Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:umm it worked pretty well (with other color requirements) for Lin Manuel Mirnda??
This is why I am never paying to see Hamilton. I might go if I get a super cheap ticket or watch the stream some day, but I am not in a rush
Maybe it isn’t for you at all? You seem to miss the whole concept. Just listen to the sound track and imagine everyone Caucasian.
Yeah maybe it’s not for me. But why can’t the school play be something similar and therefore call for a specific race in a specific role?
Anonymous wrote:Is it a show about racial issues that also calls for other parts that are for other racial groups? Something about this story makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:umm it worked pretty well (with other color requirements) for Lin Manuel Mirnda??
This is why I am never paying to see Hamilton. I might go if I get a super cheap ticket or watch the stream some day, but I am not in a rush
Maybe it isn’t for you at all? You seem to miss the whole concept. Just listen to the sound track and imagine everyone Caucasian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:umm it worked pretty well (with other color requirements) for Lin Manuel Mirnda??
This is why I am never paying to see Hamilton. I might go if I get a super cheap ticket or watch the stream some day, but I am not in a rush
Anonymous wrote:umm it worked pretty well (with other color requirements) for Lin Manuel Mirnda??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. It’s a diverse Public school in Texas. It is clearly mentioned in the audition notes that the role calls for a white person. Again not a historic character. I can’t wrap my head around, why they would explicitly mention that.
Oh, it's in Texas? Well. I mean, that explains it all, doesn't it? Clearly your son's school hasn't seen Bridgerton. Have you considered moving out of the South?
Seriously, Texas was not shocking at all. Also, my friend who teaches in Alabama had a girl freak out when she revealed several actors were black-white biracial like Wentworth Miller from Prison Break. Student actually told her she was a liar. Girl’s mother wrote a letter of complaint that it was inappropriate to talk about during class. This was a social studies class and they were discussing passing when white students assured her they could spot a black person. Afterwards, the girl lost friends, not because she flipped out, but because she was known to have a crush on Wentworth Miller. In their HS, that made her a n-word lover. It was so insane. My friend still teaches there, which is just a crazy to me.
Um, Wentworth is also gay...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. It’s a diverse Public school in Texas. It is clearly mentioned in the audition notes that the role calls for a white person. Again not a historic character. I can’t wrap my head around, why they would explicitly mention that.
Oh, it's in Texas? Well. I mean, that explains it all, doesn't it? Clearly your son's school hasn't seen Bridgerton. Have you considered moving out of the South?
Seriously, Texas was not shocking at all. Also, my friend who teaches in Alabama had a girl freak out when she revealed several actors were black-white biracial like Wentworth Miller from Prison Break. Student actually told her she was a liar. Girl’s mother wrote a letter of complaint that it was inappropriate to talk about during class. This was a social studies class and they were discussing passing when white students assured her they could spot a black person. Afterwards, the girl lost friends, not because she flipped out, but because she was known to have a crush on Wentworth Miller. In their HS, that made her a n-word lover. It was so insane. My friend still teaches there, which is just a crazy to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. It’s a diverse Public school in Texas. It is clearly mentioned in the audition notes that the role calls for a white person. Again not a historic character. I can’t wrap my head around, why they would explicitly mention that.
Oh, it's in Texas? Well. I mean, that explains it all, doesn't it? Clearly your son's school hasn't seen Bridgerton. Have you considered moving out of the South?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it a show about racial issues that also calls for other parts that are for other racial groups? Something about this story makes no sense.
This is the only possible scenario where this could make sense
Anonymous wrote:OP here. It’s a diverse Public school in Texas. It is clearly mentioned in the audition notes that the role calls for a white person. Again not a historic character. I can’t wrap my head around, why they would explicitly mention that.
Anonymous wrote:Is it a show about racial issues that also calls for other parts that are for other racial groups? Something about this story makes no sense.