Matureauditions
Eleanor began.
The scent in the hallway of the Crestwood Community Theatre was a specific cocktail: dust, old wood, and the faint, sharp tang of hope. For Eleanor, 67, that last ingredient was the most surprising. She hadn’t felt it in years, not since she’d retired from teaching high school English and, more pointedly, not since Harold had passed. matureauditions
“Well,” the young man said, clearing his throat. “Don’t wait that long again.” The cast list went up the next day. Eleanor didn’t check it. She was in her garden, pruning the roses Harold had planted, telling herself that the audition itself had been enough. The doing of it, the being of Amanda for those three minutes, had been a gift. Eleanor began
Her phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number: “Welcome to the company, Ms. Vance. Amanda is yours. Rehearsals start Tuesday at 7. Don’t be late.” She hadn’t felt it in years, not since