Camden Community Theatre will hold auditions for "To Kill A Mockingbird" on Sept. 14 and 16 at 7 p.m.at the Fine Arts Center of Kershaw County.
Auditions are currently scheduled to take place on Tuesday, Sept. 14 in the Douglas-Reed House; and on Thursday, Sept. 16 in the Dance Studio on the FAC Campus.
Based on Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning 1960 novel, the play was adapted by Christopher Sergel in 1988. Conveying themes of racial injustice, the show is set in Alabama during the Great Depression.
The cast of characters (as described by the playwright) include:
Jean Louise Finch (SCOUT): A young girl who is about to experience the
events that will shape the rest of her life. She should, ideally, be
able to play as young as age 9. Scout is courageous and forthright. If a
question occurs to her, she'll ask it.
Jeremy Finch (JEM): He is a few years older than his sister Scout, and like his sister --
perhaps even more than his sister -- he's reaching out to understand
their unusual and thus not conventionally admirable father. Perhaps the
strongest undercurrent in Jem is the desire to communicate with his
father.
CALPURNIA: Black, proud and capable, she has
raised the motherless Scout and Jem. She's a self educated woman and
she's made quite a good job of it. Her standards are high and her
discipline as applied to Scout and Jem is uncompromising.
DILL: Small, blond and wise beyond his years, he is about the same age as
Jem. Dill is neater and better dressed than his friends. There is an
undercurrent of sophistication to him, but his laugh is sudden and
happy. Obviously, there is a lack in his own home life, and he senses
something in Atticus that's missing from his own family relationship.
MAUDIE
ATKINSON: Younger than Atticus, but of his generation, she's a
lovely sensitive woman. Though belonging to the time and place of this
play, she has a wisdom and compassion that suggests the best instincts
of the South of that period.
WALTER CUNNINGHAM: Cunningham is a hard-up farmer who shares the prejudices of this time
and place, but nevertheless a man who can be reached as a human being.
He also has seeds of leadership, for when his attitude is changed during
the confrontation with Atticus, he takes the others with him.
REVEREND
SYKES: Rev. Sykes is the black minister of the First Purchase
Church, called that because it was paid for with the first money earned
by the freed slaves. He is an imposing man with a strong stage presence.
He should have a strong "minister's" voice.
HECK TATE: Heck
is the town sheriff and a complex man. He does his duty as he sees it,
and enforces the law without favor. The key to this man's actual
feelings is revealed in his final speeches to Atticus, and this attitude
should be an undercurrent to his earlier actions.
STEPHANIE
CRAWFORD: She's a neighborhood gossip, and enjoys it to the hilt.
There's an enthusiasm in her talking over the people of he town that
makes it almost humorous. Sometimes she says things that are petty, but
partly it's because she can't keep herself from stirring things up.
BOO
RADLEY: Arthur Radley is a pale recluse who hasn't been outside his
house in fifteen years. It takes an extraordinary emergency to bring
him out, and once out he's uncertain about how to deal with people, and
with his mission accomplished, he's eager to return to his sanctuary.
MRS.
DUBOSE: She is an old woman -- ill, walking with difficulty, her
pain making her biting, bitter, and angry. However, she's fighting a
secret battle within herself, a battle about which few people are aware,
and her existence has in it a point of importance for Jem and Scout.
TOM
ROBINSON: Robinson is black, handsome and vital, but with a left
hand crippled by a childhood accident and held against his chest. He is
married to Helen and they have young children. He faces up to a false
charge with quiet dignity. There is an undercurrent in him of kindness,
sensitivity and consideration.
JUDGE TAYLOR: The judge
is a wintry man of the South, who does what he can within the context of
his time to see justice done in his court. While he tries to run his
court impartially, his sympathy is with Tom.
MR. GILMER: He
is a public prosecutor who is doing his job in trying to convict Tom.
In many ways his manner is cruel and hurtful. And yet under all this, he
too has unexpressed doubts as to Tom's guilt, and his heart isn't
really in the conviction. Still -- he goes after it, and it's a hard
thing.
BOB EWELL: Ewell is a little bantam-cock of a man
who lives with his family by the town dump. As Harper Lee describes
their situation -- "The town gave them Christmas baskets, welfare money,
and the back of their hand." Bob thinks this trial will make him an
important man, and when Atticus destroys his credibility, Bob's rage and
frustration border on paranoia.
MAYELLA: The daughter of
Bob Ewell, she's a desperately lonely and overworked young woman whose
need for companionship -- any companionship -- has overwhelmed every other
emotion. However, when her effort to reach out explodes in her face,
she fights just as desperately for what she thinks is survival.
For more information, call the Fine Arts Center at 803.425.7676.