Bottle Tree Productions has partnered with the Saint Lawrence
Parks Commission to provide theatrical programming pertaining to
the cusp of the Confederation of Canada. We are thrilled to be
able to provide full-time, seasonal employment for five actors
between May and August this year, and we are accepting submissions
until March 25.
Our casting notice is posted in full on our website, here. If you can
rehearse as a Kingston Ontario local starting in mid-May, and are
willing to travel with us to Morrisburg for site-specific,
immersive theatre this may be the job for you.
In a nutshell, we are looking for two males who can play between
18-35 years old, one man and one woman who can play between 35-55
and one female to play between 18-25. You must be aged 18 or over
to submit for these roles.
For more information, and how to submit, read the casting notice
on our website. We look
forward to your submission!
Theatre classes, Productions, Plays, Musicals - the works! Bottle Tree Productions in Kingston, Ontario.
Click the title links to find out class information, performance dates, times, and ticket information.
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
No Small Parts: in Praise of Big Acting
It is challenging to cast a play. There are probably two larger roles (Romeo and Juliet), some supporting roles (Tybalt, Friar Laurence, Nurse), and some smaller roles and bit parts (Peter, Gregory, Sampson), and you are dealing with human beings who are hoping for a 'lead'. Sometimes, actors will equate their self-worth with the size of the roles that they are given. Sometimes, they will be upset that a director clearly did not see the talent that was before her, and they will be unhappy with a 'bit part'.
"There are no small parts - only small actors." Stanislavski knew that the roles were not small - but the acting in them sometimes caused the role to shrink. We like to pair his quote with this rule of thumb, "The smaller the role, the bigger you can be."
While we could not tolerate an entire play where Romeo was as exaggerated as Gregory or Sampson - played well, played BIG - those actors get noticed for the right reasons. They are fresh and different and they bring a different energy to the stage. They can be played as noteworthy.
Take a look at the young man in this video. He has a tiny teeny little role that he didn't even audition for. He has the same role as the other Celts fans, but they do not see their opportunity to play it big. He does.
People remember the performer who fully embraces his role.
"There are no small parts - only small actors." Stanislavski knew that the roles were not small - but the acting in them sometimes caused the role to shrink. We like to pair his quote with this rule of thumb, "The smaller the role, the bigger you can be."
While we could not tolerate an entire play where Romeo was as exaggerated as Gregory or Sampson - played well, played BIG - those actors get noticed for the right reasons. They are fresh and different and they bring a different energy to the stage. They can be played as noteworthy.
Take a look at the young man in this video. He has a tiny teeny little role that he didn't even audition for. He has the same role as the other Celts fans, but they do not see their opportunity to play it big. He does.
People remember the performer who fully embraces his role.
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