

The Parisian Woman
Beau Willimon
Emmie is one of the only Black people living in Paris, Vermont, and she desperately needs a job.
When she is hired at Berry’s, a store off the interstate selling everything from baby carrots to lawnmowers, she begins to understand a new kind of isolation.
Paris is a play about invisibility, being underpaid, and how it feels to work on your feet for ten hours a day.
"An airtight example of humanity."
— TheaterMania
"This is not just about gender identity. It’s about what makes us human."
— The Boston Globe
| Character |
|---|
| Josephine White Australian trans female, fifties, lived as a hypermasculine man for fifty years. Still in active transition, her gender presentation is not polished. |
| Luna African American/Latinx trans female, mid-to-late twenties. She is very comfortable with her sexuality. |
| Sandra White trans female, sixties. A former garage mechanic with the soul of a poet, she underwent an expensive, well-supervisde transition at forty. Her presentation is extremely polished. |
| Tatiana White trans female, mid-forties to mid-fifties, transitioned in her twenties. A performer, she is naturally charming. |
| Dr. Violet White trans female, seventies, transitioned at sixty-eight. A successful gynecologist working with cis and transgender patients. Raised in the UK but has lived in Australia for thirty years. Comfortable in her presentation. |
| Zakia African American trans female, late thirties, began transition at twenty-one. Social worker by day and beauty pageant contestant/drag performer by night. Confident, does not make any attempt to sound overly feminine. |
| Eden White intersex female, forties, British. Assigned male at birth, her history was long concealed from her by her parents. Intelligent, emotional, mercurial, angry, funny, substance abuser, and a lesbian. She is very androgynous. |
American Repertory Theatre
Paris (Booth) is a comedy play written by Paul Lucas and published by Samuel French .
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