A monologue from the screenplay/tv-show by Laurie Nunn. Meanwhile, I endure an incredible torture; even up to this bridal. Just look at what its done to you. My doctor gave me a prescription last week for a drug for nausea,and I just checked it on the internet and it says that it can cause fevers. Between them, the death of a father has interposed so little hatred, that the duty of blood with regret pursues him. I got you into a Remington Party! Antigone 5. This fellow has undone me endlessly;Never was bride so fearfully distressd.The more I think upon th ensuing night,And whom I am to cope with in embracesOne [whos] ennobled both in blood and mind,So clear in understanding, thats my plague now,Before whose judgment will my fault appearLike malefactors crimes before tribunals,There is no hiding ontthe more I diveInto my own distress. . This is flesh and blood, sir,Tis not the figure cut in alabasterKneels at my husband tomb. As big as the mountains. As bare as some December tree I saw them allwalking like saints to church, running to feed the sick, and hypocrites in their hearts! No shame but mine: I must, forsooth, be forcedTo give my hand opposed against my heartUnto a mad-brain rudesby full of spleen;Who wood in haste and means to wed at leisure.I told you, I, he was a frantic fool,Hiding his bitter jests in blunt behavior:And, to be noted for a merry man,Hell woo a thousand, point the day of marriage,Make feasts, invite friends, and proclaim the banns;Yet never means to wed where he hath wood.Now must the world point at poor Katharina,And say, Lo, there is mad Petruchios wife,If it would please him come and marry her! Detroit 11. KIMBERLY AKIMBO 15. Im listening to jazz, swing, jazz, swing, Im getting my posters framed. This penitential robe will keep. The Best Female Monologues From Plays To Memorize - Ranker It might be a good choice if you're looking for something subtle with a run time of about a minute . Sooner would I standThree times to face their battles, shield in hand,Than bear one child. for how many sorrows [lit. A monologue from the play by Rita Wellman. Ive covered my wall with postcards, with posters, with postcards, with posters. But dont spoil your beautiful young life on my account! Hear, you, what are you called, what is your family name? And from that night no woman dare call me wicked any more but I knew my answer. I had no idea. . I was there when Maurice was born. To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday (dramatic), 18. Changing Lanes 8. You make jokes but it is not funny. It wasnt love, I know that(pause) He never even noticed me. What did they change? I'm going to stay with you. Then the second day, you feel wretched, the third delirious, and then suddenly theres no appetite, it shrinks. Time undoes even the mightiest of creatures. 4. Life Is A Dream 3. STILL LIFE 9. As for me, if suffering be an expiation, then at this moment I have expiated all my faults, whatever they have been; for to-night you have made a heart in one who had it not, made it and broken it.But let that pass. nor to-morrows morrow comes this misfortune on me, but even now I shall be named with those that are no more. 20 Dramatic Monologues For Women From TV Shows - Mighty Actor since nothing is more precious than life, but-only what is just, as you yourself will say, since if you have not lost your senses you must love these children no less than I. I completely lost grip of myself and behaved like a fool,for which I shall pay all right, you neednt worry about that. One day you will perish. 2. and seizures and, umm, vision changes. You are their mum. So liveth Loxias,A bloodier bride than ever Helen wasGo I to Agamemnon, Lord most highOf Hellas! Who knows? A monologue from the play by Pierre Corneille. The power-hungry Lady Macbeth will not be ignored. what hast thou done?Nay, sheathe thy sword!Thou must outlive us.Now Ill tell thee the graves to give us:Thou must begin to-morrowThe work of sorrow!The best place give to my mother,Then close at her side my brother,And me a little away,But not too very far, I pray!And here, on my right breast, my baby lay!Nobody else will lie beside me!Ah, within thine arms to hide me,That was a sweet and a gracious bliss,But no more, no more can I attain it!I would force myself on thee and constrain it,And it seems thou repellest my kiss:And yet tis thou, so good, so kind to see! TWO SHADES AWAY Melanie is going through an emotional dilemma and struggles to figure out her road to happiness. said], that the choice of [a warrior of] such rare merit should cost my passion such great anguish? But, torn from you, I would not live with fatherless children, nor have I hoarded up those gifts of youth in which I found delight. When I saw that my heart could not protect itself, I myself gave away that which I did not dare to take; and I put, in place of my self, Chimne in its fetters, and I kindled their passions [lit. To show you honour and-at the cost of my life-that you may still behold the light, I die; and yet I might have lived and wedded any in Thessaly I chose, and dwelt with happiness in a royal home. I was made to go about in boys clothes and take care of the horses and harness and saddle and hunt, and all such things; in fact, all over the estate women servants were taught to do mens work, with the result that the property came near being ruined -and so we became the laughing stock of the countryside. I would have stopped it then out of pity for her, if I could have, if I didnt know that any interference would only make matters worse. From "Death of an Insurance Salesman" ISBN-13: 978-1518665547 "Funny Little Fussy Face" - Monologue - Female (1 minute) From "Death of an Insurance Salesman" ISBN-13: 978 . You think I am weak; you believe that I love you because my life has mingled with yours; you think that I would carry your offspring under my heart, and nourish it with my bloodgive birth to your child and take your name! You havent got the kind of brains that enables a woman to get back. The wife is always so ready to believe it. AN ANGEL OF FORCED LOVE: Brian makes his case for how he thinks he can learn to love his girlfriend. Really Really 7. Short Dramatic Monologues One Minute Monologues from Movies One Minute Monologues from Plays 'Annie Jump and the Library of Heaven' (Annie): "Daddy, I know what I want to do with my life" 'Annie Jump and the Library of Heaven' (Annie): "You are being really, really, really mean" You know, Ive expended so much energy over the years trying to get you to notice me. I was broke, for years. not this, let not this be, I entreat you! My name has never been Violet. If by your art, my dearest father, you havePut the wild waters in this roar, allay them.The sky, it seems, would pour down stinking pitch,But that the sea, mounting to the welkins cheek,Dashes the fire out. 10 Raging Lunatic Monologues DARK PLACE Jeffrey lost his mind but receives a visitation form a friend while cooped up in a mental asylum. Youve built this wind tunnel around you that celebrates your cult. A monologue from the play by William Shakespeare. DETAILS: Comedy, love, unbalanced relationship, male (female), around 2 minutes. fires] in order to extinguish my own. 14 Suspenseful Monologues Tara Meddaugh In order to get along alone I had to stifle every drop of humanity in my being. Eleven (11) Romantic Monologues About Hopeful Love Tara Meddaugh The serfs line will continue in an orphanage, win honors in the gutter and end in prison. RAGE AMONGST YOURSELVES 14. A monologue from the screenplay/tv show by Kay Cannon (based on the autobiographical book by Sophia Amoruso). And yetI honored thee, as the wise will deem, rightly.Never had I been a mother of children,or if a husband had been moldering in death,would I have taken this task upon me in the citys despite.What law, ye ask, is my warrant for that word?The husband lost, another might have been found,and child from another, to replace the first-born;but, father and mother hidden with Hades,no brothers life could ever bloom for me again.Such was the law whereby I held thee first in honor;but Creon deemed me guilty of error therein,and of outrage, ah brother mine!And now he leads me thus, a captive in his hands;no bridal bed, no bridal song hath been mine,no joy of marriage, no portion in the nurture of children; but thus, forlorn of friends, unhappy one,I go living to the vaults of death.And what law of Heaven have I transgressed?Why, hapless one, should I look to the gods anymorewhat ally should I invokewhen by pietyI have earned the name of impious?
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