THANK YOU to everyone who auditioned for Stocking Stuffers!!
We were thrilled with the interest in the show, and the directors are looking forward to working with everyone!
THANK YOU to everyone who auditioned for Stocking Stuffers!!
We were thrilled with the interest in the show, and the directors are looking forward to working with everyone!
Character Descriptions and Vocal Ranges
The Spellers (Typically actors in the 20’s to 40’s age range)
William Barfee
Eb3 – Bb4 Tenor
A finalist in last year’s Bee, he spells using his “magic foot” and has no interest in making friends at the bee.
Olive Ostrovsky
B3 – F5 Soprano
The heart of the show, Olive is basically deserted at the bee. Her mom is in ashram in India and her dad never shows up, even after promising that, this time, he’ll try to make it. Her best friend is a dictionary.
Leaf Coneybear
A2 – G4 Baritone or Tenor
As just the second runner-up in his district’s bee, he really shouldn’t be competing here. He makes his own clothes, is home schooled with his hippy parents and siblings, and lacks social skills. He’s strange but very sweet, loving, and kindhearted but distracted.
Marcy Park
B3 – E5 Soprano/Mezzo-Soprano
Marcy is the most feared and practiced competitor in the bee. She made it all the way to ninth place in Nationals last year and is back to win again. She sleeps three hours a night, speaks six languages, and does not recognize her own lack of humor. She is incredibly intense.
Logaine Schwartzandgrubenierre
C4 – D5 Soprano
Logaine is the youngest and most politically-aware speller, often making comments about current political figures and her mature world views. She has two overbearing gay dads who have turned her neurotic and self-conscious. She speaks with a lisp though has a real confidence about her at times.
Chip Tolentino
C3 – B4 Tenor
Last year’s Putnam County champ who begins to learn the ups and downs of puberty during the bee. He is strong willed, competitive, ambitious, and – most of all – very horny. This role has some of the most difficult singing in the show and requires long sustained high notes.
The ‘Adults’ (Typically actors from age 25 to 50)
Vice Principal Douglas Patch
Non-singing (but can be added to ensemble numbers if actor can sing)
He was involved in an “incident” at the Twentieth Annual Bee that got him removed from the judging panel. He returns this year in “a better place,” thanks to a high-fiber diet and Jungian analysis. He is infatuated with Rona Lisa Peretti. Impeccable comic timing and the ability to improv are both needed for this character.
Rona Lisa Peretti
C4 – A5 Soprano
This former Spelling Bee champ is not only the county’s top realtor, she also runs a highly lucrative eBay business, selling sensible pumps at sensible prices. She is incredibly kind to the spellers, having been in their shoes many years earlier. Should have both a high belt and improv skills. Along with Panch, she guides the comedy of the show and the audience volunteers.
Mitch/Madge Mahoney
E3 – A4 (B4) Tenor
This former felon is fulfilling his/her court ordered community service at the bee and acting as the bee’s “comfort counselor,” handing out juice boxes and a dose of reality to the losers. He/she comes across as scary and tough but is really a big softy deep down.
The Greeneville Theatre Guild will hold auditions for its second show of the 2016 season on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, March 15 and 16 at 7:00 pm. Dixie Swim Club, written by Jessie Jones, Nicholas Hope, and Jamie Wooten and directed by Jim Holt, is a funny and poignant comedy that spans thirty years and centers around five Southern women who continue a friendship that began on the college swim team by meeting at the Outer Banks once a year. The women catch up on each other’s lives and events, meddling whenever possible and relying on each other for support.
The cast includes five women who must be able to play from ages 44 – 77. No special preparation is needed. Auditions will consist of cold readings from the script and will take place at Theatre Depot, 250 W. Depot Street, the three-story building behind the post office. Scripts are available for on-site review at Catalyst Coffee Company. Performances will be on Friday and Saturday evenings, May 6, 7, 13, and 14 and Sunday afternoons, May 8 and 15. Please bring a list of any schedule conflicts between audition dates and show dates. Rehearsals are typically held on weekday evenings. Please visit our website at www.greenevilletheatreguild.org, find us on Facebook, or call 423-470-2792 with any questions you may have.
The Greeneville Theatre Guild is announcing auditions for the opening show of its 2016 season, Southern Fried Funeral, written by J. Dietz Osborne and Nate Eppler and directed by Bill Regan. The play is a comedy about how Southern funerals can bring out the worst, the best, and the funniest in people, and the Frye family is no exception. Dewey Frye is dead and his wife Dorothy is left behind to pick up the pieces and hold her family together. Her daughters are at each other’s throats, Ozella Meeks from the SonShine committee is trying to take over the funeral, and Dewey’s brother is trying to take away her house. Southern Fried Funeral is a big-hearted comedy about family – Southern style.
Auditions will be held on Sunday, December 6 at 2:00 pm and Monday, December 7 at 7:00 pm, with call-backs being held on Tuesday, December 8 if necessary. Performance dates for Southern Fried Funeral are March 11 – 20, and rehearsals will begin in January. Those wishing to audition should bring a calendar with any known conflicts with them to the building at 250 W. Depot Street in Greeneville (it’s the three-story building on the corner of W. Depot and Cutler Streets behind the post office.) Auditions will consist of cold readings from the script. The director will be searching for 6 women who can play between the ages of 25 and 100, 4 men who can play between the ages of 25 and 100, and one male who can play between the ages of 15 and 25. Scripts will be available for on-site perusal at Catalyst Coffee Company until auditions are complete.
Come on out and play a part in the magic of live theatre! Or if you would like to be a part of a production but feel the spotlight isn’t for you, come to auditions or contact us at 423-470-2792 or by email at greenevilletheatreguild@gm