The banner for the 2023 NEH Institute for Higher Education Faculty, "The Performance of Roman Comedy." A beige background. At top, in black Art Deco capital lettering, reads: The Performance of Roman Comedy. Below that, in white sentence-case Art Deco lettering, reads: Boston College & Wake Forest University • Chestnut Hill, MA • July 9–August 4, 2023. Below that, four Art Deco figures in bright colors representing ancient Roman actors, left to right: a red-skinned bald person with a beard and asymmetrical eyebrow, wearing a yellow toga, on a sky-blue background; a light-skinned person with brown hair and a slate palla playing the double pipes on a green background; a red-skinned bald beardless person with a big smile and a blue toga with arms stretched overhead, on a mustard background; and a light-skinned figure wearing red palla and head covering with Green skirt with a big frown, on a red background. In the bottom left, in tiny letters: art by Kevin Quigley.

Directors

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad

Profile picture of T. H. M. Gellar-Goad: a white man with short brown hair, white glasses, ear piercings, and a goofy smile. He's wearing a pink button-up shirt and a gray sport coat.

T. H. M. Gellar-Goad is Associate Professor of Classics at Wake Forest University. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has published numerous articles on Roman comedy, satire, elegy, and pedagogy, among other topics, and is the author of four books: Laughing Atoms, Laughing Matter: Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura and Satire (University of Michigan Press, 2020), Plautus: Curculio for the Bloomsbury Ancient Comedy Companions series (2021), A Commentary on Plautus’ Curculio (forthcoming, Michigan), and Masks (forthcoming, Tangent/Punctum Books). He is currently writing a book on religion in the comedies of Menander, Plautus, and Terence.

Christopher B. Polt

Profile picture of Christopher B. Polt: a bald white man gently smiling at the camera and wearing a blue checked button-up. The background is of a rocky desert landscape.

Christopher B. Polt is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Boston College. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has published widely on Latin poetry, including articles on stage properties and performance in Roman comedy, animal fable, and ancient translation. His first book, Catullus and Roman Comedy: Theatricality and Personal Drama in the Late Republic (Cambridge University Press 2021), examines the reception of Roman comedy in the 1st century BCE. He is currently writing a book on C. S. Lewis’ engagement with and use of the Greek and Roman Classics.


Composer

Vanessa Stovall

Profile picture of Vanessa Stovall: a woman with light-to-medium-brown skin tone and black hair under a red hair covering. She is wearing large-frame gold-frame glasses and figural dangly earrings. Her eyes are looking up and to her left. She is holding by her face in her right hand a coffee mug decorated with a close-up photo of her own face, wearing glasses and with eyes looking up and to the left.


Vanessa Stovall is an independent artist and interdisciplinary scholar of the classics. She received her bachelors in Classics from The Evergreen State College and her masters from Columbia University, studying ancient mythology in its musical performance contexts. She is currently pursuing a second masters in teaching from the University of Vermont, focusing on the reconstruction of ancient music with an emphasis on the role of hair and ornamental headgear in choral performances. She has composed two scores for ancient tragedies, for the 2021 Barnard-Columbia Ancient Drama Group production of Euripides’ Iphigenia in Aulis, directed by Elizabeth MacNamara, and the 2022 Whitman College production of Euripides’ Medea, directed by Anna Conser, and she is currently in the middle of finishing the music for two comedy productions for the spring of 2023: the BCADG production of Aristophanes’ Thesmophoriazusae, directed by Izzy Levy, and the University of Vermont production of Aristophanes’ Frogs, directed by Jeannette Chien. Her passions are centered on using ancient musical performance to encourage interest in classical drama outside of more-traditional philological contexts.

Musician

Dane Bennett

Profile picture of Dane Bennett: a white man with clean-shaven head and a brown beard. He is smiling and wearing a light blue button-up shirt, a darker blue sport coat, and a blue-and-white pocket square. He is holding an oboe.


