Yearly Archives: 2019

Cast Announced for MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS at Covedale Center

CCPAThe cast includes:

  • Sydney Kline  as Esther
  • Brianna Bernard as Rose
  • Tyler Rosenblatt as Lon
  • Clare Graff as Agnes
  • Morgan O. Reynolds as Tootie
  • Talia Zoll as Anna
  • John Langley as Alonzo
  • Joe Hornbaker as Grandpa
  • Dylan McGill as Warren
  • Matthew Gretz as John
  • Angela Alexander Nalley as Katie
  • Zoe Rose Davidson as Lucille/Ensemble
  • Cassidy Steele as Eve/Ensemble
  • Allison Hinkel as Ensemble
  • Peter Cutler as Clinton Badger/Ensemble
  • Randolph Geers as Peewee Drummond/Ensemble
  • Zac Holman asSidney Purvis/Ensemble)

Directed & choreograped by Dee Anne Bryll. Music directed by Ryan Heinrich.

Performances run Feb. 13-March 8.

For more information visit www.cincinnatilandmarkproductions.com/CCPA

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Auditions Announced for OLIVER! at Hamilton Rotary Presents

RP_100 logoWe are excited to begin the journey for what is sure to be another amazing show.  Auditions are one evening only, December 16th with audition slots available from 6-9pm.  Callbacks will be Dec 18th from 6-9pm at the same location.

Directed by Rodney Neal
Music voice direction by Betsy Horton
Music conducted by Benjamin Price
Choreographed by Sam Murray
Produced by Angie Neal

Come prepared with a song: approximately 30 bars of music in the style of a Broadway Musical.

Rehearsals will start in January and are currently scheduled for Mondays and Tuesdays 6:30-8:30 and Sundays 3-6.

Oliver! Character Descriptions:
(Ages listed are to be considered stage age and are only a guidline)

  • Oliver Twist: An orphan workhouse boy, age range 8-13, singer (smooth boyish soprano)/actor. British (not cockney) accent, bright and innocent. This character is in approximately 80% of the scenes, parents should note he will be required at rehearsal more than any other person in the show.
  • Fagin: Middle aged leader of a children’s band of thieves, age range 35- 50s, singer/actor. Cockney accent. Described as devious, a user, sly fox, con man, very personable.
  • Artful Dodger: A street kid, age range 13-18, singer/actor. Cockney accent. Very energetic, highly personable, intelligent and savvy beyond his years, Fagin’s right hand “man”.
  • Bill Sykes: Also worked for Fagin as a youth now a feared master criminal, age range 25-40s actor/singer (baritone). Cockney accent. Good looking in a rough sort of way, sociopath, a killer who only looks out for himself.
  • Nancy: When she was younger worked for Fagin, now a “barmaid” at the Three Cripples Bar, age range 20-30s, singer (good belt)/actress should have decent movement skills. Cockney accent. She lives with and loves Bill Sykes, pretty, intelligent, longs for a better life.
  • Bet: Nancy’s friend, may also have worked for Fagin, age range 15-25, singer/actress should move well. Cockney accent. She idolizes Nancy.
  • Mr. Bumble: The Master of the Workhouse, age range 35-55, singer (tenor)/actor. Cockney accent. A large, pompous and corrupt bureaucrat.
  • Widow Corney: The Mistress of the Workhouse, age range 30-50, singer (soprano belt)/ actress. Cockney accent. Sharp tongued widow, also corrupt.
  • Mr. Brownlow: Older gentleman, age range 40-60, actor/singer. British (not cockney) accent. Kind upper class gentleman, Oliver’s grandfather.
  • Mr. Sowerberry: The undertaker, age range 30-45, actor/singer (baritone). Cockney accent. Kind of creepy, “buy” Oliver from Bumble to work in the funeral home as a coffin follower, may be an alcoholic.
  • Mrs. Sowerberry: The undertaker’s wife, age range 30-45, actress/singer (mezzo). Cockney accent. More business savvy than her husband.
  • Noah Claypole: Undertaker’s apprentice, age range 18-25, actor. Cockney accent. May have also come from Workhouse. Feels threatened by, dislikes and torments Oliver.
  • Charlotte: Sowerberry’s daughter, age range 16-25, actress. Cockney accent. Attracted to Noah, kind of flirty.
  • Dr. Grimwig: A doctor, age range 35-55, actor. British (not cockney) accent. Upper class, friend of Mr. Brownlow.
  • Mrs. Bedwin: A housekeeper, age range 35-55. British (not cockney) accent. Works for Mr. Brownlow. Warm personality.

Workhouse & Fagin KIDS
Will cast boys AND girls. Including Dodger’s friend Charley. Singers/actors, let us know if you have any “special skills” example: acrobatics, tumbling, juggling, dance etc. We are looking for boys and girls who are bright and personable.  Boys and girls will be in one or more of the following: Workhouse Boys, Workhouse Assistants, Bow Street Runners, Street Vendors (Criers) Crowd of Onlookers and Passersby.

