Oklahoma City UniversityWhere You're a Name Not a Number  
Future StudentsCurrent StudentsAcademicsFaculty/StaffAdministrationVisitors/ParentsAlumniAthleticsDiversityHomeContact
History of the Ann Lacy School of American Dance and Arts Management
1981

Oklahoma City University, under the leadership of Professor Jo Rowan, founded an American musical theatre dance program to educate and train performers for careers in the American entertainment industry. The program was also created to recognize the legitimacy of the American dance art forms of tap, jazz, and theater dance.

At that time, university and college dance programs uniformly focused on ballet and modern dance. Few, if any, dance programs required majors to study tap and jazz; none offered specialization in tap and jazz leading to a bachelor's degree. Professor Rowan designed a degree which, with Dean John Bedford, has been refined over the years to give thorough preparation to students wanting dance performance careers in the American entertainment industry.

1984

Dean Bedford developed an arts management program at Oklahoma City University for both graduate and undergraduate students. The general wisdom of the time in higher education was that arts management should be a field of study reserved for graduate students with the maturity and seriousness that undergraduates interested in the arts could not have. In 1985, the trustees approved a new Bachelor of Science in Dance Management degree which now has over 70 majors.

The Master of Business Administration in Arts Management, established in 1984, provided graduate level education and training in both business and arts management. An undergraduate degree in business is not required since a student can accelerate preparation for graduate business studies by taking preparatory courses. Students of the Master of Business Administration in Arts Management program are required to intern with a professional arts organizations. Former students have worked as interns for Lyric Theatre of Oklahoma, Assembly of Community Arts Councils of Oklahoma, Pollard Theatre, Allied Arts, Ballet Oklahoma, Oklahoma City Philharmonic and BLAC, Inc.

1996

A Bachelor of Science in Entertainment Business degree was created. Originally for students interested in careers in music business, the degree has been modified to a general arts management degree allowing students to tailor a portion of the curriculum to support their career objectives. Typical student career interests include event coordination, theater management, orchestra management, sports management, wedding planning, venue management, music management, corporate event planning, meeting planning, theme park management, and stage management.

1999

Professor Rachel Jacquemain joined the arts management faculty and was appointed director of the Entertainment Business program.

2003

Dance Magazine’s Managing Editor, K.C. Patrick, declared the Oklahoma City University dance program as the “best preparatory dance program in the nation.”

2004

The School of American Dance and Arts Management is renamed The Ann Lacy School of American Dance and Arts Management honoring Oklahoma City University trustee and benefactor Ann Lacy.

2005

A Bachelor of Science in American Dance Pedagogy was created for students wanting careers as extraordinarily well-prepared dance teachers.  With funding from the Priddy Foundation, internationally known master teacher Mary Price Boday joined the faculty as coordinator of the new program.

2006

Professor Mary Price Boday began a series of dance workshops for dance teachers, dance teacher assistants, and high school students.  A Master of Fine Arts in Dance degree was created to prepare graduate students for careers in performance, choreography, or teaching in higher education where extensive knowledge of tap, jazz, theater dance, and ballet for musical theater is valued.

2007

A $3 million grant from the Inasmuch Foundation was combined with a $3.5 million contribution from Ann Lacy and a $750,000 contribution from the Mabee Foundation to make new facilities possible. Renovation and construction of the Edith Kinney Gaylord Center, the new home of the Ann Lacy School of American Dance and Arts Management, was completed in the fall of 2007. The new facility for dance and arts management instruction is revalued at $28 million and is declared in the dance press as possibly the finest facility for dance in higher education in the world.  The first graduate students entered the new M.F.A. program in the fall.  Professor Melanie Shelley was appointed as Associate Dean of the Ann Lacy School of American Dance and Arts Management.

2008

Dance workshops were expanded to include four Saturday workshops during the regular school year for high school sophomores, juniors, and seniors.  The first classes were offered in the Edith Kinney Gaylord Center’s new Community Dance Center.

General Information | Degree Programs | Prospective Students | Performances | Media | Awards




Contact Us
Apply Online
Schedule Visit




How to Give