The spring semester Erasmus students have arrived at the University of Theatre and Film Arts: students from several countries, from Romania to Estonia, will join the university’s professional work in the coming months in English-language courses at Sinkovits Imre Institute of Theater Arts and Zsigmond Vilmos Institute of Cinematic Arts.
On Monday, 9th of February, the University of Theater and Film Arts welcomed a new international team: 17 Erasmus students arrived for the spring semester. The foreign students will be involved in the university’s professional and creative work in the coming months. Two of them will participate in the training program of the Sinkovits Imre Institute of Theater Arts, while the majority of the students will attend courses at the Zsigmond Vilmos Institute of Cinematic Arts. This semester, 13 English-language courses offer students the opportunity for professional development and international experience.
The new arrivals come from Romania, Germany, Estonia, Italy, Lithuania, North Macedonia, and the Czech Republic, further strengthening the institution’s international presence.
We are also accepting applications for the fall semester—the deadline for submitting applications is 15th of May, 2026.
The SZFE Books series is once again enriched with a significant volume. Its mission is to make essential theatrical and film works available in Hungarian, works that are indispensable to contemporary artistic discourse. The newest addition is French theatre historian Béatrice Picon-Vallin’s book: Théâtre du Soleil – The First Half-Century of Ariane Mnouchkine’s Sun Theatre. The launch will take place on September 29 at the Doctoral School of SZFE.
David Cronenberg, the world-renowned Canadian director of the body-horror genre, visited the Uránia National Film Theatre as the guest of honor of the Budapest Classic Film Marathon. At the audience Q&A organized by the NFI and SZFE, viewers heard not only about the beginnings of his career and behind-the-scenes stories from his legendary films, but also about what technology and artificial intelligence mean to him.
In 2025, the University of Sopron once again hosted the International Theatre Workshop. On the closing day, July 8, the students presented the short stage performances inspired by Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet that they had been working on during the week at six different locations in the university’s botanical garden.
The University of Theatre and Film Arts Budapest (SZFE), in collaboration with the National Theatre of Hungary and the University of Sopron, proudly presents the second edition of the International Theatre Workshop – Sopron 2025, taking place from 1 to 9 July on the picturesque campus of the University of Sopron. The initiative gathers jung actors and directors from Hungary and abroad, alongside distinguished educators and theatre professionals, for a week of intensive artistic collaboration. The official opening ceremony was held on 2 July at the Ligneum Event House.
The Cannes Film Festival is the world’s most famous and prestigious film festival, held every year in the second half of May in Cannes. The main venue for the screening of films competing for the Palme d’Or, the festival’s top prize, is the Festival and Congress Palace (Palais des Festivals et des Congrès) on the Croisette. This year, 25 students from the SZFE traveled to the festival; we spoke with two of them, first-year television production student Kata Hegedüs and second-year student Eszter Simon, about their experiences.
The University of Theatre and Film Arts will launch three 12-week masterclasses in February 2025: movement, voice training and a combined movement-voice training masterclass. The training coordinator for the movement masterclass is Vidáné Szent-Ivány Kinga, associate professor and winner of the Gyula Harangozó Prize, while the voice training coordinator is Borbála Keszei, assistant professor and winner of the Liszt Ferenc Prize.
Based on a survey by The Campus Advisor, Daily News Hungary published the European university ranking, in which Budapest ranked 4th. The analysis is based over 17,000 authentic ratings by students and reflecting the real experiences of those with first hand knowledge.
On a fortuitous day, December 13th, all eight of our Erasmus students presented their examination projects from their product design course under the guidance of Professor Éva Szendrényi. The focal point of their project work was the adaptation of the first scene of King Lear, either as a film or a stage play, applying the students’ unique concepts. The adaptations ranged from contemporary themes – a drag queen show, a modern USA Wall Street business narrative – to a fantasy tale. The presentations combined freehand drawings and photos. It was fascinating to observe how the students conveyed the characters’ features and dynamics through costumes, exploring how textures and colours could represent the nuances of the characters’ roles and the social distances within the narrative. Each presentation showed how the space, costumes, colours, and lighting design work in a play or film, expressing our students’ creativity and skills.