A role in Anne of Avonlea

For the callbacks for Anne of Avonlea, I was the only callback for J. A. HARRISON. I read with 3 different people for the part of EMILY HARRISON. Once I as done with that, I was free to leave. I was given the role.

Having left early, I am not aware of who received the other roles.

Kudzu Family Playhouse
presents
Anne of Avonlea

March 22, 2008 – 2:00 PM

March 23, 2008 – 2:00 PM

March 29, 2008 – 2:00 PM

March 30, 2008 – 2:00 PM

April 05, 2008 – 2:00 PM

April 06, 2008 – 2:00 PM

April 12, 2008 – 2:00 PM

April 12, 2008 – 7:30 PM

April 13, 2008 – 2:00 PM

April 19, 2008 – 2:00 PM

April 19, 2008 – 7:30 PM

April 20, 2008 – 2:00 PM

Callback and a Play

I received a call from Candy Spahr on my way home from work on Friday. She offered me a callback for Anne of Avonlea. The callbacks have been moved to Monday at 5 PM. This was interesting because as far as I knew, there were more auditions to be held on Saturday. But as I stated before, I was the only adult male to audition on Thursday night.

On Saturday, I received a call from the Artistic Director, IJ Rosenblum, at Button Theatre offering me a role in Barefoot in the Park. The Auditions were last weekend and I has assumed I did not get a role. The part I auditioned for and which I knew I did not get was for the older eccentric neighbor. The part I was offered, and accepted, was for the TELEPHONE REPAIRMAN. It is a paid role and my first role at a Professional Non-Equity theatre. All I have done before now have been in Community Theatres.

Audition Notice: Anne of Avonlea

Kudzu Family Playhouse
10743 Alpharetta Highway
Brannon Square
Roswell, Georgia 30076

Audition Notice for: Anne of Avonlea Directed by Jeannie Hinds.

Dates and times of audition: January 24 Thursday @ 7pm January 26 Saturday @ 11:30am

Location of audition: 608 Holcomb Bridge Road, Roswell, Ga. 30076

Casting needs: Nine women, ages 14-65 Five men, ages 10-55 Anne of Avonlea is the sequel to Anne of Green Gables. It continues the story of Anne Shirley, an imaginative and headstrong young orphan in 1890s Canada, whose hot temper matches her red hair. Anne of Green Gables told of Anne’s adoption by an elderly brother and sister, Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert, and her childhood adventures in the idyllic village of Avonlea on Prince Edward Island. Anne of Avonlea takes up the story with Anne, now sixteen, soon after Matthew’s death, when Anne has graduated from college. It follows her struggles and adventures as an aspiring writer and English teacher in a private school on the mainland.

Performances: March 22-April 20, 2008 Saturday and Sunday at 2 pm Saturday, April 12 & 19 at 7:30pm Performances will be at 10743 Alpharetta Highway, Roswell, Ga. 30076

Audition requirements: Cold readings from the script

Contact:
Name: Jeannie Hinds
Telephone # 770-594-1020
Fax # 770-594-1318
e-mail: kudzuplayhouse@aol.com
website: www.kudzuplayhouse.org

(Directions) Kudzu (3rd Stage) Playhouse is on the corner of Alpharetta Highway and Holcomb Bridge Road in the Roswell Town Center Mall, 608 Holcomb Bridge Road, Roswell. The theatre is downstairs at the South end of the center hallway next to Whirly Ball.

A Christmas Carol at Kudzu

I went with Rebecca Coffee (Director of A Christmas Story) and her family to see A Christmas Carol at Kudzu Playhouse last night. Now I am not a critic and I do not plan on starting now. I will say it is worth seeing.

The point of this post is not the play itself, but the actors in the play. I did light and sound tech for this show last year and have throughout the year worked with many of the same actors. So after the show, during the greeting the cast, I received hugs from what seemed like, half the cast (more like a quarter of the cast of 40).

It just show me how close cast members can sometime get. It is very nice to be part of a community of actors who enjoy working together.

Alpharetta news paper Review & News

There is an article in a local news paper called Review & News for Alpharetta and Roswell titled:

ACT1 actors in Alpharetta relive holiday memories with ‘A Christmas Story’
November 28, 2007

(SPECIAL/www.northfulton.com)Jay Croft, the narrator and adult Ralphie, holds the famous genuine Red Ryder 200-shot Carbine Action Air Rifle, the object of young Ralph’s (portrayed by Bobby Cookson) dreams in ‘A Christmas Story.’

Actors Mark Olsen and Jay Croft, who perform respectively as “the Old Man” and as the Adult Ralph in ACT1 Theater’s production of “A Christmas Story,” have discovered their own forgotten Christmas memories embedded in the Philip Grecian play.

Based on the popular movie and the memoirs of Jean Shepherd, “A Christmas Story” follows 9-year-old Ralphie Parker’s quest for a genuine Red Ryder 200-shot Carbine Action Air Rifle for Christmas in the early 1940s.

Veteran actor Mark Olsen who performs as Ralphie’s “Old Man” could not resist the audition call.

Since his move to Atlanta two years ago to work at the Georgia Aquarium, the marine biologist has not auditioned once. Most of the shows on his resume from his home city of Medford, Mass. are musicals such as “South Pacific,” “Music Man,” “Oklahoma” and “Anything Goes.” He both tap-danced and sang in “A Chorus Line,” and in “Forty Second Street.”

Olsen earned his degree in Marine Biology from Northeastern University in Boston and worked at the aquarium in Connecticut before taking the job in Atlanta.

In the pecking order of his own family, Olsen was the little brother in a family of four. His real life boyhood memory of Christmas was the adventure of the whole family going together to a snow covered lot to select his very first live Christmas tree when he was 5 and his brother was 8.

“We can all relate to the story of wanting that one special Christmas gift. For me it was a Big Wheel, which, incidentally, I didn’t get,” he said. “The real message of ‘A Christmas Story’ is neither the gift nor the turkey dinner. It is the family.”

Georgia native Jay Croft takes on the introspective role of story-teller and narrator as the adult Ralph. He is on stage for most of the play.

“It is not a traditional role. There is no verbal interaction with other cast members. In fact I am invisible to the other actors as I tell the story of my younger self,” he said.

Croft was born in Macon and is a life long Georgian. He earned his undergraduate degree in anthropology and archeology from Georgia Southern, as well as a graduate degree in recreational administration. During a brief stint as an anthropologist, he helped excavate some historic cemeteries dating back to the 1700s. Croft now works for Northup Grumman in Data Quality Assurance.

Croft’s first show was in 2004 in “Sunshine Boys,” followed by “The Man Who Came to Dinner,” “Beau Geste[SIC],” and numerous shows at Kudzu in Roswell.

“I never had the desire for a Red Ryder BB gun, but when I was 12 years old my grandfather bought me a brand new 22 rifle for Christmas,” remembers Croft. “The sad thing is that while we were on our way to spend Christmas Day with my grandparents, he died. I still have that gun today.”

www.northfulton.com