Dane Bennett is a second-year master’s student at the New England Conservatory of Music, earning the Presidential Distinction Award, and studying under Mark McEwen. He is an active member of the NEC Philharmonia and the NEC Wind Ensemble. Prior to attending NEC, Dane earned his B.M. in oboe performance at the University of Kentucky in 2022, where he studied under Dr. ToniMarie Marchioni and performed with the University of Kentucky Symphony Orchestra, the University of Kentucky Wind Symphony, and three undergraduate wind quintets. Dane has participated in masterclasses with Andreas Wittmann, Jaren Atherholt, Jared Hauser, Mary Lindsey Bailey, Nicholas Stovall, Elaine Douvas, Theresa Delaplain, and Titus Underwood. Over the past five years, Dane has attended the MasterWorks Summer Festival, Hidden Valley Oboe Seminar, and the Decoda Skidmore Chamber Music Institute. In 2018, Dane was a semifinalist in the Donald Runnicles Musical Arts Scholarship Competition at the Grand Teton Music Festival and graduated as a two-time John Philip Sousa Award winner from Worland, Wyoming.

Outreach Coordinator

Maya Chakravorty

Profile picture of Maya Chakravorty: a woman with medium-brown skin tone and black hair. She is smiling and wearing small metal glasses. Her chin is resting on her hand and she has a gray-and-white striped button up covered by a yellow sweater.


Maya Chakravorty is a PhD candidate in the Classical Studies Department at Boston University. She graduated from the University of Toronto in 2014 with High Distinction, having completed a B.A. (Hons.) in Classics and Classical Civilizations. Her general research interests include archaic and imperial Latin literature, Latin prose, Roman historiography, cultural history, and ancient education. She is currently working on her dissertation, which examines the transmission of virtues and the conceptualization of Republican Roman heroes in the Imperial-era authors Silius Italicus, Juvenal, Plutarch, and Quintilian.


Visiting experts

Peter Barrios-Lech

Profile picture of Peter Barrios-Lech: a white man with balding black hair, black five-o'clock shadow, and glasses. He is wearing a blue-and-tan striped polo shirt unbuttoned.

Peter Barrios-Lech is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Massachusetts Boston. He earned his Ph.D. from Brown University. His current research interests are historical pragmatics, sociolinguistics, Latin and Greek syntax, and computational stylistics. He has published articles on puns, bilingualism, and social aspects of language in Roman comedy and is the author of Linguistic Interaction in Roman Comedy (Cambridge University Press, 2016).

Amy R. Cohen

Profile picture of Amy Cohen: a white woman with cheek-length graying brown hair and glasses, smiling, wearing a black v-neck blouse.

Amy R. Cohen is Professor of Classics and Catherine Ehrman Thoresen ’23 and William E. Thoresen Professor of Speech and Theatre at Randolph College. She earned her Ph.D. from Stanford University. Her doctoral work focused on the interpretive implications of doubling and the three-actor convention in Greek tragedy. She has directed thirteen productions of ancient drama using original practices, twelve in the Whiteside Greek Theatre at Randolph College and one in Greece. From 2010–2017, she edited Didaskalia: The Journal for Ancient Performance.

Sharon L. James

Profile picture of Sharon L. James: a white woman with shoulder-length curly brown hair and glasses, holding a full-face mask slightly in front of and below her face. The mask is pale in color, with thick brown hair and a prominent nose.

Sharon L. James earned her Ph.D. from UC Berkeley. She is Professor of Classics at UNC Chapel Hill and an affiliated member of Comparative Literature and Women’s and Gender Studies. She has published widely on sex, gender, rape, teaching rape in ancient literature, Roman love elegy, and Roman Comedy. Her first book, Learned Girls and Male Persuasion (University of California Press 2003), studies Roman elegy from the perspective of the learned girl who is the object of sexual persuasion by male poets. She co-edited A Companion to Women in Antiquity (Blackwell, 2012), Women in Republican Roman Drama (University of Wisconsin Press, 2015), and Women in the Classical World (Routledge, 2017).

