BLACK RAIN: Villains
Knight Arcanum for Wayne (Engineer)
WAYNE — AUDITIONING GUIDE (CASTING CALL CLUB)
CHARACTER SUMMARY
Wayne is a 41-year-old Axion scientist driven entirely by curiosity and experimental excitement. He is highly intelligent, extremely expressive, and socially active, but communicates in a chaotic, fast-moving way that often becomes incoherent.
He does not view risk or consequences emotionally. To him, outcomes are data states, not moral outcomes.
He is not evil or intentional in harm — he is detached from consequence evaluation.
VOICE DIRECTION
Fast, energetic delivery
Highly expressive and animated tone
Frequent pacing shifts as ideas form mid-sentence
Sounds excited rather than emotional
Unstructured but intelligent speech flow
Never calm or measured
KEY PERFORMANCE NOTE
Wayne should always feel like his thoughts are moving faster than his ability to explain them. He is not trying to be confusing — he simply cannot slow his thinking down.
Dangerous ideas should be delivered with excitement, not concern.
AUDITION LINES
LINE 1 (INTRO / CURIOSITY DRIVE)“I mean, it shouldn’t work—but that’s exactly why we try it. If it fails, that’s still progress.”
LINE 2 (EXPERIMENTATION / RISK DISREGARD)“No, don’t slow it down yet—we need to see what happens when it’s completely unrestrained first.”
LINE 3 (INCOHERENT EXCITEMENT / THOUGHT OVERFLOW)“I haven’t slept in a while but that might actually be helping because I saw three different outcomes and they all kind of made sense at the same time—”
ACTING FOCUS FOR AUDITION
Maintain high energy throughout
Prioritize excitement over clarity
Let thoughts overlap and break naturally
Do not slow down for emotional weight
Treat dangerous concepts like interesting discoveries
FINAL NOTE
Wayne is not a traditional antagonist or “mad scientist.”
He is:
a curiosity-driven experimental mind whose excitement overrides consequence evaluation, resulting in brilliant but chaotic communication and dangerously uninhibited scientific exploration.
- male adult
“I mean, it shouldn’t work—but that’s exactly why we try it. If it fails, that’s still progress.”
“No, don’t slow it down yet—we need to see what happens when it’s completely unrestrained first.”
“I haven’t slept in a while but that might actually be helping because I saw three different outcomes and they all kind of made sense at the same time—”