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A DRAMATISTS PLAY SERVICE TITLE
Full-Length Play, Dramatic Comedy / 6w, 3m
Kimberly Belflower
Five young women – fueled by pop music, optimism and fury – clash with their school, their Georgia town and the stories they’ve been instructed to believe.
Image: 2025 Broadway Production (Julieta Cervantes)
Nominee: Seven 2025 Tony Awards, including Best PlayNominee: Four 2025 Drama Desk Awards, including Outstanding PlayWinner! Three 2025 Dorian Awards, including Outstanding Broadway Play and Outstanding EnsembleWinner! Two 2025 Outer Critics Circle Awards, including Outstanding New Broadway PlayFinalist: 2026 Dramatists Guild Hull-Warriner Award
At a high school in a one-stoplight town in Georgia, a group of lively teens navigate young love, sex ed and a few school scandals while studying a canonical play in English class. As the students delve into the American classic, they begin to question the play’s perspective and the validity of naming its hero. With deep wells of passion and biting humor, this dramatic comedy captures a generation mid-transformation, running on pop music, optimism and fury. Alternating between touching, unsettling and bitingly funny moments, these teens discover that their future is not bound by the past and that they have the power to change it all by writing their own coming-of-age story.
After almost two years as one of the most-produced plays in America, John Proctor Is the Villain made its Broadway debut on 14 April 2025. Directed by Danya Taymor and nominated for seven Tony Awards, the production featured Nihar Duvvuri, Gabriel Ebert, Molly Griggs, Maggie Kuntz, Hagan Oliveras, Morgan Scott, Sadie Sink, Fina Strazza and Amalia Yoo.
Before Broadway, John Proctor Is the Villain premiered in Washington DC at Studio Theatre in May 2022. It then played at multiple college theatre programs across the country – bringing the story nationwide – before having a second regional splash in Boston, MA at Huntington Theatre Company in February 2024.
CARTER SMITH – Teacher, mid-to-late 30s, M. A former golden boy, but one of those rare smart and sensitive ones. Now he’s a great teacher: charming, engaging, goofy. SHELBY HOLCOMB – Student, 16, F. Her brain works faster than her mouth, but her mouth works pretty dang fast. People have always underestimated her. BETH POWELL – Student, 17, F. Nervous and ambitious and enthusiastic. Kind of like if Rory Gilmore and Paris Geller had a baby and raised her in the Deep South. NELL SHAW – Student, 16, F. from Atlanta. Grounded and sincere. Genuinely curious about things. A good judge of character, and a quick study. IVY WATKINS – Student, 17, F. Fiercely loyal and always well-intentioned. From money. Resist the urge to play her as a mean girl. RAELYNN NIX – Student, 16, F. A cheerleader type who’s always lived her life by other people’s standards. She was paying careful attention and keeping score the whole time. MASON ADAMS – Student, 17, M. He’s never really tried before, and he’s surprised by how good it feels. Earnest and affable. LEE TURNER – Student, 16, M. A Carhartt-wearing good ol’ boy. Deeply insecure and without the tools to deal with it. He’s always been good at getting what he wants. BAILEY GALLAGHER – Counselor, 24, F. Sweet in all the ways Southern women are supposed to be. This is her first real job out of college. She’s trying her best.
Notes on Casting: You can have as many other students present for the classroom scenes as you have room and resources for.
Also, rural Georgia doesn’t mean all white. Never has. The case can be made for any of these girls (and Mason) to be a person of color, but certain combinations leads to stereotypes and/or commentary the playwright is not trying to make. As such:
You can have as many other students present for the classroom scenes as you have room and resources for.
A high school in northeast Georgia. Spring semester of junior year, 2018.
Critic’s Pick! “A vital, hilarious, thrilling, urgently necessary new play.” – The New York Times
“A heart-wrenching, guttural, cathartic masterpiece. This is a perfect play for our moment, an urgent response to a time of crisis and a battle cry in the face of a terrifying world.” – Variety
“John Proctor Is the Villain not only serves as a modern day recontextualization of the original play, but also a laugh-out-loud funny and deeply affecting examination of girlhood, feminism, the #MeToo movement, and the unstoppable power of female friendship. It is pure, heartbreaking perfection.” – Entertainment Weekly
“Full of zing, zest and heartbreak, this play hits as hard as it does because at its heart, fighting their way through one hell of a junior year, are the kind of heroes we actually need.” – New York Magazine
John Proctor is the Villain at The Huntington – Story Trailer
John Proctor Is the Villain Is a Broadway Movement
Interview with the Director of John Proctor Is the Villain at the University of Kansas
Sadie Sink in John Proctor is the Villain on Broadway – Official Trailer
John Proctor is the Villain at Studio Theatre – Reviews
Go Inside John Proctor Is The Villain with Kimberly Belflower and Danya Taymor
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