Senior Prom
Barbara Walters Campus Center BWCC Rooms B and C
Showing results 1 through 25 out of 71.
Barbara Walters Campus Center BWCC Room C
/ Monday
Barbara Walters Campus Center BWCC Room C
/ Tuesday
Heimbold Visual Arts Center Donnelley Theatre
/ Tuesday
Join Joseph Forte, Faculty Emeritus, on campus, for an exclusive preview of his forthcoming book on the architectural history of Sarah Lawrence. Drawing from his initial research, Joe will uncover little-known stories hidden in the walls, pathways, and green spaces of our campus as well as little known predecessors, fabricated and real genealogies, and masterpieces hiding in plain sight. Joe brings these histories to light with curiosity, care, and deep affection for our wonderful campus. Rediscover the Sarah Lawrence you thought you knew--and leave with a whole new appreciation for the grounds that shape your Sarah Lawrence experience.
Funding for this program is provided by the Joseph C. Forte Faculty Research and Development Fund in Art History.
Marshall Field MFLD Room 1
/ Tuesday
Heimbold Visual Arts Center HEIM 202 Donnelley Film Theatre
/ Wednesday
Akhil Sharma is the author of Family Life, a New York Times Best Book of the Year and the winner of the International DUBLIN Literary Award and the Folio Prize. Sharma’s writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Best American Short Stories, and the O. Henry Award anthology. A native of Delhi, he lives in New York City and teaches English at Rutgers University–Newark.
This event is colloquium credit eligible. Register here for the Zoom livestream.
Barbara Walters Campus Center BWCC Room B
/ Wednesday
We’re pleased to welcome Arietta Slade ’73, Ph.D. as the guest speaker for the 2026 Longfellow Lecture at Sarah Lawrence College. Dr. Slade is a clinical psychologist, Professor Adjunct of Child Psychology at the Yale Child Study Center, Professor Emerita at the City College of New York, and Co-Founder of Minding the Baby, an interdisciplinary home-visiting program for high-risk mothers and infants. An internationally recognized scholar of attachment and the parent-child relationship, she will discuss how parents, caregivers, clinicians, and teachers can “hold the child in mind” to foster understanding, connection, and healthy development.
Sarah Lawrence College offers 1.5 CTLE hours for this in-person program on the Bronxville campus. Attendance is required to receive CTLE hours.
Heimbold Visual Arts Center HEIM 202 Donnelley Film Theatre
/ Wednesday
Please join us for a reading and Q&A with Akhil Sharma, followed by book sales and signing.
Akhil Sharma is the author of Family Life, a New York Times Best Book of the Year and the winner of the International DUBLIN Literary Award and the Folio Prize. Sharma’s writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The Best American Short Stories, and the O. Henry Award anthology. A native of Delhi, he lives in New York City and teaches English at Rutgers University–Newark.
This event is colloquium credit eligible.
Performing Arts Center PAC Open Space Theatre
/ Wednesday
5, 6, 7, 8! follows Annie, a middle schooler who discovers musical theatre through her mom’s choreography. Across four years in small-town Maine, 2004-2008, she learns through what it means to care for oneself and others. A tender portrait of girlhood, performance, and generational trauma. This piece is presented as part of the First Look Reading Series.
Marshall Field MFLD Room 1
/ Friday
Marshall Field MFLD Room 1
/ Saturday
Performing Arts Center PAC Reisinger Auditorium
/ Tuesday
Heimbold Visual Arts Center HEIM 202 Donnelley Film Theatre
/ Tuesday
Luis Jaramillo is the author of The Witches of El Paso. He is also the author of the award-winning short story collection The Doctor’s Wife. His writing has appeared in Literary Hub, BOMB Magazine, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and other publications. His honors include fellowships from Aspen Words, the Sewanee Writers Conference, and the New York Institute for the Humanities. He is an associate professor of creative writing at The New School. He received an undergraduate degree from Stanford University and an MFA in creative writing from The New School.
This event is colloquium credit eligible. Register here for the Zoom livestream.
Campbell Sports Center CSC Full Gym
/ Tuesday
Performing Arts Center PAC Open Space Theatre
/ Wednesday
This play is about dead people talking in a hospital room. As they try to pass the indefinite time through playing card games, the current coma patient's finance comes to visit who also is someone from Dead Person's One romantic past enters the room. An explosion of repressed feelings, religious trauma, and seeing but no touching. This piece is presented as part of the First Look Reading Series.
Marshall Field MFLD Room 1
/ Wednesday
Marshall Field MFLD Room 1
/ Friday
Marshall Field MFLD Room 1
/ Saturday
Barbara Walters Campus Center BWCC Room B
/ Thursday
Marci Shore, Chair in European Intellectual History at the Munk School at the University of Toronto, in conversation with Sarah Lawrence history faculty Philipp Nielsen.
A question many ask with great urgency these days is, “What can we learn from history?” Marci Shore, an intellectual historian focusing on Central and Eastern Europe, has engaged with this question in her academic career and increasingly as a public intellectual. In her dialogue and cooperation with Eastern and Central European intellectuals, Shore herself has become entangled in the region’s politics, most notably in her defense of Ukrainian independence but also of democracy more widely. This engagement is also no longer limited to Europe. Shore comments frequently on the state of politics in the United States. In conversation with Sarah Lawrence History faculty member Philipp Nielsen, Shore will explore what it means to be an engaged historian, what we can learn from history, and how it matters to ourselves, to our societies, and to international relations.
Registration information to come.
Performing Arts Center PAC Reisinger Auditorium
/ Sunday
Collaborative concert: Westchester Chamber Soloists featuring SLC Students & Faculty:
Rafael Hendrick-Baker: Music for Shenandoah
Kate Cornyn: Tchaikovsky’s ‘Marche Slave’
Renae Sullivan: Donizetti’s ‘La Fille du Regiment’ / Strauss ‘Morgen’
Lazar Nelkovski: original work (tba)
Dena Brennan: Mark Camphouse’s ‘from Three London Miniatures’
PROKOFIEV: Peter and the Wolf
Prof. Martin Goldray, conductor
Narrator: Ayala Dinour
Performing Arts Center PAC Reisinger Auditorium
/ Sunday
Marshall Field MFLD Room 1
/ Monday
Please join us on Monday, April 13th at 6:30 for an evening of song with the voice studio of Sarah Wolfson with Michael Maronich on piano.
Barbara Walters Campus Center BWCC Rooms A, B, C and Living Room
/ Tuesday