Help Cinderella find her Prince Charming in this energetic dance adaptation of the storybook adventure! Harford Dance Theatre performs Cinderella May 19-21 in the Chesapeake Theater at 7 PM Friday and 1 & 5 PM Saturday & Sunday.
Harford’s President, Dr. Theresa B. Felder, received a 2023 Paragon Award for New Presidents from the Phi Theta Kappa (PTK) Honor Society recognizing her support of student success among high-achieving students at the College.
Hop on the Magic School Bus in this new musical adaptation based on the original book series. See TheaterWorksUSA’s production of “The Magic School Bus: Lost in the Solar System” at the Amoss Center, Saturday, May 13 at 3 PM.
Harford’s Music Department is hosting three musical performances in May: Seattle-based jazz vocalist Eugenie Jones, flutist Meghan Shanley Alger, and Harford’s Music Students in Recital followed by a set by the Harford Jazz Ensemble.
Harford's Behavioral and Social Sciences division was awarded a National Science Foundation grant of $427,181 to implement its “Map Your Success: Enhancing Pathways in Geospatial Technology Through Community Partnerships” project.
The Third Annual Maryland Scholars Summit will be held on Saturday, April 29, 9 AM to 3 PM, in Darlington Hall on Harford’s campus. The free event is open to faculty, community members, students, and families and friends.
See the 2023 Juried Student Art + Design Exhibition through May 26 in the Chesapeake Gallery in Harford’s Student Center. A long tradition at the College, many students have started their exhibition careers with this show.
Harford’s Actors Guild will present “Next to Normal,” a three-time Tony Award-winning musical drama, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 4, 5 and 6 at 8 PM and Sunday, May 7 at 3 PM in the Blackbox Theater in Joppa Hall.
Join us in this dress-your-best celebration of Harford Dance Theatre’s and Phoenix Festival Theater’s past, present and future on May 5 at 7:30 PM in Harford’s APGFCU Arena! Reserve tickets for this special evening by April 24.
Learn about our Colonial forebears who debated rebelling against the King and Parliament in “Archeology of Town Life on the Eve of the American Revolution,” April 28, 7 PM in Edgewood Hall on campus. Free and open to the public.