CURTAINS - The Candlelight Theatre Non Equity Auditions

Posted November 26, 2018
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CURTAINS - The Candlelight Theatre
The Candlelight Theatre will present Curtains March 16 - April 20, 2019.

Auditions for Curtains will be held Sunday and Monday, December 2nd and 3rd, 2018 at The Candlelight Theatre in Wilmington, Delaware and Monday, December 10th, 2018 at The Rock School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Curtains - book by Rupert Holmes, music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb, John Kander and Rupert Holmes. Director: Peter Reynolds; Choreographer: Colleen Kreisel

Sunday, December 2 and Monday, December 3: 6:30PM sign-in.
The Candlelight Theatre
2208 Millers Rd.
Wilmington (Ardentown) DE 19810

Monday, December 10: 6:30PM sign-in.
The Rock School
4th floor, Studio C
1101 So. Broad St.
Philadelphia PA 19147
Sign in at 6:30. No appointments. Please prepare 16 - 32 bars showing range and in the style of the show. Please come with headshot and resume stapled together, do not send in advance. All roles open and paid. Restaurant opportunities available.

Curtains rehearsals will begin (approximately) January 22. Performances are March 16 – April 20, 2019 and generally Friday and Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoons.Also scheduled: 1 Thursday evening-April 11; 2 Wednesday matinees - March 20 and April 17.

No phone calls to the theatre, please.

www.candlelighttheatredelaware.com

Casting Breakdown

LIEUTENANT FRANK CIOFFI: Sweetly endearing local Boston detective who idolizes the world of musical theatre and has reveled in the thrill of performing in community theatre. Called upon to solve the murder of the star of “Robbin’ Hood” (a musical intended for Broadway that is currently out of town in Boston), Cioffi is very good at his job and, lamentably, married to his work. He is instantly smitten with ingénue Niki Harris. The undisputed central character of the musical. Requires deft and charming comedy, good singing, solid dancing in one extended “Fred and Ginger” number.

NIKI HARRIS: Pretty, almost too innocent ingénue, a local performer in a small role hoping “Robbin’ Hood” will be the Boston production that at last takes her to Broadway. Love interest for Lieutenant Cioffi, apparently reciprocated. Requires a legit soprano and strong dancing in an extended “Fred and Ginger” number.

GEORGIA HENDRICKS (similar age to AARON): Female half of our show-within-a-show’s songwriting team on the lyric-writing side. Ends up taking on the leading lady role. Must sing and dance extremely well.

CARMEN BERNSTEIN: Brash and brassy Broadway producer. Terrific comedic actress with a belt.

AARON FOX (similar age to GEORGIA): The composer of the show-within-the-show. His songwriting partner, Georgia, is also his wife, from whom he’s separated but for whom he still pines. He’s a handsome, intense, somewhat tortured artist-type. Requires a strong vocalist with comedy.

SIDNEY BERNSTEIN: The always-angry, sleazy, philandering producer of the out-of-town flop. Sidney is rough around the edges and completely self-serving. Requires a cartoon-like character actor who is funny on arrival. No singing required.

CHRISTOPHER BELLING: English director. Very camp. Very droll. Noel Coward meets Addison DeWitt meets Clifton Webb. Requires a superb comic actor.

BAMBI BERNÉT: Performer in the chorus, daughter of Carmen, step-daughter of Sidney. Genuinely brassy and artificially blonde. Hungry to work her way out of the chorus; many think she was only hired because of her mother. She surprises everyone, however, when she shows genuine dancing and singing talent when at last called upon. Requires great dancing, strong “street-smart dumb blonde” comedy, and singing.

OSCAR SHAPIRO: from the garment district and sole investor in “Robbin’ Hood.” A likeably gruff man who knows nothing about theatre and frets over every dime of his that’s spent. Requires good “rough around the edges” comedy and singing.

BOBBY PEPPER (similar age as Georgia and Aaron): The Gene Kelly of “Robbin’ Hood,” its choreographer and male star, and a handsome rival to Aaron for Georgia’s affection. Requires strong dancing, singing, comedy.

DARYL GRADY: Caustic and smug theatre critic for the local Boston newspaper. Patronizingly pompous, enjoys using his power to make or break shows during their Boston tryouts. Does not require strong singing or dancing.

JOHNNY HARMON: Stage Manager of the show-within-the-show, and both drill sergeant and mother hen to the cast. Barks orders but has a pleasant side as well, he keeps the company in line and on their toes throughout the rehearsal process. Comic actor who can sing.

JESSICA CRANSHAW: Faded Hollywood star, a grand diva with no right to be one, and a plague to the show-with-the-show and to her cast. An absolutely dreadful singer and inept actress who stars in the show-within-a-show and gets murdered on its opening night in Boston. Must be skillful enough to sing hilariously out-of-tune and ineptly, and adroit enough to dance perfectly out of step with the rest of the cast. Appears only in the first minutes of the musical; on Broadway, this performer then adopted a different look and became part of the ensemble.
RANDY DEXTER: a member of the singing & dancing ensemble featured in “Kansasland,” pleasant but with a sensitive side.

HARV FREMONT: a member of the singing & dancing ensemble who bears a bouquet.
ROBERTA WOOSTER: a member of the singing & dancing ensemble who speaks from experience.

ENSEMBLE: Women & Men: strong singer/dancer/actors of all types.

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