What you'll study
Developed and led by renowned Actor Musician Jeremy Harrison, this vocational programme builds on and extends the work developed on the College’s ground-breaking BA (Hons) Actor Musicianship programme, drawing on our strong links to theatre-makers, directors, choreographers, writers, musical directors and performers involved in the development of this innovative area of theatre practice.
Taught through vocational training, practice research and project work, it aims to develop interdisciplinary as a core theatre-making tool, with a focus on innovation and work that responds to audience, place and space.
Watch this video made by Artsmark to learn more about our collaboration with Riverside school to deliver a sensory project for their pupils.
Book an informal chat with Jeremy Harrison, Programme Director
Why choose this course?
Expert training
Rose Bruford College was the first to develop an actor-musician training course and is regarded as the world leader in this field with a long history of graduates working at the forefront of this area of theatre practice
Unique approach
This unique MA offers you the opportunity to explore how to integrate the skills of music-making and acting in performance. Equipping you to create and perform work that contains the visceral power and poetry synonymous with actor-musicianship
Professional experience
The programme’s strong ties to industry partners and industry showcase are further enhanced by an exploration of place, space and community
Performance opportunities
Explore and develop approaches to performance that responds to audience, place and space, creating an outwardly facing theatre-artist, ready to take their place as leading artists and active participants in cultural life
Course breakdown
This course offers an intensive and in-depth exploration of how musical and acting processes can interrelate and feed each other. Creating work that is both music as theatre and theatre as music.
The programme’s strong ties to industry partners are enhanced by an exploration of place, space and community. You’ll explore how this most inclusive of theatre forms can continue to engage audiences of all ages; developing and building on the origins of the actor-musician movement as an alternative and progressive force, with a history of creating surprising and engaging live theatre experiences in all sorts of places and spaces.
Connected to London and Kent and with an international reputation, our Sidcup campus offers an ideal location to explore how actor-musicianship can continue to play a part in both international mainstream theatre and work that seeks to enrich and develop new and hard to reach audiences.
MA module breakdown
- Module One: Approaches to Performance
The course begins with a foundational skills-block, which includes classes in devising, movement, voice, acting, musicality, music making and ensemble practice. Following the skills block, students take part in two mini-projects that apply and develop the skills of the performer/maker: the sensory theatre project and Music Theatre LAB which look at applying actor-musicianship in performance. - Module Two: Actor-Musicianship in Performance
Students then create two fully realised projects. These vary depending on the interests and make-up of the cohort, but include a collaborative project with students from the MA Theatre for Young Audiences course. Previous examples have included Adrift, an open-air musical-adaptation of Homer’s Odyssey created with young refugees under the direction of Tony Graham (former Artistic Director London’s Unicorn Theatre), a reworking of Brecht’s Mother Courage and Jekyll and Hyde directed by Watermill Associate Artists Abigail Pickard Price and Lucy Betts. - Module Three: Languages of Practice
Running alongside the practical, class work and early projects is a module that supports you in developing your own artistic voice. You will explore differing approaches to making, documenting and reflecting on your work, culminating in the creation of small or scratch piece of original material shared with your group, alongside a portfolio that documents how the piece was made. The module seeks to develop the skills of the artist as practice-researcher; modelling that idea on the way artists think about and share their ideas and work to audiences, producers, funders and an academic audience. - Module Four: Independent Project
An opportunity for you to make the work you want to make, supported by mentors from the College and our industry partners. You might wish to work alone or in a collaboration with students from other courses. The pieces are shared in a mini-festival format and accompanied by a portfolio or written submission that offers a glimpse into how the piece was made and the ideas and practices that have informed the journey. - Industry Showcase:
The course ends with an industry showcase which is filmed and made available to our network of industry partners.
MFA module breakdown
Year 1
- Module One: Approaches to Performance
The course begins with a foundational skills-block, which includes classes in devising, movement, voice, acting, musicality, music making and ensemble practice. Following the skills block, students take part in two mini-projects that apply and develop the skills of the performer/maker: the sensory theatre project and Music Theatre LAB which look at applying actor-musicianship in performance. - Module Two: Actor-Musicianship in Performance
Students then create two fully realised projects. These vary depending on the interests and make-up of the cohort, but include a collaborative project with students from the MA Theatre for Young Audiences course. Previous examples have included Adrift, an open-air musical-adaptation of Homer’s Odyssey created with young refugees under the direction of Tony Graham (former Artistic Director London’s Unicorn Theatre), a reworking of Brecht’s Mother Courage and Jekyll and Hyde directed by Watermill Associate Artists Abigail Pickard Price and Lucy Betts. - Module Three: Languages of Practice
Running alongside the practical, class work and early projects is a module that supports you in developing your own artistic voice. You will explore differing approaches to making, documenting and reflecting on your work, culminating in the creation of small or scratch piece of original material shared with your group, alongside a portfolio that documents how the piece was made. The module seeks to develop the skills of the artist as practice-researcher; modelling that idea on the way artists think about and share their ideas and work to audiences, producers, funders and an academic audience. - Module Four: Independent Project
An opportunity for you to make the work you want to make, supported by mentors from the College and our industry partners. You might wish to work alone or in a collaboration with students from other courses. The pieces are shared in a mini-festival format and accompanied by a portfolio or written submission that offers a glimpse into how the piece was made and the ideas and practices that have informed the journey. - Industry Showcase:
The course ends with an industry showcase which is filmed and made available to our network of industry partners.
