TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - Laurel Mill Playhouse Non Equity Auditions

Posted August 12, 2017
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TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD - Laurel Mill Playhouse

Auditions for To Kill a Mockingbird

Dramatized by Christopher Sergel. From the book by Harper Lee.

Cast size: 12m., 8w. (extras).

Laurel Mill Playhouse

508 Main Street

Laurel MD 20707

Audition Dates

August 19 Saturday at 4pm

Monday August 21 at 7pm

Wednesday August 23 at 7pm.

Show Dates - October 20 through November 12, 2017 Fridays and Saturdays and 2 selected Sundays.

Jen Sizer - Director

Maureen Rogers - Producer

Actors and actresses will be asked to do cold readings from the script.

Questions email
maureencrogers@gmail.com or call
301- 452 - 2557.

SYNOPSIS

Scout, a young girl in a quiet southern town, is about to experience the dramatic events that will affect the rest of her life. She and her brother, Jem, are being raised by their widowed father, Atticus, and by a strongminded housekeeper, Calpurnia. Wide-eyed Scout is fascinated with the sensitively revealed people of her small town, but, from the start, there's a rumble of thunder just under the calm surface of the life here. The black people of the community have a special feeling about Scout's father and she doesn't know why. A few of her white friends are inexplicably hostile and Scout doesn't understand this either. Unpleasant things are shouted and the bewildered girl turns to her father. Atticus, a layer, explains that he's defending a young Negro wrongfully accused of a grave crime. Since this is causing such an upset, Scout wants to know why he's doing it. Because if I didn't, her father replies, I couldn't hold my head up. When she asks why take on such a hopeless fight—the time of the play is 1935—he tells her, Simply because we were licked a hundred years before we started is no reason not to try. He goes on to prepare Scout for the trouble to come. We're fighting our friends. But remember this, no matter how bitter things get, they're still our friends. Things do get bitter—to the point where Atticus props himself in a chair against the cell door of the man he's defending and confronts an angry mob. Horrified Scout projects herself into this confrontation, and her inconvenient presence helps bring back a little sanity. Atticus fights his legal battle with a result that is part defeat, part triumph. As Atticus comes out of the courthouse, the deeply moved town minister tells Scout, Stand up. Your father's passing!

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