Jump to content

Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts

Coordinates: 53°23′58.4″N 2°58′20.3″W / 53.399556°N 2.972306°W / 53.399556; -2.972306
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by D.pendleton (talk | contribs) at 18:25, 15 April 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts
LIPA's main entrance, on Mount Street
Map
General information
Town or cityLiverpool
Country England
Coordinates53°23′58.4″N 2°58′20.3″W / 53.399556°N 2.972306°W / 53.399556; -2.972306
Construction started1990
Completed7 June 1996
Cost£20m
Design and construction
Architect(s)David Watkins - Brock Carmichael Architects

The Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts (LIPA) is a university in the English city of Liverpool that offers training in Acting, Community Drama, Dance, Music, Sound Technology, Arts Management, Technical Theatre, and Theatre Design.

It offers nine full-time BA (Hons) degrees, as well as Post Graduate Diplomas and Master of Arts (postgraduate) programmes of study.

LIPA also offers weekend performing arts classes for 4 to 19-year-olds both within Liverpool and further afield via official franchises.

History

How LIPA came to be

LIPA was started by Sir Paul McCartney and Mark Featherstone-Witty.

It was a meeting of two ideas: McCartney had known since 1985 that the building which had housed his old school — the Liverpool Institute High School for Boys — was becoming increasingly derelict after the school's closure, and wished to find a productive use for it; Mark Featherstone-Witty had set up the Brit School in London, and wanted to try his ideas on a bigger scale.

Featherstone-Witty had been fired up by Alan Parker’s 1980 film Fame, about the New York High School for the Performing Arts. The film inspired him to think about what training would have best prepared him and others for a lasting career in the arts and entertainment industry. The film gave him the idea that performing artists needed to train in all three performing arts (acting, dance and music) at the same time. Then he read a book about musicians who had failed to understand they were entering a business, despite the phrase "show business". He also took on board the idea that performers formed the tip of an arts and entertainment employment iceberg. Performers were a fraction of the employment. From these basic concepts, he created a blueprint for a new type of training and then spent three years quizzing the industry and refining his philosophy. By 1985 he had nearly 50 artists, directors, choreographers and entrepreneurs backing him.

Record producer Sir George Martin knew that Featherstone-Witty was looking for somewhere to develop a school, and that McCartney was looking for someone who could save the building, and so introduced them to each other. The struggle to create the facility and the school took seven years and is described in more detail on LIPA's website, and in a book by Featherstone-Witty. It was not easy, but then, as McCartney reminds Featherstone-Witty from time to time, "if it were easy, everyone would be doing it". It took £20m for the facility, the curriculum and the support to maintain and develop all three.

1996 - today

LIPA was opened by Her Magesty The Queen on 7 June 1996, and since then its range of courses has expanded with each new academic year. From the start, the desire and so the challenge was to achieve excellence with access. The final solution was to offer higher education courses to achieve excellence and a range of open and flexible learning courses to achieve access. To this day, both embody the heart of the Institute.

10th Anniversary

LIPA celebrated its tenth Birthday on 30 January 2006 at the Liverpool Philharmonic Hall with a performance designed to celebrate the past, present and future, alongside the launch of a new book: [1]. This event also served to launch 2006 as "Liverpool Performs", one of the theme years leading up to Liverpool's time as joint European Capital of Culture 2008.[2]

Current Courses

Diplomas are validated by LIPA, and are offered mainly as a course which will allow entry into higher education, either in LIPA or elsewhere. These courses are also popular among certain students who want to improve their skills and abilities, but who do not wish to undertake a full three-year course.

  • LIPA Diploma in Performing Arts (Acting)
  • LIPA Diploma in Performing Arts (Dance)
  • LIPA Diploma in Performing Arts (Song)
  • LIPA Diploma in Popular Music and Sound Technology

Degree programmes are all validated by Liverpool John Moores University

  • Diploma in Acting

MA Postgraduate programmes

  • MA in Performing Arts Education
  • MA in Dance Theatre Practice
  • MA in Community Music
  • MA in Contemporary Theatre Practice

Companions

LIPA is not able to issue its own degrees, so rather than issuing Honorary Degrees like other British Universities, it awards "Companionships". LIPA awards companionships to individuals in recognition of their contributions to the world of art and entertainment, particularly within the sectors to which LIPA is linked.

Prospective companions usually attend the Institute at least once before they are invited to become companions in order to give masterclasses to students, or to participate in "Conversation with" type question and answer sessions. Some then revisit the Institute at later dates.

As of July 2008, LIPA's companions are:

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

+ denotes a Companion who is also a LIPA Patron.

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. ^ LIPA - The First Ten Years In Pictures[1],
  2. ^ European Capital of Culture 2008 liverpool08.com - Retrieved 19 October 2007

'History section' adapted from the LIPA 'History Page'