Year 2
- Module Five: The Widening Field
This module focuses on processes of research and development aimed at realising individualised specialist practice with the view that it ultimately achieves professional validity and viability. The module is deliberately open and flexible as each student’s journey will develop its own pathway.
The module is based around self-directed study, research into the industry and work-based learning through talks/presentations/ seminars throughout the year prior to the attachment. Students are supported in seeking appropriate work-based learning opportunities either with the College’s creative partners, their own contacts, new initiatives with appropriate organisations or ensemble companies or working within appropriate internal placement opportunities.
There will be four taught weekends that offer the opportunity to test and trial the state of your practice with tutor/mentor/peer feedback and input. These weekends will be focused to support the progressive development of each student’s emerging project.
- Module Six: Final Independent Project
The final module facilitates the creation of your original creative work. This may be a performance, a conceptual paper, a multi-dimensional proposition of a project that you have developed, and pitch to professional organisations; it may be the practical articulation of your own practice or a model and vision for your future organisation.
Teaching and assessment methods
MA: You will complete around 350 hours of indicative scheduled learning and teaching activities and 850 hours of independent learning on projects, productions, placements or self-directed study. Assessment will be through: Coursework, performances, presentations, assessed tutorials and portfolios.
MFA: In year 1 you will complete around 350 hours of indicative scheduled learning and teaching activities and 850 hours of independent learning on projects, productions, placements or self-directed study. Assessment will be through: Coursework, performances, presentations, assessed tutorials and portfolios.
In your second year you will complete around 350 hours of indicative scheduled learning and teaching activities and 850 hours of independent learning on projects, productions, placements or self-directed study. Assessment will be through: Coursework, performances, presentations, assessed tutorials and portfolios.
Get a flavour
Your Future Career
The MA/MFA in Actor Musicianship creates a multi-skilled performer, maker and facilitator of work. In theatre, community and educational settings our graduates are prepared to lead, create and perform interdisciplinary work that celebrates the relationship between theatre and music.
Please note: Course content is regularly reviewed to make it relevant and current. Course modules are, therefore, subject to change.
Alumni Success
Arin Smethurst
Arin graduated in 2020 and went straight into Casualty where they play Sah, the first transgender character in a continuing role for the BBC's long-running primetime drama.
Erin Rydal
Erin graduated in 2021 and and went straight into touring outdoor spaces with Quantum Theatre, before joining Frozen Light for their national tour of 2065, managing to fit in a Christmas show along the way.
Tom Benjamin
Tom graduated in 2022 and went straight on tour with Frozen Light before joining Playground, an Arts Council England national portfolio organisation, as one of their regular artists.
Jake Reynolds
Jake graduated in 2019 and went on to play Doody, the guitar-playing character in the West End production of Grease.
Angus Tikka
Angus graduated in 2022 and makes his West End debut in 2023 in the in-concert version of Once at the London Palladium, alongside Carrie Hope Fletcher and Jamie Muscato.
How to join
Applications are now open for October 2025.
Institution code: Not required for this course.
Course code: Not required for this course.
Entry requirements
Applicants for Masters programmes will be expected to have a good undergraduate degree in a related subject area. The College also encourages applications from those without formal qualifications who may be accepted based on professional experience.
Applications remain open until the course is full. However, we understand the unique circumstances of international applicants and accept their late applications to our postgraduate programmes until 31 July.
Please get in touch with us at [email protected] for information on entry criteria if you are applying from outside the UK. You can also visit our international students page.
Application Guidance
When you submit your online application you will be asked to submit:
- A detailed personal statement (500 word or a 2-minute video recording). This should include why you want to study Actor Musicianship, what you would bring to the course and what your current interests and passions are.
With your application you will be asked to submit self-tapes:
- Footage of a piece of music played on your chosen instrument(s)
- Footage of you performing a song, accompanied by either a backing track or a musical instrument
Workshop
If successful, you will be invited to the second round which will be an in-person workshop based on our Sidcup campus.
Workshops and Interviews, the process has two stages:
Stage 1: Workshop
A three-hour workshop consisting of practical work and discussion that takes place at Rose Bruford College’s Sidcup campus.
Stage 2: Interview
The interview is an opportunity for you to meet the Programme Director and outline why you wish to study on the course and how you think it will inform your personal and professional development. It is also an opportunity for you to ask us questions about the course student life at Rose Bruford.
What shall I prepare?
- Candidates should bring their chosen instrument with them to the first workshop stage. The session will include a practical work session, which will focus on the exploration of how to integrate live music making in performance. There is no need to prepare an audition piece on the instrument at this stage.
- In addition, candidates should prepare a short monologue or poem. The text can be from any play, era or poet. Something that you feel reflects your interests and strengths as a performer and contains a sense of musicality.
- For the stage 2 interview you do not need to prepare anything. This is an opportunity for us to learn more about you and for you to ask any questions you might have.
Course Summary
Duration
MA 13 months MFA 24 Months
Mode of study
Full time
Start date
October 2025
Course Type
Postgraduate Course
Course Fees (2025 Entry)
MA UK & Republic of Ireland Students (180 credits)
£18100
MA International Students (180 credits)
£24150
MFA UK & Republic of Ireland Students (240 credits)
£32350
MFA International Students (240 credits)
£32350