Silent Film Actress (speaking role)
Hollywood Murders Speakeasy
About the Job
The Silent Film Actress is an elegant, sharp-witted figure from 1920s Hollywood who tells the story of William Desmond Taylor, one of early Hollywood’s first great unsolved scandals. She comes from the silent era — a world of glamour, studio control, whispered affairs, false names, ruined reputations, and careers that could vanish overnight. She understands better than anyone that Hollywood was never as innocent as it looked. Behind the velvet curtains and soft-focus closeups were secrets, addictions, love letters, jealousies, and studio executives desperate to protect the image of their stars. This character should feel glamorous but knowing — someone who has survived the machinery of old Hollywood and has seen what happens when scandal becomes more dangerous than murder. She speaks directly to the audience with theatrical charm, intelligence, and a touch of bitterness, revealing how Taylor’s death exposed the dark side of the silent film era. The role requires strong storytelling ability, vintage elegance, emotional depth, and the confidence to hold an intimate room. She should be captivating, polished, and slightly haunted — the kind of woman who smiles beautifully while telling you exactly where the bodies are buried. Tone: Elegant, theatrical, witty, mysterious, wounded. Performance Style: Direct address to audience, old-Hollywood glamour, intimate storytelling. Approximate stage time: 15-minute monologue, with light audience interaction. Actor type: Should be comfortable with heightened period style and close-up audience performance.
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