Annie Character Guide
Oliver Warbucks is the richest man in America, a self-made billionaire who lives in a massive mansion staffed by a small army of servants. He agreed to host an orphan for Christmas as a publicity stunt and ended up falling in love with Annie. He starts the show as stiff, formal, and all business. By the end he is a father.
Warbucks moves with military precision at the start. Straight back, measured steps, hands clasped behind him. He takes up space not through big gestures but through stillness and authority. People move around him, not the other way around. As Annie works on him, the stiffness starts to crack. His gestures become warmer, his posture softens, his steps become less measured. By I Don't Need Anything But You, he is dancing with a child and looking like the happiest man alive. The transformation should be gradual and earned.
A tailored dark suit jacket in charcoal grey or navy over a crisp white dress shirt and tie. The suit should fit well and look expensive. As the show progresses and he warms up, he can lose the jacket and loosen the tie. By the finale, sleeves rolled up, no tie, the formal armour stripped away.
Matching tailored suit trousers with a sharp crease. Dark, well-fitted, formal. These are the trousers of a man who has never worn jeans in his life.
A pocket watch on a chain is a good character prop. He checks it, showing he is always thinking about time and business. A signet ring. Reading glasses he puts on when looking at documents. A red flower for the lapel in the finale when he has softened.
Polished black Oxford shoes or character shoes. They should be immaculate and you should hear them on the stage. Warbucks enters a room and his shoes announce him.
Traditionally bald, which works if you can get a good bald cap or the performer already has short hair. If not, slicked-back hair, very neat and controlled. Not a strand out of place.
The visual journey from buttoned-up businessman to loving father should be readable from the back row. Start with every button done up, tie perfectly knotted, hair immaculate. End with the jacket off, collar open, maybe a bit of Annie's craft glitter on his shirt. The costume tells the story of a man who let someone in.
Best for ages 14-18 or an adult dancer. Warbucks needs a performer who can project authority and then vulnerability. The role does not require flashy dance skills but demands stage presence and the ability to hold a scene through stillness. Cast someone who is physically contrasting to Annie, tall, composed, formal. The emotional arc is everything.
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