Seth Jeppesen

Profile picture of Seth Jeppesen: a white man with brown hair, glasses, salt-and-pepper full beard. He is smiling and leaning against a brick wall. He has a white button-up shirt and tan suspenders.

Seth Jeppesen is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Brigham Young University. His research focuses on religious parody in Roman comedy, the modern reception and performance of ancient drama, and cultural diversity in the ancient Mediterranean, on which he has published several articles. He has directed and/or performed in seven productions of Greek tragedy and Roman comedy. He is currently finalizing a translation of Plautus’ Curculio for the University of Wisconsin Press’ The Complete New Comedies and a book on Plautus’ Trinummus for the Bloomsbury Ancient Comedy Companions series.

V. Sophie Klein

Profile picture of V. Sophie Klein: a white woman with shoulder-length straight brown hair with blonde highlights. She is smiling and wearing glasses.

V. Sophie Klein earned her Ph.D. from Boston University. She has written several articles on ancient and modern performance, including a book on Plautus’ Menaechmi for Bloomsbury Ancient Comedy Companions. She has also written plays inspired by Classical literature and directed performances of ancient drama at Boston University and Boston College.

Matthew Leigh

Profile picture of Matthew Leigh: a white man with silver-and-black hair combed back. He is wearing glasses, a teal sportcoat, a checkered blue button-up, and a navy tie.

Matthew Leigh is Professor of Classical Languages and Literature at Oxford University and Fellow and Tutor in Classics at St Anne’s College, Oxford. He earned his D.Phil. from Oxford University and is the author of Comedy and the Rise of Rome (Cambridge University Press, 2004), Lucan: Spectacle and Engagement (Oxford University Press, 1997), From Polypragmon to Curiosus: Ancient Concepts of Curious and Meddlesome Behaviour (Oxford University Press, 2013), and The Masons and the Mysteries in 18th Century Drama (DeGruyter, 2019). He has produced a translation of Plautus’ Pseudolus, which he uses in performance-based teaching, and is working on a larger project using antebellum American memoirs by enslaved authors as a way to think about the ideological work done by Roman comedy.

C. W. Marshall

Profile picture of C. W. Marshall: a bald white man with short white beard. He is wearing a floral button-up with the top two buttons undone. The background is pink flowers and green trees.

C. W. Marshall is Professor of Greek at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. His research focuses on the stagecraft and performance of ancient theater. His first book, The Stagecraft and Performance of Roman Comedy (Cambridge University Press, 2006), provided the first overview of Roman stagecraft in over fifty years. Subsequent books on Greek drama have examined Euripides’ Helen, Aeschylus’ Libation Bearers, and Aristophanes’ Frogs. He is currently working on a study of comic routines in Roman comedy. In 2021, he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.

Rachel Mazzara

Profile picture of Rachel Mazzara: a white woman with cheek-length wavy black hair and clear-framed glasses, wearing a red turtleneck.

Rachel Mazzara is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Classics at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University, specializing in the form and genre of Roman comedy. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Toronto. She has published on self-referentiality and the interactive relationship that Plautus’ plays cultivate between the performance and its audience, including how metageneric effects invite viewers to collaborate imaginatively in playwrighting and dramatic production.

Deepti Menon

Profile picture of Deepti Menon: a woman with medium-brown skin tone and long straight black hair. She is smiling and wearing a gray-and-white striped sweater. The background is of a California beach, with waves gently crashing against rocks.

Deepti Menon is a professional translator and Web Editor for the British Comparative Literature Association. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Her research focuses on multilingualism, intertextuality, ancient staging, and metatheater. She is working on an article on cultural hybridity in Plautus’ Poenulus based on her dissertation.

