Laura Waringer, Newcomb Music Department at Tulane University

Laura London Waringer

Assistant Professor of Musical Theatre
lwaringer@tulane.edu

Education

Ph.D.- Florida State University, Theatre and Performance Research
MFA- The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London, Music Theatre
BFA- New York University (NYU) Tisch School of the Arts, Musical Theatre

Biography

Laura London Waringer (Laura Hope-London) is an actor, director, writer, producer, and academic who joined the faculty of the Newcomb Department of Music in 2024 as coordinator of the Musical Theatre concentration under the BFA in Music. She comes to Tulane from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where she helped create their Musical Theatre Certificate program. She holds a PhD in Theatre and Performance Research from Florida State University, an MFA in Music Theatre from the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London, and a BFA in Musical Theatre from New York University (NYU) Tisch School of the Arts. She is a member of the Actors Equity Association (AEA), British Actors Equity, and SAG-AFTRA.

As an accomplished actress of stage and screen, her favorite credits include A Christmas Carol (National Tour), Little Women (London, UK Premiere), Spring Awakening (London, Bridewell Theatre), Mean Girls (London, workshop), John & Jen (New York, Artists Salon), the world premieres of Elizabeth Swados' Atonement and RakheLeah, and the 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremonies directed by Danny Boyle.

Waringer is the founding artistic director of Wanderlust: Theatre on Location, an immersive musical theatre company that stages musicals “on location” at site-specific venues to celebrate community identity and illuminate local histories. The company’s work is the center of creative research. She conceived and directed their debut production, Musicals on the Move, an ambulatory theatre experience that staged musical excerpts at show-specific venues and businesses across midtown Tallahassee, Florida. The company also created a commissioned, immersive adaptation of A Christmas Carol for Thomasville, Georgia's famed Victorian Christmas Festival. Wanderlust recently produced a site-specific production of Into the Woods at Lichgate conservancy and will soon premiere The Frenchtown Project, an auditory musical theatre experience that chronicles the rich history of Frenchtown, Florida's oldest Black neighborhood. The company is also developing an original musical Threads, based on the true events of the 1929 Loray Mill Strike in Gastonia, North Carolina. An initial staged reading of Threads will premiere at the Loray Mill in 2024.

Waringer’s scholarly research interests include race and gender representation in musical theatre, musical theatre education, and musical adaptation of historic events. She is currently developing her dissertation project, Triple Threat: A Study of American Musical Theatre Training, into a book. Her published work appears in the books Queen Mothers: Articulating the Spirit of Black Women Teacher-Leaders, Dance in U.S. Popular Culture, and Hamilton: History and Hip-Hop - Essays on an American Musical.