Adult Featured Ensemble
Singers (all voice types), characters with cockney and traditional British accents. Include in this are the “featured” soloists: The Rose Seller (mezzo), Strawberry Seller (soprano), Milk Maid (soprano), Knife Grinder (baritone) and Long Song Seller (Tenor); featured roles Old Sally and Old Lady (cockney accents), & the Chairman. Let us know if you have dance training.

Date: 12/16/2019 (Mon.)
Time: 6:00pm – 9:30pm EDT
Location: The Fitton Center for Creative Arts – 101 S Monument Ave, Hamilton, Oh 45011

Performances are March 19-22.

Reserve your audition slot at https://www.signupgenius.com/go/70a054faca828a64-rotary

 

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Auditions Announced for CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN at Greater Hamilton Civic Theatre

GHCT_logoCHEAPER BY THE DOZEN Auditions
Greater Hamilton Civic Theatre
215 S. Third St., Hamilton OH

December 9 & 10, 2019

  • 6:30pm Younger kids (ages 3 – 10)
  • 7:30pm Older kids (ages 11 – 18) & Adults

Cast Requirements:

  • 1 Adult Male (stage age 40 – 60)
  • 1 Adult Female (stage age 40 – 50)
  • 2-3 Adult Females (stage age 30 – 70)
  • 1 Adult Male (stage age 50 – 70)
  • 2 Teen Males (stage age 17 – 18)

The Children:

  • 3 Girls (stage age 14 – 18)
  • 3 Boys (stage age 10 – 15)
  • 6 Children (stage age 3 – 10)

Rehearsals: Sunday afternoons, Tuesday and Friday evenings starting December 15 (no rehearsal December 24 or December 31)

Children up to 10 years old will be released from week night rehearsals by 8:00pm until the week of the show, when all attempts will be made to release them by 9:00pm on Monday – Wednesday. The nights of the shows, the children will not be done until close to 10pm.

Performances are Feb. 13-16.

Questions can be sent to the director, Tracy Botos, at tracy.botos211@gmail.com.

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DEATH & DYING ON THE DINSMORE FARM this Sunday, Oct. 27th

MISC_Death and Dying at the Dinsmore Farm

Please join us for this unique event on Sunday, Oct. 27th 1-6pm, at the Dinsmore Homestead museum (5656 Burlington Pike, Burlington, KY 41005).

Your tour of the 1842 Dinsmore home will highlight FIVE scenes of death & dying that actually took place on the farm.  See how men and women in the past dealt with the inevitable!

Each vignette is based on actual letters from the family!  You won’t want to miss this one-of-a-kind historic tour.  This experience is a collaboration between the Dinsmore Homestead, local actors, and the Falcon Theatre’s Falcon Takes Flight outreach program.

Questions?  Please call Dinsmore Homestead 859.586.6117 or email Cathy Collopy at ccollopy@dinsmorefarm.org.

If you register ahead you will be assured of a spot for this must-see adventure!

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THE LIFESPAN OF A FACT Quick Review

THE LIFESPAN OF A FACT presented Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park through Nov. 16. I attended the opening night performance. 

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JuCoby Johnson as Jim Fingal, Kate Rigg as Emily Penrose & David Whalen as John D’Agata. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

At what point does literary license become libel?

This argument is central to the plot of the thought-provoking play THE LIFESPAN OF A FACT running through Nov. 16 at Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park.

LIFESPAN follows the extreme and laugh out loud funny pursuit of the truth by young and over-achieving fact-checker Jim Fingal (JuCoby Johnson). Actor David Whalen (author Paul Sheldon in last season’s MISERY) returns as John D’Agata, a talented and respected old school wordsmith who argues the truth of his writing is not beholden to fact. Literally caught between the two is magazine editor Emily Penrose (Kate Rigg) who’s love for the written word is tempered by the realities of the struggling print industry in our online, click-obsessed, social media dominated world.

Director Wendy C. Goldberg displays a deft hand with her talented cast in tackling a show that is essentially three people talking…a lot. The humor of the script and the humanity of the three characters is brought to the forefront. It is not three people arguing to be right, but three individuals trying to do the best work they can.

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David Whalen as John D’Agata. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

Todd Rosenthal’s clever, two-sided set believable takes us from a New York skyscraper to suburban Las Vegas. It was also a wise move to not utilize the entire play area available.

There are some now-expected generational jokes and the fact-checking debate does briefly stall the forward momentum of the play, but on the other side is one of the most profound moments I’ve experienced in a theater. A perfect example of the power of the written word from the “pen” of a talented writer.

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Kate Rigg as Emily Penrose & JuCoby Johnson as Jim Fingal. Photo by Mikki Schaffner.

Nowadays any yahoo can start a blog and become a media influencer. The internet is full of people eager to nitpick and point out minuscule failings (like how did D’Agata’s elderly mother, who needed a walker to get around, manage to get herself up and down the stairs without a bedroom or bathroom on the first floor?).

But none can duplicate the investment of the opening night audience in those closing minutes of this play or the thoughtful discussion that follows after the stage goes dark.

My rating: 4.75 out of 5.

Click here for more information on the production.

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