21 grams of hydrogen - episode 1: the fall of heaven
Lumis00 for Radio DJ (Lead)
CASTING CALL: Lead Voice Actor (DJ)
21 GRAMS OF HEAVEN — Episode 1: “The Fall of Heaven”
Horror Audio Drama — Volunteer / Unpaid
ABOUT THE PROJECT
21 Grams of Heaven is a slow, intimate, atmospheric horror audio drama told through late-night radio broadcasts during an irreversible metaphysical catastrophe. The tone is grounded, restrained, and deeply human. This is not creepypasta or genre parody. It is cosmic dread delivered through the quiet breakdown of a single person who realises they have doomed the world.
This is a hobbyist, passion-driven project.
While it is being produced with professional standards, it is not expected to generate revenue. If it ever becomes commercially viable in the future, voice actors will receive a good-faith share of profits once expenses are recouped. This should be regarded as a possibility, not a guarantee.
ROLE: The DJ (Lead – Major Emotional Range Required)
Gender: Any
Age: Adult
Accent: Any (natural-sounding)
Vocal Type: Warm, tired, emotionally strained
Tone: Subdued, grief-ridden, trying to hold it together until they can’t
CHARACTER SUMMARY
The DJ is broadcasting to whoever might still be alive after an event they are personally responsible for. They enter the episode already exhausted and hollow, clinging to the microphone because it is the only thing left anchoring them to reality.
Across the script, they move through:
quiet composure
contained dread
guilt
the beginnings of panic
the unraveling of denial
the realisation of the full extent of what they caused
catastrophic grief
and finally, utter despair
By the final scene, the DJ breaks completely: crying uncontrollably, begging their dead mother’s voice not to answer back, pleading with an impossible thing wearing her soul to give her back.
This performance must feel deeply real, not theatrical or exaggerated.
PERFORMANCE REQUIREMENTS
You must be able to portray:
A quiet, tired opening tone — worn down, numb, and barely holding on
Subtle emotional leakage: the kind of trembling voice that tries not to crack
Gradual escalation into panic and guilt
The dawning horror that the DJ cannot undo what they have done
A collapse that feels human, not melodramatic
Full, desperate sobbing, the sound of someone who has realised they opened a door that should never have existed
Final despair that feels emptied out and hopeless
This is a challenging, heavy role. Only audition if you feel comfortable performing deep emotional distress.
AUDITION LINES
(Please record all three. Raw audio preferred.)
Line 1 — Worn down, quiet, trying to stay composed:
“you made it back to this frequency.
Good.
Not everyone does, lately.”
Line 2 — Guilt rising, voice trembling:
“I thought it was just a signal.
Just something strange on the band.
I didn’t know answering it would open a door.”
Line 3 — Final collapse. Full despair. Someone who has doomed the world:
“mother, please.... I didn’t know....
I didn’t know it could wear you like that.
please, I’m begging you
give her back
give her back
please
please!”
The breaking point should sound natural and painfully human. Pauses for breath or crying are expected.
SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
Email auditions to:
[redacted]
Use the subject line:
audition: fall of heaven
Please include:
Your audition lines (WAV/MP3, unprocessed preferred)
Your preferred name
Any previous work or demo reels (optional)
TIMELINE
No fixed deadline for initial auditions.
Once the role is offered, the final recording must be completed within two weeks.
you made it back to this frequency. Good. Not everyone does, lately
thought it was just a signal. Just something strange on the band. I didn’t know answering it would open a door
mother, please.... I didn’t know.... I didn’t know it could wear you like that. please, I’m begging you give her back give her back please please!
Hey
This is slightly emotionally flat, not quite what I'm looking for - though if you can bring out more of a sense of guilt and shame in the first two lines and that sense of "the world is ending and it's my fault, and oh god no, no no no" in the last line it'd work great.
Your voice is good, but just needs more emotion.
The character is someone who's making a confession to the listener about an awful thing he did, and we get the impact via the personal issue of his own mother being used as a puppet by a supernatural being.