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Actors Job For Stage Play "The Cherry Orchard"

Staten Island, NY, United States
ID: 252863Exp: 1/5/2024
easy apply
Description:

Audition announcement for "The Cherry Orchard" play. In need of cast. ONLY LOCAL TALENT WILL BE CONSIDERED. See more info below. About the project: After a prolonged absence following the death of her son, noblewoman Lyobov Ranevskaya returns to her estate and finds the cherry orchard on the estate in full bloom. Despite this outward sign of prosperity, her home is on the verge of financial ruin. Along with her brother, Gaev, Lyobov struggles to maintain the façade of gentility as their world crumbles around them. Anton Chekhov’s beloved masterwork is a rich tapestry of the human condition woven into a humorous and haunting tale. With universal themes of societal upheaval, love, loss, grief, envy, and ambition, THE CHERRY ORCHARD remains a relevant and powerful meditation on social change and cultural futility. Rate: There will be a small stipend provided to actors. Additional info: Please prepare a monologue from the play, other Chekhov plays, or similar works. Memorized is preferred, but rather have you on book than not there if interested. This production is interested in having a diverse cast and actors of color and Latinx descent are encouraged to audition. Performances: Friday, March 15 – 8:00pm Saturday, March 16 – 8:00pm Sunday, March 17 – 2:00pm Friday, March 22 – 8:00pm Saturday, March 23 – 8:00pm Sunday, March 24 – 2:00pm If you are interested, please apply.

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13 roles

Madame Lyubov Andreievna RanevskayaFemale36-49 y.o.All ethnicities

A landowner. Ranyevskaya is the linchpin around which the other characters revolve. A commanding and popular figure, she represents the pride of the old aristocracy, now fallen on hard times. Her confused feelings of love for her old home and sorrow at the scene of her son's death, give her an emotional depth that keeps her from devolving into a mere aristocratic grotesque. Most of her humor comes from her inability to understand financial or business matters.

Yermolai Alexeievitch LopakhinMale36-49 y.o.All ethnicities

A merchant. Lopakhin is by far the wealthiest character in the play, but comes from the lowest social class, as his father was a peasant and his grandfather was a serf. This contrast defines his character: he enjoys living the high life, but at the same time is uncomfortably conscious of his low beginnings and obsession with business.

Leonid Andreieveitch GayevMale50-59 y.o.All ethnicities

The brother of Madame Ranevskaya. One of the more obviously comic characters, Gayev is a talkative eccentric. His addiction to billiards (often manifesting itself at times of discomfort) is symbolic of the aristocracy's decadent life of leisure, which renders them impotent in the face of change. Gayev tries hard to save his family and estate, but ultimately, as an aristocrat, either lacks the drive, or doesn't understand the real world mechanisms necessary to realize his goals.

AnyaFemale18-24 y.o.All ethnicities

Lyubov's daughter who journeys to Paris to rescue her mother from her desperate situation. She is a virtuous and strong young woman. She is close to Trofimov and listens to his revolutionary ideas, although she may or may not be taking them in.

VaryaFemale20-29 y.o.All ethnicities

Lyubov's adopted daughter who is the one who manages the estate and keeps everything in order. She is the rock that holds the family together. The reason why Ranevskaya adopted her is never made clear, although she is mentioned to have come from "simple people" (most likely serfs). Varya fantasizes about becoming a nun, though she lacks the financial means to do so. She adores her mother and sister, and frets about money constantly. Her relationship to Lopakhin is a mysterious one;

Peter TrofimovMale20-34 y.o.All ethnicities

A student and Anya's friend. Trofimov is depicted as an "eternal" (in some translations, "wandering") student. An impassioned left-wing political commentator, he represents the rising tide of reformist political opinion in Russia, which struggled to find its place within the authoritarian Czarist autocracy.

Boris Borisovich Simeonov-PishchikMale50-69 y.o.All ethnicities

A landowner and another old aristocrat whose estate has hit hard times. He is constantly discussing new business ventures that may save him and badgering Ranyevskaya for a loan. His character embodies the irony of the aristocracy's position: despite his financial peril, he spends the play relaxing and socializing with the Gayevs.

Charlotta IvanovnaFemale26-39 y.o.All ethnicities

A governess. By far the most eccentric character, Charlotta is the only governess the Gayevs could afford and is a companion for Anya. She is a melancholy figure, raised by a German woman without any real knowledge of who her circus entertainer parents were. She performs card tricks and ventriloquism at the party in the third act and accepts the loss of her station, when the family disbands, with pragmatism.

YepikhodovMale20-39 y.o.All ethnicities

A clerk. The Gayev's estate clerk is another source of comedy. He is unfortunate and clumsy in the extreme. He considers himself to be in love with Dunyasha, whom he has asked to marry him.

DunyashaFemale20-39 y.o.All ethnicities

A housemaid. Like Lopakhin, she is another example of social mobility in Russia at the time. A peasant who is employed as the Gayev's chambermaid, Dunyasha is an attention seeker, making big scenes & dressing as a lady to show herself off. She is in some respects representative of the aristocracy's impotence, as a lowly chambermaid would not in the past have had the freedom to dress like a lady & flirt with the menservants. Although pursued romantically by Yepikhodov, she is in love with Yasha.

YashaMale20-39 y.o.All ethnicities

A young manservant, accompanying Lyubov on her way back from Paris and desperate to return. Yasha represents the new, disaffected Russian generation, who dislike the staid old ways and who will be the footsoldiers of the revolution. A rude, inconsiderate and predatory young man, Yasha, like Dunyasha and Charlotta, is the best the Gayevs can afford. He toys with the girlish affections of Dunyasha, the maid.

FirsMale56-56 y.o.All ethnicities

A manservant, aged 87. An aging eccentric, Firs considers the emancipation of the Russian serfs a disaster, and talks nostalgically of the old days when everybody admired their masters and owners, such as Gayev's parents and grandparents. His senility is a source of much of the play's poignancy, symbolizing the decay of the old order into muttering madness. (age range: 60s - 80s).

A Stranger/The StationmasterMale18-56 y.o.All ethnicities

Will be cast as a duel role: a passer-by who encounters the Gayevs as they laze around on their estate during Act II, and attendee at the party in Act III.