Theatre Auditions, Boise
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Molly Sweeney
A Drama written by Brian Friel, Directed by Mike Cronen
Courtesy of Dramatists Play Service, Inc.Audition Dates: Dec. 4, 11 Audition Needs: 2 men (30-60), 1 woman (30-45)
Three points of view about a poignant drama are related by three characters addressing the audience directly. First there is Molly, blind since early infancy, who describes her world before and after an operation to restore some of her sight. Her husband, Frank, who pushed Molly into this operation, relates his view of his wife’s journey into sightedness and his dealings with her doctor. Molly’s once-famous eye surgeon, Mr. Rice, watches both Molly and Frank and reveals his opinion of them along with his own fears in handling the operation. Through it all we see each character’s painful and happy histories, their memories and the events that led them to meet. Their stories interweave on stage, threading in and around each other’s lives, until the unexpected and touching conclusion to this striking tale. “Brian Friel has been recognized as Ireland’s greatest living playwright…his latest work, MOLLY SWEENEY…confirms that Mr. Friel still writes like a dream.” —NY Times
Contains Mild Language
Audition Date/Time
December 12, 2 p.m. & December 13, at 7 p.m. in the greenroom.
Needed
- 3 Men, 3 Women, ages 25-50.
No preparation or appointment
necessary. For more
information,
please contact boiselittletheater@gmail.com.
Play information
Leaving Iowa (General Audiences)
By Tim Clue and Spike
Manton
(presented w/ permission by Dramatic Publishing)
Directed by Andrea Haskett
Performances will be February 25, 26, March 4, 5, 11, & 12, 2011 at 8 p.m. and March 3 & 10, 2011 at 7:30 p.m. and March 6 & 12, 2011 at 2:00 p.m.
Don Browning, a middle-aged writer, returns home and decides to finally take
his father's ashes to his childhood home, as requested. But when Don discovers
Grandma's house is now a grocery store,
he begins traveling across Iowa
searching for a proper resting place for his father. Leaving Iowa is a postcard
to anyone who has ever found himself or herself driving alone on a road,
revisiting fond memories of his or her youth.