It was a day of joyous celebration, sweet farewells and, in the Commencement address from Oscar-winning filmmakers Phil Lord â97 and Chris Miller â97, comic relief.
Under breezy, sunny skies, to the tune of bagpipes and a brass quintet, 12,000 people gathered on the Green for Sundayâs commencement. More than 1,200 undergraduates and almost 800 graduate and professional school students received degrees. The undergraduates hailed from 48 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and Guam, and from 46 countries.
Lord and Miller, who met at Dartmouth almost 30 years ago, are the writers and producers of the blockbuster Spiderman: Across the Spider-Verse, which has grossed $390 million globally since being released less than two weeks ago.
But they steered clear of road-to-success stories, choosing instead to tally early failures.
âWe donât call them failures,â Miller said. âWe call them mistakulearnings, catastriumphs,â said Lord who, with his partner, went on to name a string of their TV shows that got cancelled.
âBut donât worry,â Miller assured the graduates. âYouâre not going to fail like we did. Youâre each going to fail in your own unique ways.â
âAnd thatâs OK,â said Lord. âItâs whatâs supposed to happen.â
Whatever happens, he urged the graduates to âmake space in your life for art.â
Miller added, âArt is often very silly but it is not frivolous. People have been going into dark caves to see paintings and hear stories told with light for 30,000 years, at leastâlonger than people have been eating bread.â
And true art, the partners agreed, is made by people, not artificial intelligence.
âAI is a really useful tool, but it canât have an idea,â Miller said. âItâs a derivative plagiarism machine that is about as creative as a paintbrushâwhich is also a useful tool. But it isnât very smart.â

Long before the advent of AI, Lord and Miller learned their craft at Dartmouth from David Ehrlich, a professor emeritus of film and media studies.
âHe has made artists out of engineers and physicists, because he told us all we were wonderful,â said Lord. âDavidâs idea is that art isnât just for Gertrude Stein, or Nelson Rockefeller. It should be commonplace. And the people who make it should be everywhere.â
Following instructions they said they got from Dartmouth trustee and CNN Anchor (who gave the 2017 commencement address), Lord and Miller tag-teamed rapid-fire advice, including:
âNostalgia is a weapon. Donât spend too much time looking back. Look ahead. Except when youâre backing a car out of a driveway, thatâs a good time to look back.â
â You are the most resilient, creative, informed, imaginative generation there has ever been. You can and will imagine a better world than what we came up with. You will help us imagine goodness.â
Valedictory from President Hanlon
For President Philip J. Hanlon â77, it was his final Commencement speech, capping a decade-long tenure.
In his valedictory address, President Hanlon recalled first seeing âthis sacred placeâ in the summer of 1972, as a âshy, introverted high school junior from a small town in the Adirondack Mountains.â

He spoke of the enduring friendships he made, and said Dartmouth students all receive two special parting gifts as they graduate.
âThe first is the gift of the Dartmouth family. I know of no stronger community in all of higher education than ours. Welcome to the cult!â Hanlon said.
âRarely have I met a Dartmouth alum who didnât say that their best friends in life are their Dartmouth friends. I know mine are. And look no further than Phil Lord and Chris Miller to see how Dartmouth friendships can change your life.â
The second gift, Hanlon said, âis a transformed quality of mind.â
He advised graduates to use their knowledge and education to cut through âa world where too often, opinions dominate and evidence and reason are dismissed. As Iris Murdoch put it, âWe live in a fantasy world, a world of illusion. The great task in life is to find reality.â You can do it. Your Dartmouth education has prepared you for that task.â
Hanlon received warm and sustained applause after his speech.
Student Speakers
Students also took the stage at Commencement.
Ahnili Johnson-Jennings â23 and AanĂ Perkins â23, co-presidents of , gave the traditional welcome, recalling the founding of Dartmouth with the vital assistance of the Rev. Samson Occom, a member of the Mohegan tribe.
âAs we and this institution embark on our next chapters, we must remember that if we are willing to learn from one another and deal honestly and justly, we can enhance our communities at home and abroad,â said Johnson-Jennings. âAnd here at Dartmouth, on the homelands of the Abenaki people, we are lucky to have had the privilege to learn from one another.â

The valedictory was delivered by Jonathan Lee â23, one of the 13 valedictorians. A mathematics major modified with computer science and a James O. Freedman Presidential Scholar, Lee spoke about cherished Dartmouth traditions such as Homecoming and Winter Carnival, about the camaraderie he found in the game of pong, and about his favorite teacher, .
âYou embody the rigorous, logical thinking that we need more of in the world, and I hope to continue applying what Iâve learned in my future work in computer science,â Lee said, urging his classmates to âseek out those you inspire you, who push you to grow, and who make you feel like you belong.â
Honorary Degrees: A Turnabout
Before President Hanlon awarded honorary degrees to Lord and Miller and to four leaders in the fields of engineering, sociology, medicine, and environmental law, he and his wife, Gail Gentes, received their own honorary Doctor of Arts degrees from , who chairs the Board of Trustees.
About Gentes, Lempres read from the citation, âAs a champion of experiential learning, compassionate and engaged community member, and the wise and devoted partner to Dartmouthâs 18th President, your impact on Dartmouth, the Upper Valley and, indeed, the world has earned you the admiration and appreciation of your Dartmouth family forever.â
Lempres praised Hanlon for, among other virtues, âYour unwavering commitment to building a more diverse, equitable and inclusive campus and to instilling a culture of prioritization and reallocation further elevated the success of the institution. And you never lost sight of the most important work of the Collegeâteachingâdedicating yourself fully to students in the role of caring professor every year of your tenure.â
Hanlon then presented honorary degrees to:
Doctor of Science
- Gilda Barabino, president of Olin College of Engineering
- Jennifer Carlson â04, associate professor of sociology at the University of Arizona
- Andrea Hayes Dixon â87, MED â91, dean and vice president of clinical affairs at Howard University College of Medicine
Doctor of Arts
- Filmmakers Phil Lord â97 and Chris Miller â97
Doctor of Humane Letters
- Benjamin Wilson â73, retired chair, Beveridge & Diamond, PC, and a former member of the Dartmouth Board of Trustees

Following the ceremony, Lucan White â23, a philosophy major and member of the squash team from Belmont, Mass., said he enjoyed Lord and Millerâs address, especially because he has done stand-up comedy at Dartmouth, and hopes to do more of it, after finishing a four-month internship with a venture capital firm.
âThe filmmakers really inspired me to just do whatever I like,â he said. âItâs just about doing what youâve got, to the best of your ability, and loving it enough to just keep doing it.â