all right, now I definitely need to hit the gym before I start this play.Ealswythe wrote:Hi Killer Kitty!
See you in the ring! I'll chew you up and spit you out!
Sonia
I'd rather not double up on parts so as to give more people a chance.Ealswythe wrote:Hi Todd!
Is it OK to play two parts in this play? I already have Mrs. Gaylustre, but I would also like to play Angèle. It seems to be a very small part, and I speak French fluently, plus I can speak English with a French accent. I'll give her a completely different voice and personality from Mrs. Gaylustre, so they won't sound anything alike.
Thank you!
Lord Twombley, I believe our children are complete now. And a fine set they are.leanneyauyau wrote:Hi, may I claim Imogen? I'm only a year older than the character (who is 18) so I think my voice would suit
No problem, Todd. Just thought I'd ask.ToddHW wrote:I'd rather not double up on parts so as to give more people a chance.Ealswythe wrote:Hi Todd!
Is it OK to play two parts in this play? I already have Mrs. Gaylustre, but I would also like to play Angèle. It seems to be a very small part, and I speak French fluently, plus I can speak English with a French accent. I'll give her a completely different voice and personality from Mrs. Gaylustre, so they won't sound anything alike.
Thank you!
Sorry, Todd
Ealswythe wrote:Hi Killer Kitty!
See you in the ring! I'll chew you up and spit you out!
not even the Australian outback wildlife is safe from your antics picture tourists coming to that spot in order to find peace and quiet and all of a sudden their night rest is disturbed by some Jewish moneylender practicing his linesSonOfTheExiles wrote:Okay, having plumbed the depths artistically, I now have to do it topographically. Will be incommunicado for at least the next eight hours. But as George Tidd would've said, you can wager your donkey (ie, bet your ass), that I'll be honing my J.L. accent the whole time.
this is fast becoming surrealistic here.ToddHW wrote:I'm picturing all this practicing going on while Chris is riding by on a saddled kangaroo. Holding up a copy of the script (perhaps on his phone - this is 2017) and declaiming his lines in a variety of accents that make it sound like there are 30 people approaching as he hops by....
if I may make a suggestion (of course I may, since you asked ), I understand this "suddenly" differently. It's not as if she shouted this immediately glued to the previous sentence. In fact, quite the contrary I would say.Ealswythe wrote:I have a question. If there's a stage direction, such as "suddenly", is it OK for me to just suddenly say that line, right after my previous line, eliminating the need for spoken stage direction "suddenly"? Here's the text:
“who will bear you from your dilapidated home and plunge you into the vortex of some great city. [Suddenly.] Have you ever been to Paris?”