The Society holds its annual convention in January, meeting jointly with the
Archaeological Institute of America. About 400 scholarly papers are delivered at the Society's meeting, which is also the site for interviewing for college and university positions and for the meetings of the many committees and affiliated groups. It is also the occasion for the presentation of Society awards for teaching, public outreach, and scholarly publications publication, including the
Goodwin Award of Merit, which recognizes a recently published book. At every meeting, an Outreach Division conducts two events that are open to the general public. One is a special panel that is of interest to non-specialists. Topics have included the movie
Troy, Classics and Contemporary Fiction and the
HBO series
Rome and Classics and Comics. The second is the staged reading of a classical or classically themed play, by the Committee on Ancient and Modern Performance. The productions have been:
The Invention of Love (
Tom Stoppard, directed by Mary-Kay Gamel, produced by
Judith Hallett),
The Heavensgate Deposition (based on
Apocolocyntosis by
Seneca the Younger, adapted by Douglass Parker, directed by Amy R. Cohen, produced by Thomas Jenkins),
The Golden Age (by
Thomas Heywood, directed by C. W. Marshall),
Iran Man (based on
Persa by
Plautus, directed by Mary-Kay Gamel),
Thespis (by
W. S. Gilbert and
A. S. Sullivan, with new music by Alan Riley Jones, directed by John Starks, produced by John Given),
The Birds (by
Aristophanes, directed by Thomas Talboy),
Cyclops (by
Euripides, directed by Laura Lippman and Mike Lippman),
Thersites (perhaps by
Nicholas Udall, directed by C. W. Marshall),
Thesmophoriazusae (by
Aristophanes, directed by Bella Vivante),
The Jurymen (by Katherine Janson, directed by Amy R. Cohen) and
Alcestis (by
Euripides, translated by Mary-Kay Gamel, directed by Gamel and Mark Damen). ==Awards==