2024 Playwrights’ Festival
Fordham Theatre presents the 2024 Playwrights' Festival. Enjoy new plays by Fordham Theatre’s rising junior playwrights at our annual staged reading series.
Fordham Theatre presents the 2024 Playwrights' Festival. Enjoy new plays by Fordham Theatre’s rising junior playwrights at our annual staged reading series.
Join us for a conversation about the new graphic novel Every Creeping Thing. Madison Morris will give a brief presentation on the spiritual inspiration and ideas behind the story, as
The memory of the traditional world of Jewish small towns in Eastern Europe has been slowly disappearing since the beginning of the last century. "The shtetl," a small town, is
Fordham Libraries and Fordham's Center for Jewish Studies present the art of Siona Benjamin. As a Bene Israel Jewish woman from India now living in the United States, Siona Benjamin
Fordham Libraries and Fordham’s Center for Jewish Studies invite you to the opening of the new exhibit in the Henry S. Miller Judaica Research Room, “Yearning to Breath: The Art
Join Thomas Massaro, S.J., Rabbi Katja Vehlow, and Imam Ammar Abdul Ramhan as they discuss the intersection between faith and our political responsibility. Light refreshments will be served.
Welcome to Fordham Theatre's MainStage for 2024–2025: Revel and Revolt: A Season of Joy and Subversion. Kicking off the season is Karen Zacarías’s compelling play, The Sins of Sor Juana,
Come hear guest organist Anthony Rispo perform your favorite Halloween hits at this fun, informal organ concert. A Fordham Halloween tradition! Free admission and free candy!
The Emmy-nominated producer/screenwriter of Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Apple TV’s Extrapolations will talk about what it takes to make great television about important issues—and how her Catholic faith and
In conjunction with the exhibit “Yearning to Breathe: The Art of Siona Benjamin” at Fordham Univerisity’s Walsh Family and Quinn Libraries, we invite you to join us for a screening
This event includes a film screening and a discussion with director David Damian Figueroa. It is supported by the “Faculty Challenge and the Professor Connection” grants, presented in collaboration with
Come see Kentucky, opening on Thursday, November 14 at Pope Auditorium at Fordham's Lincoln Center campus! Leah Nanako Winkler’s wry, refreshing, and playfully theatrical Kentucky is the second production of
Continuing the dialogue sparked by University Press Week (November 11-15, 2024), join us for this event featuring authors from Fordham University Press’s Empire State Editions imprint. This panel will explore
Fordham English Professor Christopher GoGwilt will discuss his recent book, The K-Effect: Romanization, Modernism, and the Timing and Spacing of Print Culture, in a conversation hosted by Professor Stephen Hong Sohn.
The fall installment of the Voices Up! concert series at Fordham's Lincoln Center campus presents the world-renowned Cassatt String Quartet performing music by Black American composer Dorothy Rudd Moore, Russian
Join us for the annual celebration of the season with the combined University choirs, dancers from the Ailey/Fordham B.F.A. in Dance, and the Bronx Arts Ensemble. The festival is general
We invite you to join Professor Magda Teter for a guided tour of the three current exhibitions at the Walsh Library: "Fordham's Babel: An Exploration of World Languages in the
Join us for the annual celebration of the season featuring the combined University choirs and the Bronx Arts Ensemble. The festival is general admission; no ticket required.
With his camera, Chester Higgins “wrestles with issues of memory, place, and identity.” He sees his life as a narrative and his photography as its expression. His art gives visual
Step into the Refuge Gallery to view Mariupol Deisis (2022), a striking series of 11 icons from Atlantova and Klymenko’s Icons on Ammo Boxes project. The “Wartime Beauty” exhibition is
Join us for a screening of the award-winning experimental film I AM NOT OK, followed by a dance and percussion workshop led by Pat Hall. Thursday, January 16, 5 –
Longterm loans of important and rarely seen ancient sculpture from the Brooklyn Museum and the Hispanic Society of America are on view at the Fordham Museum until 2026. The Museum
In 2011, Siona Benjamin, an intercultural artist born in India to a Bene Israel Jewish community, returned to her country of birth on a Fulbright India-US fellowship. During her stay,
Join us for the opening of a new exhibit “Henna, Love, and Light: Jewish Life and Art in Siona Benjamin’s India,” which brings to Fordham several pieces from Siona Benjamin's
Don't miss the treasure that is George Drance, S.J. The esteemed professor has been teaching at Fordham University for over 25 years, and Three Penny Opera is his fourth directorial