Schoolhouse Arts Center (SAC) is announcing auditions for “Harvey”, their first production of the 2018 season, directed by Chris Roberts and assistant directed by Hollie Pryor.
When
Elwood P. Dowd starts to introduce his imaginary friend Harvey, a six and a-half-foot
tall invisible rabbit, to guests at a party, his sister Veta discovers she has
seen as much of his eccentric behavior as she can tolerate. She decides to have
him committed to a sanitarium to spare her daughter, Myrtle Mae, from future
embarrassment. Problems arise when Veta is mistakenly assumed to be on the
verge of lunacy when she explains to doctors that living with Elwood's
hallucination have caused her to see Harvey also! The doctors commit Veta
instead of Elwood, but when the truth comes out, the search is on for Elwood
and his invisible companion. When he arrives at the sanitarium looking for his
lost friend Harvey, Veta realizes that maybe Harvey isn't so bad after all.
Auditions
will consist of cold readings from the script. Please be prepared to list any
conflicts.
Auditions will be held at Schoolhouse Arts Center, 16 Richville
Road, Standish, ME.
Auditions:
Friday, February 9 from 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday, February 10 from 3
p.m. to 5 p.m.
Callbacks:
Sunday February 11 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Performances:
April 13, 14, 15, 20, 21, 22.
CHARACTER
BREAKDOWN
We
are seeking to cast 6 male actors (ages late teens through 50+) and 6 female
actors (late teens through 60+). All roles are available.
Elwood
P. Dowd: the central character of the play, a friendly eccentric who spends his
days and nights in the taverns of his unnamed town. Elwood's best friend is
Harvey, an invisible six and a half-foot tall rabbit.
Veta
Louise Simmons: Elwood's sister who is becoming undone by her brother's
relationship with the invisible Harvey. She decides to have Elwood committed to
a sanitarium to spare the family any further embarrassment. However, the easily
flustered Veta ends up being committed when she confesses that she too feels
that she sometimes “sees” Harvey.
Myrtle
Mae Simmons: Myrtle lives with her
widowed mother Veta in her Uncle Elwood's home. Unmarried and eager to meet
eligible men but believes her uncle’s peculiar behavior is ruining her chances.
Ethel
Chauvenet: An old friend of the family. She is a member of the town's social
circle, which Veta wants her daughter Myrtle Mae to break into.
Betty
Chumley: (Dr. Chumley’s wife) Betty is more concerned with socializing than
with science; when told that her husband has to examine a patient, she tells
him, “Give a little quick diagnosis, Willie - we don't want to be late to the
party.”
Dr.
William B. Chumley: An esteemed psychiatrist and the head of the sanitarium,
Chumley's Rest, to which Veta has Elwood taken. He is a difficult, exacting
man, feared by his subordinates, unwilling to tolerate his mistakes.
Judge
Omar Gaffney: An old family friend of the Dowd’s, a representative of the
people in town who are accustomed to seeing Elwood talking to Harvey and who do
not think anything of it.
Nurse
Ruth Kelly: An attractive young nurse with a crush on the handsome but obtuse
psychiatrist Dr. Sanderson. She is charmed by Elwood's courtly ways.
Dr.
Lyman Sanderson: Young, but a very qualified psychiatrist; Dr. Chumley has
picked him out of the twelve possible assistants that he tried. He is just as
infatuated with Nurse Kelly as she is with him, but he only reveals his concern
indirectly.
Wilson:
The muscle of Chumley’s Rest, a devoted orderly responsible for handling the
patients who will not cooperate voluntarily.
E.
J. Lofgren: Lofgren is the cab driver
who regularly takes patients to and from Chumley’s Rest - and sees the negative
results.
Cateress/Maid:
Works for the Simmons household.
If
you have questions please check our web site at www.schoolhousearts.org or email Directors Chris
Roberts at chrisroberts.me@gmail.com or Hollie Pryor at hollie.pryor29@yahoo.com.
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