Send To
Sierra Repertory Theatre
P.O. BOX 3030
SONORA CA 95370
Email
artistic@sierrarep.org
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Contract
Special Appearance
Special Appear Min $417/wk+lodging+travel stipend
Seeking
Sierra Repertory Theatre is accepting pictures/resumes for the following roles in Arthur Miller's drama ALL MY SONS. See breakdown for details.
Other Dates
Auditions will be held July 19, 2014 (Los Angeles) andJuly 18, 2014 (San Francisco) by appointment.
First rehearsal: August 12, 2014
Performance run: August 29-September 21, 2014
Personnel
Director: SCOTT VIETS
Author: ARTHUR MILLER
Other
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION: Tuesday, July 15, 2014
List the role you are interested in the header of your submission. Please no phone calls to theatre.
www.sierrarep.org
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Breakdown
Auditions will be held July 19, 2014 (Los Angeles) and July 18, 2014 (San Francisco) by appointment. We are unable to hold east coast auditions at this time. However, we do consider and encourage submissions from all over the country.
Sierra Repertory Theatre is accepting pictures/resumes for the following roles in Arthur Miller's ALL MY SONS:
JOE KELLER: Male, 50-65. Genial, uneducated but hard working manufacturer secretly responsible for the death of 21 pilots because he allowed damaged cylinder heads to be shipped from his factory during WWII. American rugged individualism alienated Keller, whose past misdeeds haunt the future of his family.
KATE KELLER:: Female, 48-60. Wife and mother who cannot abandon the memory of her other son, Larry, who was lost in the war. Nervous and suspicious, yet truly charming she has taken on the burden of her husband’s secret, suffering from headaches and nightmares while he is seemingly untroubled. Underneath the “all is well” attitude lies a true force to be reckoned with.
CHRIS KELLER: Male, 30’s. A strong, steady everyman, served in the war and returned a hero, devoted to his parents with ideals and beliefs. Loves Ann and hopes of a new life for both of them. Idolizes his father and believes in his innocence and ultimately is devastated when he discovers the truth. He redirects his discomfort into idealism and an attitude of social awareness that is foreign to his family environment. Others perceive Chris’s idealism as oppressive, asking sacrifices of others that Chris himself does not make as he lives comfortably (if guiltily) on his father’s dime.
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