Erin K. Moodie

Profile picture of Erin K. Moodie: a white woman with shoulder-length straight dark brown hair tucked behind her ears. She is wearing a navy top. The background, blurred out, is of trees with mostly green leaves, some hints of early fall's yellow, red, and orange.

Erin K. Moodie is Assistant Professor of Classics at Purdue University. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania. Her research interests include Greek and Roman comedy, Greek and Roman social history, Roman satire, and Lucian. She is the author of Plautus’ Poenulus: A Student Commentary (University of Michigan Press, 2015) as well as several articles on Greek and Roman comedy and Roman satire, and her monograph Comic Subversion: Metatheater in Athens, Rome, and Beyond is currently under review.

Timothy J. Moore

Profile picture of Timothy J. Moore: a white mean with glasses and a short white beard. He is wearing a bright red hat with a feather tucked into a black band around its base (above the brim), and a red tunic. He's on Zoom, and the virtual background is some ancient Greek ruins.

Timothy J. Moore is John and Penelope Biggs Distinguished Professor of Classics at Washington University in St. Louis. He received his Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina and has taught at Harvard, Texas A&M University, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Colorado, and the Ruhr Universität in Bochum, Germany. His publications include The Theater of Plautus; Music in Roman Comedy; Roman Theatre; two edited volumes on Greek and Roman comedy; an online database of the meters of Roman Comedy; and articles on Greek and Roman music, theater, and literature, the teaching of Greek and Latin, American musical theater, and Japanese comedy. Current projects include a long-range study of musical theater in ancient Greece and Rome. He has received fellowships and grants from the American Academy in Rome, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, the Mellon Foundation, the Loeb Classical Library Foundation, the Center for the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis, and the Center for Hellenic Studies.

Dan-el Padilla Peralta

Profile picture of Dan-el Padilla Peralta: a balding man with dark brown skin, black hair, salt-and-pepper beard, and glasses. He is wearing a light blue striped shirt. The background is blurry greenery.

Dan-el Padilla Peralta is Associate Professor of Classics at Princeton University, where he is affiliated with the Programs in Latino Studies and Latin American Studies and the University Center for Human Values. He earned his Ph.D. from Stanford University and is the author of Undocumented: A Dominican Boy’s Odyssey from a Homeless Shelter to the Ivy League (Penguin, 2015) and Divine Institutions: Religions and Community in the Middle Roman Republic (Princeton University Press, 2020), and he has co-edited Rome, Empire of Plunder: The Dynamics of Cultural Appropriation (Cambridge University Press, 2017). Current projects include a co-authored study of 338 BCE and the origins of Roman imperialism (under contract with Harvard University Press), A People’s History of Rome (under contract with Princeton University Press), a co-edited volume on new approaches to the Middle Roman Republic, and a co-authored manifesto on race and racism in the disciplinary identity of Classics.

Amy Richlin

Profile picture of Amy Richlin: a white woman with red hair and glasses. She is smiling and holding up a book in modern Greek, by the author Τζέημσ Τζὸλ and with the title Οι Αναρχικοι

Amy Richlin is Distinguished Professor of Classics at UCLA. She earned her Ph.D. at Yale University. Her books include The Garden of Priapus: Sexuality and Aggression in Roman Humor (Yale University Press, 1983), Arguments with Silence: Writing the History of Roman Women (University of Michigan Press, 2014), and Slave Theater in the Roman Republic: Plautus and Popular Comedy (Cambridge University Press, 2017). She has published translations of Plautus in Rome and the Mysterious Orient (University of California Press, 2005) and her translation of Plautus’ Rudens was performed at the Getty Villa (2007). She served as dramaturg for Getty productions of Plautus’ Haunted House (2016) and Aristophanes’ Lysistrata (2021).

Niall W. Slater

Profile picture of Niall W. Slater: a black-and-white line drawing of a man with ear-length sweeping hair, blocky glasses, a full beard, a stripy button-up shirt, a sport coat, and a bowtie.

