"To Kill A Mockingbird" Play Seeks Teenagers
Looking for boys and girls for "To Kill A Mockingbird" Play. Please see the details below. About the project: Plot: It’s 1935, and racial tensions are high in Maycomb, Alabama. Nonetheless, young Jean Louise Finch -- or Scout, as she is fondly called -- manages to live a rather carefree, privileged existence, insulated from issues of race. All that changes when Scout watches her father, Atticus Finch, defend an innocent man, Tom Robinson, against a potential death sentence, which looms threateningly against him because of prejudice due to race. Scout begins to realize that just because society portrays something as being true doesn’t mean that it actually is fact. With the the help of Atticus, and her older brother Jem, Scout learns that “growing up” often means doing what is right, even when it comes at great cost. Warning: This play contains offensive language, graphic content and violence. There will be no script alteration from the original content. Additional info: Come with a one minute(adults)/45 second(16 & under) monologue and be prepared for a cold reading from the script. You can fill your audition packet out prior to (on our website) or at the audition. If needed, callbacks will be held and those needed will be notified. If you have conflicts with the audition dates directors will accept video submissions. If this is the case, please attachement. If interested, please apply.
18 roles
Lives with her father, Atticus, her brother, Jem, and their housekeeper, Calpurnia. She is inquisitive, impulsive, emotional, and by the standards of the day, a true tomboy. She believes in the basic goodness of the people in her community, which is tested as the story unfolds.
Scout’s brother and playmate. Though he is very close with and protective of his sister, he also starts to detach himself from her, transitioning towards adolescence throughout the story. His beliefs and ideals are badly shaken by the prejudice and hatred he observes during Tom Robinson’s trial.
As Scout and Jem’s father and a widower, Atticus has taught his children to have a strong sense of justice and open-mindedness. He is a lawyer in Maycomb and is regarded as a man of integrity and decency who agrees to defend Tom Robinson, a black man accused of raping a white woman, even though he knows there is little chance to win the trial.
The Finches’ black housekeeper, Calpurnia is very strict and has helped look after the children since their mother’s death.
A good friend and role-model to Jem and Scout. She is open-minded and nonjudgmental; possessed with a biting sense of humor and quick wit; opinionated and forthright; and easygoing. She loves gardening and baking.
An attention seeker and neighbor the Finch children in To Kill a Mockingbird. Rather than preferring to be interesting enough to seek attention through her own perceived accomplishments, Miss Crawford likes to be a busybody and share other people's dirty laundry.
An elderly, cranky, racist woman, Mrs. Dubose lives near the Finches. The children do not like her, but Atticus admires her for trying to conquer her morphine addiction.
A reclusive, mysterious neighbor of the Finches, Boo Radley becomes a source of fascination for the children, and starts to develop a sort of indirect friendship with them, leaving them small gifts. As one of the story’s “mockingbirds,” he is a prisoner in his own home, but emerges to protect Scout and Jem from a potentially life-threatening situation.
While spending summers with his aunt who lives next door to the Finches, Dill meets and befriends Scout and Jem. He has a very active imagination and a strong sense of adventure, being the first to suggest the idea of “making Boo come out.”
Maycomb’s sheriff, a decent and respected man.
The judge for Tom Robinson’s trial.
The Reverend for the black community at the First Purchase African M.E. Church.
The oldest of the nine Ewell children, Mayella Ewell is lonely, abused by her father, and unhappy. She tries to seduce Tom, and, when her father sees them, the father and daughter accuse Tom of rape and lie about it in court.
A poor farmer whom Atticus tries to help, but who also unsuccessfully leads a lynch mob going after Tom Robinson the night before the trial.
The prosecuting attorney in the case against Tom Robinson.
A black man who is falsely accused of raping Mayella Ewell, Tom Robinson is defended by Atticus in court. He is one of the story’s “mockingbirds.”
The clerk of the court.