
2026 Festival
The Martin E. Segal Theatre Center at CUNY's Graduate Center presents the 10th edition of the Segal Center Film Festival on Theatre and Performance (FTP), running May 28 – June 5, 2026, in partnership with Anthology Film Archives.
This milestone anniversary edition brings together a bold international program of new films alongside a major retrospective celebrating Robert Wilson, who passed away in 2025 at the age of 83.
A selection of films will be screened in-person at the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center (free, first-come first-served) on May 28th, 30th and June 1st, with a selection of films will be screened at Anthology Film Archives (ticketed) from May 29th to June 5th.
Festival Lineup
Screening Schedule
at The Martin E. Segal Center (365 5th Ave, New York)
(free and open to all, first-come first-served)
Thursday May 28
6:00 pm
Short Opening
6:10 pm
Monk in Pieces by Billy Shebar & David C. Roberts
(USA / Germany / France, 2025, 94’)
7:50 pm
Q&A with Billy Shebar
8:20 pm
Reception — Wine & Cheese
Saturday May 30
12:00 pm
Unbound by John English & Tom Garner
(Spain, 2024, 91’)
1:40 pm
Respoken by Sidney Ken & Thaiphirun Hul
(Cambodia, 2024, 26’)
2:15 pm
Palestine Comedy Club by Alaa Aliabdallah & Charlotte Knowles
(Palestine / UK, 2024, 97’)
4:00 pm
Museum of the Night by Fermín Eloy Acosta
(Argentina, 2025, 88’)
5:45 pm
In-I In Motion by Juliette Binoche
(France, 2025, 156’)
Monday June 1
5:00 pm
Firebird by Irina Patkanian & Marion Schoevaert
(USA, 2026, 23’)
5:30 pm
Ewa - The Last Lesson by Andrea Mura & Federico Savonitto
(Italy / Poland, 2025, 66’)
6:40 pm
Obsessed with Light by Sabine Krayenbühl & Zeva Oelbaum
(USA, 2025, 90’)
Robert Wilson on Screen
Anthology Film Archives (32 2nd Ave, New York)
(Ticketed, please see AFA website)
Friday May 29
6:45 pm
Einstein on the Beach: The Changing Image of Opera by Mark Obenhaus (1984, 58’)
8:45 pm
Overture for KA MOUNTAIN AND GUARDenia TERRACE
(1972, 80’, Silent)
Saturday May 30
6:15 pm
Video 50 + Deafman Glance
(1978 / 1981, ~85’)
8:30 pm
Robert Wilson and the Civil Wars by Howard Brookner
(1987, 90’)
Sunday May 31
5:30 pm
Stations + La Femme à la Cafetière + La Mort de Molière
(1982 / 1989 / 1995, ~90’)
8:00 pm
The Black Rider by Theo Janssen & Ralph Quinke
(1990, 120’)
Monday June 1
6:30 pm
Hamlet: A Monologue by Franco Laera
(1997–2000, 95’)
8:45 pm
The Making of a Monologue: Robert Wilson's Hamlet by Marion Kessel
(1995, 62’)
Tuesday June 2
6:30 pm
Stations + La Femme à la Cafetière + La Mort de Molière
(1982 / 1989 / 1995, ~90’)
8:45 pm
Bob Wilson’s Life & Death of Marina Abramovic by Giada Colagrande
(2012, 57’)
Wednesday June 3
7:00 pm
Robert Wilson In Situ by Pauline de Grunne (2017, 90’)
8:45 pm
Watermill 1993 + Watermill Center Summer Program 2009 by Stefan Kurt / Tomek Jeziorski
(1993 / 2010, ~65’)
Thursday June 4
6:45 pm
Video 50 + Deafman Glance(1978 / 1981, ~85’)
9:00 pm
Einstein on the Beach: The Changing Image of Opera by Mark Obenhaus (1984, 58’)
Friday June 5
6:45 pm
Overture for KA MOUNTAIN AND GUARDenia TERRACE(1972, 80’, Silent)
8:45 pm
Robert Wilson and the Civil Wars by Howard Brookner (1987, 90’)
This summer, in collaboration with the Segal Center Film Festival on Theatre and Performance, The Robert Wilson Estate & Trust, and The Watermill Center, Anthology presents an extensive film series celebrating the work of the great theater artist Robert Wilson, who passed away in 2025 at the age of 83. Wilson was a towering figure in experimental theater over the past fifty years, an astonishingly prolific and inventive artist who was responsible for such landmarks of 20th century performance as “The Life and Times of Sigmund Freud” (1969), “Einstein on the Beach” (1976), and “the CIVIL warS” (1984), as well as legendary, highly singular productions of everything from Shakespeare’s “King Lear” and Wagner’s “Parsifal” to Beckett’s “Krapp’s Last Tape”, Ionesco’s “Rhinoceros”, and Heiner Müller’s “Hamletmachine”. Wilson collaborated with an astonishing range of artists, musicians, writers, and actors (William S. Burroughs, Willem Dafoe, Philip Glass, Lou Reed, and Tom Waits, to name just a few), and in 1991 founded The Watermill Center on Long Island, a “laboratory for performance” that continues to host performances, exhibitions, and residencies, and to develop productions, up to the current day.