Niall W. Slater is the Dobbs Professor of Latin & Greek in the Department of Classics at Emory University. After receiving his Ph.D. from Princeton, he taught at Concordia College (Moorhead, Minnesota) and the University of Southern California before arriving at Emory, where he received the Emory Williams Award for Distinguished Teaching at Emory in 1999. His books include Euripides: Alcestis (Bloomsbury, 2013); Spectator Politics: Metatheatre and Performance in Aristophanes (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002); Reading Petronius (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990); and Plautus in Performance: The Theatre of the Mind (Princeton University Press, 1985). He is a past president of the Classical Association of the Middle West and South as well as past president of the national Phi Beta Kappa Society.

Serena S. Witzke

Profile picture of Serena S. Witzke: a white woman with close-cropped brown hair, blue eyes, and a nose ring. She is wearing a white floral button-up and a gray cardigan over it.

Serena S. Witzke is Visiting Assistant Professor of Classical Studies at Wesleyan University. She earned her Ph.D. at UNC-Chapel Hill. She has published numerous articles on ancient comedy, gender and sexuality, and reception studies. She also serves as editor of Diotíma, an online resource for information on women, gender, sex, sexualities, race, ethnicity, class, status, masculinity, enslavement, and disability in the ancient Mediterranean world.


Digital team

Heather Barnes

Profile picture of Heather Barnes: a white woman with cheek-length wavy brown hair with bits of gray, half-smiling and wearing red-and-black-framed glasses. She is wearing a maroon blouse with black grid and a navy blazer.

Heather Barnes is the Digital Curation Librarian at ZSR Library. Her core focus is providing research data curation services and addressing data lifecycle questions for faculty digital scholarship projects.

Kyle Denlinger

Profile picture of Kyle Denlinger: a white man with brown hair and a beard. He is smiling and wearing a checkered shirt of various shades of blue.

Kyle Denlinger is the Digital Pedagogy & Open Education Librarian at Wake Forest University’s Z. Smith Reynolds Library. In this role, he works with faculty to design and manage digital class projects, with a specific focus on digital publishing and the creation of open educational resources.

Carrie Johnston

Profile picture of Carrie Johnston: a white woman with long straight brown hair, curled at the bottom, and glasses. She is smiling and wearing a gray blazer over a red v-neck.

Carrie Johnston is the Digital Humanities Research Designer at Wake Forest University’s ZSR Library. In this role, she supports the incorporation of digital tools and methods into innovative humanities scholarship.

Molly Keener

Profile picture of Molly Keener: a white woman with short-cropped brown hair and glasses. She is smiling at the camera. She is wearing a black shirt, black jacket, and big necklace with large bright blue and orange beads and a dangly silver centerpiece.

Molly Keener is the Director of Digital Initiatives & Scholarly Communication at the Z. Smith Reynolds Library, Wake Forest University. She provides guidance on copyright, author rights, open access, and scholarly publishing, and heads the department that collaborates with faculty on using digital tools and methods in their scholarship and instruction.


The Performance of Roman Comedy has been made possible by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy demands wisdom.

The official logo of the NEH. On the right, in all caps, "National Endowment for the Humanities." On the left, the seal of the NEH: A blue circle with "National Endowment" in all caps along the upper half, a star at the left and right midpoints of the circle, and "for the Humanities" in all caps along the lower half. Within the circle, on a white background, is the coat of arms of the United States of America: a bald eagle looking to its right with wings and legs spread. Above its head, a circular white cloud surrounding a hexagonal blue sky with thirteen white stars in it. In its beak, a gold ribbon that flows out to the right and left sides of its head, reading, in all caps, E Pluribus Unum. On its breast, a shield with a horizontal blue rectangle at top and 13 vertical stripes below, 7 white, 6 red. In its right talons, an olive branch. In its left talons, a bunch of 13 arrows.

Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.