In this playwriting issue, we're going to take a look at how you write the perfect monologue. Exercises galore!
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In life, we don't speak in monologue. There's no point we turn to our mother, father, brother, sister, best friend, girlfriend, boyfriend and start talking about that smell, that memory, that event.
In the theatre, the monologue can be a great gift. It's a gift to the audience to look up on that stage and see inside the thoughts a human being. For the great monologues are private moments, secrets, emotions, heartbreaks, wonders.
Keeping that in mind, it's no easy feat to write a powerful monologue. There's a lot of dreck out there: rambling "do you remember when's" of past tense cobbled together into sentences.
This month we have an exercise-only issue. You can't talk about writing the perfect monologue: you have to write it!
Warm up exercises are extremely useful. Use them at the start of class, as the first writing of the day, as a break when writer's block sets in. They act as a pressure-free way to immerse the writer into the world of the work. Sometimes it's real hard to find the motivation to write, so you have to do something to create a creative atmosphere.
Here are some guidelines:
The story of a monologue must have purpose. There must be a reason for a character to speak at length! Here are some monologue exercises that focus on storytelling. Keep monologues to half a page.
These are very common monologue stories. To illuminate something that is currently happening in the script, a character relates a past story.
The problem with these types of monologues is when a character says, "I remember." "I remember" creates an insular experience; it's something that only happened to the character and it's difficult for the audience to share in the event.
Another problem with past monologues is the use of the past tense. When something has happened in the past, it's over, it's done. Using the present tense is much more alive and active.
If a character tells a story, "I went to the grocery store and THIS JUST HAPPENED," there has to be something besides the base story going on for the audience. There has to be more. The story has to show something: character flaw, a plot point we didn't know, a lie, a romance, and so on.
We'll be using this scenario as a base for most of the upcoming exercises.
Monologues must have a beginning, middle and end. Not only that, there has to be a journey, a change, a shift from the beginning to the end of the monologue. This exercise focuses on creating an extreme change!
Below are three unrelated beginning/endings. Write a monologue to connect each beginning/ending.
Vivid characters create vivid monologues. Will you use all these details in the monologue? Of course not. But the more you know about them, the more specifically you'll be able to write for them.
You're going to create a character. Use this character for as many of the upcoming exercises as possible.
The amount of details you can come up with for a character profile are limitless. Basically, all the small pieces of information that go into making you, should be created for a character.
Decide on the following:
Questions are an excellent tool to take writing to the next level: they are something you can answer! Ask you character questions and see what you learn about them.
Answer the following questions about the character:
Discuss the discrepancies in the answers (and there should be some!). Every person has wants both big and small and often those wants contradict each other. This is what makes them three-dimensional and human.
In every monologue a character must 'need to speak.' Otherwise, why is the monologue there? In every monologue you write, you must determine the need for the character to speak. What drives the character? Is there anything that stands in the way of the character's need to speak?
NOTE: The character doesn't have to successfully get out this need. Maybe they need to speak but in the end they're too afraid, or they change their mind, or there is something in the way of their need. Obstacles are good! Flaws make excellent material.
It is essential that there is emotion in your monologue. And just as there needs to be a journey in the story from the beginning to the end, there needs to be an emotional journey. There's nothing worse than a one note emotional monologue! Variety is the key.
How do we find intense emotion? The answer can often be found in the character's 'need to speak.' What is their need? How do they go for that need? What happens to the character emotionally if they succeed? What happens to the character emotionally if they fail?
All characters should speak in a specific language that illuminates their personality. This is especially important in monologues, where we focus on a character for more than a couple of lines. When creating a language for a character think about the sentence structure: sentence length, contractions, vocabulary, predominant punctuation.
This exercises focuses on the structure, rather than content. For this first exercise do not use the Parade Monologue character.
Now that you've explored a variety of structure styles, go back to your Parade Monologue.
When you write a monologue, all the audience has is the words and their imagination. The writer must be able to create images with their words which will come alive in the audience's mind.
Always remember you are writing drama and not real life. Telling a story about a parade may happen in real life, but in theatre, there must be a journey, a change, a shift, a twist. We should get much more out of the monologue than a story about a parade. There should always be something unexpected to make the audience sit straight up in their seats.
Do not use the Parade Monologue for this exercise.
Do not use the Parade Monologue for this exercise.
An efficient lean monologue is always going to be more effective than a rambling bloated monologue. Monologues do not have to be long! Establish what the character needs to accomplish in the monologue and set out to show this in the least number of sentences possible.
Do not use the Parade Monologue for this exercise.
As I've said before, questions are an excellent tool to move your writing forward. Now that you have the Parade Monologue exactly where you want it, answer these final questions. By this point the answers should come easily!
10 Tips for writing an award winning monologue. Check out this website!
This month we're going to talk about the song 'My Brother Andy.'

'My Brother Andy' is sung by Kate near the end of the First Act and reprised at the end of the Second Act. It's a tough song for the actor: lyrically it's a raw, emotional song and musically she sings alone without any other vocal support.
Kate presents as a happy, positive, chatty, everybody knows her kind of girl. She's the kind of girl that comes across so strongly everyone thinks they know her: she seems happy, so she must be happy, and further to that, she must have the perfect life. Ariane calls her 'Pollyanna' more than once.
Of course, no one has the perfect life. Everyone has a problem or a secret; some hide it better than others. Ariane for example, seems to go out of her way to look miserable. Kate goes out of her way to look happy, despite what she may be hiding.
When another character tells Kate that she's 'lucky' because she doesn't have the same problems as Ariane, we learn, in fact, she just might: 'My Brother Andy' is about Kate's older brother. He's a drug addict who clearly has had a destructive effect on his family:
Before the needle war,
The punch, the kick, the roar.
The lies he told,
The money he stole,
And every time, the very last crime, promises grimed.
That's what he did.
Lyrically I really strove for lean, lean storytelling. I wanted to create images with the fewest words possible. I'm especially proud of 'needle war' and 'Promises grimed.' I think they show exactly what was going on with Andy, in only four words!
This is an important song, because it shows the audience that the 'perfect' girl is dealing with very real problems. It's a moment only between character and audience – no one else in the play knows about Kate's brother.
It also shows that perhaps Kate's not so vastly different from Ariane after all. This idea is specifically shown during the reprise of the song. Here the tables are turned; Ariane is the one who must stop Kate from making a very bad choice. Ariane must be the positive friend.
In earlier drafts of the play, Kate lashed out at Ariane in this moment with a big monologue. But, this is a musical! Any important emotions must be revealed in song. Now, Kate's feelings come out in the reprise with new lyrics.
Everything's a mess,
Faking happiness.
The end of my rope,
I feel no hope.
It's a powerful moment.
My Brother Andy was one of the toughest to get started with because it was one voice on its own.
It needed to be simple melodically but it needed to feel like a song; If it was too simple it would be boring. I liked the idea of the melody continually rising and falling, like Andy's life. I also liked that at the end of verses when Kate says 'that's what he said' the melody doesn't resolve. It's almost a musical question.
When I heard it sung for the first time, it confirmed our ideas that the song needed to be simple. The music informs the emotions: the anger, the sadness the frustration. She doesn't have to cry, the music does it for her.
That's the thing about doing musicals. Songs occur where the emotions move into such a powerful place that they must be sung. The music serves the emotions. You don't have to act songs. It's all there in the music and the lyrics.
We've got new scripts and new writers! Check out these new additions to the Theatrefolk catalogue: A Box of Puppies by Billy Houck, and Upon a Sea of Dreams: A Journey on the Titanic by Kathleen Donnelly.
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