research/Independent Work (Honors & Distinguished Honors)

Interdisciplinary Studies 491: Lesbianism in American Culture, 1900-1950

Theater 362: Directed Studies/Research in Theatre: Playwriting

Summer Fellowship: Pride and Prejudice: A Modern, Queer Retelling for the Stage

Summer Fellowship: Writing Resistance: Examining the Evolution of Feminist Ideology and Theory in Theatre Since the Second Wave

Summer Fellowship: The Art of the Story: An Introduction to Playwriting and Dramatic Adaptation

Summer Fellowship: Mystery & Magic: Playwriting in Theory and Practice

Summer Fellowship: Female Stage Comedy: History & Practice

Summer Fellowship: Theatre for Social Justice

Summer Fellowship: Theatre for Social Justice & Sexual Violence Prevention

Summer Fellowship: Bitter Bitches: Feminism, Theatre, & Dark Comedy

Summer Fellowship: Tools for Change: Theatre for Social Justice in Communities of Marginalized Youth

Summer Fellowship: (Fun)ction: Developing Games from a Narrative Standpoint

Website

http://meghanbrodie.com

Research Interests

Feminist Theater

Queer Theater

Dramatic Adaptation

Holocaust Drama

Theater for Social Justice

Related News

Calista Baechtold '26 and Andrew Reyes '28 rehearse a scene Afternoon at the Seaside.
Ursinus College Theater Presents Agatha Christie Double Bill

Afternoon at the Seaside and The Patient will be staged Oct. 31, Nov. 1, and Nov. 2 at 7:30 p.m., and Nov. 3 at 2 p.m.

Sophia Bush '26 (left) as Peter Pan; Annie Zulick '25 (right) as Captain Darling.
Neverland Reimagined

What if Peter Pan isn’t the hero and Captain Hook isn’t the villain? That’s the premise behind Captain Darling, a dark, feminist adaptation of J.M. Barrie’s classic story of Peter Pan written by Ursinus College graduate Kate Isabel Foley ’23.  It made its world premiere on the Lenfest Theater stage in April and was the first-ever student-authored play directed by Associate Professor and Chair of Theater Meghan Brodie ’00.

Sophia Bush '26 (left) as Peter Pan; Annie Zulick '25 (right) as Captain Darling.
A New Spin on Neverland

CaptainDarling by Kate Isabel Foley ’23 is a dark, feminist adaptation of J.M. Barrie’s classic Peter Pan. It made its world premiere April 2024 in the Kaleidoscope Performing Arts Center.