Hollywood Hills Neighbor
Hollywood Murders Speakeasy
About the Job
The Hollywood Hills Neighbor is a reflective, emotionally grounded witness to the night Hollywood’s innocence shattered: the 1969 murders at 10050 Cielo Drive, including actress Sharon Tate and four others. This character is not flashy or theatrical in the same way as the others. They speak from memory, as someone who lived nearby and remembers the hills before the fear set in — the music drifting through canyon roads, the open doors, the artists, actors, and dreamers who believed the future was bright. Then, overnight, that feeling changed forever. The Neighbor guides the audience through the Sharon Tate story with humanity and restraint, focusing not just on the crime, but on the lives lost, the atmosphere of 1969 Los Angeles, and the emotional shockwave that moved through Hollywood afterward. This role should feel intimate, sincere, and quietly shaken — someone still trying to understand how a beautiful house in the hills became part of one of the most infamous crimes in American history. The role requires strong emotional storytelling, naturalism, sensitivity, and the ability to hold silence without overplaying the horror. The power should come from restraint. Tone: Reflective, intimate, shaken, compassionate, human. Performance Style: Direct address to audience, memory-driven storytelling, quiet emotional tension. Approximate stage time: 15-minute monologue, with light audience interaction. Actor type: Any gender/ethnicity welcome. Must be comfortable performing in close proximity to guests.
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