Alums reflect on the artistic spark ignited at the Hopkins Center.
SEPTEMBER | OCTOBER 2025
The cultural heart of the campus has inspired tens of thousands of students who passed under its arches since it opened in 1962. on October 16, the newly revamped Hopkins Center is opening its doors again—to a fresh wave of students, creatives, and big dreamers. As the Hop kicks off a new chapter, we look back through the eyes of alumni who have gone on to renowned careers. In their reflections, they trace the spark of their artistic journey back to where it all began.
Rachel Dratch ’88
Tony award-nominated actress, comedian, and writer
Best known for her roles on Saturday Night Live, including the iconic pessimist Debbie Downer
At Dartmouth: Drama major, joined Said and Done improv comedy group, sang with the Glee Club
“In the improv group I finally felt like these are my people.”
Best known for The White Lotus, Nashville, and Friday Night Lights
At Dartmouth: Asian Studies major who performed in campus productions of George Bernard Shaw’s Arms and the Man and Larry Shue’s The Foreigner
“My dreams of life in the performing arts were honed and solidified in every corner of the Hop.”
Shonda Rhimes ’91
Award-winning television creator, producer, director, author, and CEO of media company Shondaland
Best known for creating Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal, How To Get Away With Murder, and Bridgerton
At Dartmouth: English major with concentration in creative writing, directed with Black Underground Theater Association. Top of the Hop was her favorite hangout spot
“In BUTA(Black Underground TheaterAssociation) I was supposed to direct. To have that experience and sort of find my place of leadership and comfort was enormous for me.”
David Harbour ’97
Award-winning actor nominated for two primetime Emmy awards, a Tony award, and a Golden Globe award
Best known for his role as chief Jim Hopper in TV's Stranger Things and as Red Guardian in Marvel movies Black Widow and Thunderbolts
At Dartmouth: Drama major who directed Macbeth and Hamlet and acted in Measure for Measure at the Hop as well as in plays by Samuel Beckett and Bertolt Brecht
“I was a big theater geekwriting manifestos about Brechtian alienation.”