Asian and Asian American Actors for Play "Bus Stop"
Equity actors for roles in "Bus Stop". See breakdown below. Rate: Off Broadway $999 weekly minimum (Tier 5) Additional info: Audition Lunch 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM Asian/Asian American actors are encouraged to audition. PREPARATION Please prepare a 1-minute monologue in the style of American classic (Inge, Williams, Miller, Hellman, Odets) and bring your headshot and resume stapled together. If you are interested, please apply. Rehearsal Start Date: o/a April 07, 2025 Preview Date: o/a May 08, 2025 Opening Date: May 18, 2025 Closing Date: June 08, 2025 Extension Date: June 22, 2025 EPA Procedures are in effect for this audition. An Equity Monitor will be provided. Equity’s contracts prohibit discrimination. Equity is committed to diversity and encourages all its employers to engage in a policy of equal employment opportunity designed to promote a positive model of inclusion. As such, Equity encourages performers of all ethnicities, gender identities, and ages, as well as performers with disabilities, to attend every audition. Always bring your Equity Membership card to auditions. If you are interested, please apply.
8 roles
(18+ to play 16 y.o.) Elma is a part-time waitress at the diner working under Grace. She is innocent, charming, smart, and longing for a world of beauty found in Shakespeare, literature and poetry. She is at all times hopeful.
Grace runs/owns the diner. She is smart, seasoned, dry, and practical. Underneath it all she is heartbreakingly lonely (as are all Inge characters). She is also sexy but in an experienced, Barbara Stanwyck way.
Will is the local Sheriff. Inge describes him as a huge saturnine man, well over six feet who has a thick black beard and a scar on his forehead--he looks somewhat forbidding. Despite his appearance, Will is a fair and honest man--an upstanding midwesterner.
Lyman is a professor of English. Inge describes him, "a man of medium height, about 50 with a ruddy boyish face that smilingly defies the facts of his rather scholarly glasses and iron-gray hair. He wears an old tweed suit of good quality--his clothes are mussed. He has been drinking.
Carl is the bus driver. Inge describes him as a, "hefty man, loud and hearty, who looks very natty in his uniform." He is a man trying to exist in the world under his crushing loneliness.
Virgil is a cowboy/ ranch hand and works with Bo, serving as an adjunct mentor and parent figure to him. Inge describes him, "a big man corpulent and slow moving, rolls his own cigarettes." He is a tender-hearted wise figure who knows how to read a room. He plays the guitar and sings a little.
Bo is a cowboy who owns a ranch he inherited. He is incredibly naive and tremendously sensitive. He cannot read a room to save his life. Inge describes him, "tall and slim and good-looking in an outdoors way--very unkempt." He is a hopeless and clumsy romantic and madly and obsessively in love with Cherie.
Cherie is a nightclub performer/singer. Per Inge, she is pretty in a fragile, girlish way. Her make-up has been applied under the influence of having seen too many movies. Her prettiness is always apparent though, and she has the appeal of a tender little bird.