One of the hallmarks of Wilson’s work is his ambitious, highly expressionistic, and always defiantly anti-naturalistic style, and his full embrace of every imaginable dimension of the theater: performance, music, costume and set design, and so on. His drive to explore multiple forms and modes of expression led him to make numerous moving-image pieces over the course of his career, including important early video works like VIDEO 50 (1978), DEAFMAN GLANCE (1981), and STATIONS (1982). He also personally oversaw the filming of many of his most important theater productions.
This series includes his own films and videos, a sampling of the filmed versions of his productions, and several documentaries made about his life and work over the years, such as Mark Obenhaus’s definitive chronicle of perhaps Wilson’s most famous work, EINSTEIN ON THE BEACH, and Howard Brookner’s revealing portrait film, ROBERT WILSON AND THE CIVIL WARS.
About The Festival
The Segal Center Film Festival on Theatre and Performance (FTP) is an annual event showcasing films drawn from the world of theatre and performance. The 2026 festival is co-curated by Frank Hentschker and Tomek Smolarski.
The festival presents experimental, emerging, and established theatre artists and filmmakers from around the world to audiences and industry professionals. From its inaugural edition in 2015 to its present-day hybrid avatar, The Segal Film Festival for Theatre and Performance (FTP) has served as a platform for recorded works that span the length and breadth of the performing arts.
Festival Founder and Executive Director of the Martin E. Segal Theater Center, Frank Hentschker shares his inspiration for creating the festival: “Film and digital media are an integral part of theatre and performance. I am surprised that there is not a film festival out there right now focusing on theatre and performance. I thought ‘why not create one’?”
In the time before Corona, the Segal Film Festival had evolved into the premier US event for new film and video work focusing on theatre and performance. Its mission was to invite experimental and established theatre makers to present work created for the screen – not filmed archival recordings – to audiences and industry professionals from around the world. Now, after a year and a half of digital and hybrid theatre offerings, the festival must take on a new meaning. The festival has held on to its mission of being a free and open-to-all event accessible to everyone. The 7th edition of the festival was held digitally in March 2022, and featured 80 films from 30 countries.
For queries, feedback and any more information get in touch with us at segalfilmfestival@gmail.com
Meet The Curators

Tomek Smolarski
Co-Curator
Tomek Smolarski is a cultural manager, producer, and curator with over 20 years of experience producing international cultural events and building bridges across disciplines through cultural diplomacy. His work spans theater, film, and performance, and he has collaborated with leading U.S. institutions including BAM, MoMA, Lincoln Center, Anthology Film Archives, MoMI, Pacific Film Archive, and La MaMa Theatre, among many others.

Frank Hentschker
Co-Curator
Frank Hentschker, who holds a Ph.D. in theatre from the now legendary Institute for Applied Theatre Studies in Giessen, Germany, came to the Graduate Center in 2001 as program director for the Graduate Center’s Martin E. Segal Theatre Center and was appointed to the central doctoral faculty in theatre in 2009. Currently executive director and director of programs at the Segal Center, Hentschker has transformed the center into the nation’s leading forum for public programming in international and U.S. theatre and theatre studies; each year, he curates and produces more than forty events—staged readings, lecture-demonstrations, symposia, works-in-progress, and conversations with theatre scholars, theatrical luminaries, and emerging voices in the international, American, and New York theatre scenes. Among the vital events and series he founded at the Segal Center are the World Theatre Performance series; the annual fall PRELUDE festival, which features more than twenty New York–based theatre companies and playwrights; and the PEN World Voices Playwrights Series. Hentschker also led CUNY’s nineteen performing arts centers in founding the CUNY–Performing Arts Consortium (C–PAC), producing the consortium’s first joint festival in 2009. Hentschker edited the MESTC publications Jan Fabre: I Am A Mistake, Seven Works for the Theatre (2009) and New Plays from Spain (2013), and he served as president of the board of PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art from 2005 to 2009. Before coming to the Graduate Center, Hentschker founded and directed DISCURS, the largest European student theatre festival existing today; he acted as Hamlet in Heiner Müller’s Hamletmaschine, directed by the playwright; performed in the Robert Wilson play The Forest (music by David Byrne); and worked as an assistant for Robert Wilson for many years.
with special thanks to
Jed Raphael (Anthology Film Archives); Clifford Allen; Christof Belka & Noah Khoshbin (RW Work, Ltd.); Paige Laino & Nicole Martorana (The Watermill Center); Brian Belovarac (Janus Films); Rebecca Cleman, Karl McCool, and Jooyoung Park (EAI); Pauline de Grunne; Tomek Jeziorski; Stefan Kurt; Franco Laera; Edward McCarry (Cinema Guild); Mark Obenhaus; Ralph Quinke; and Elena Rossi-Snook (NYPL).










