Women's monologues! As alwaysread the entire script before ...
[Pages:145]Women
Humorous
Women's monologues!
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All Kiding Aside Courtship House of Blue Lv Killdeer Miss Firecracker Play it again, Sam Stanton's Garage Nothing butNonsense #1 Learning to Drive
Final Dress Rehearsal
Cleopatra, on Suicide
Catholic Schoolgirls #2
Bums--Evelyn 'dentity crisis Greater Tuna Last of Lovers More fun Bowling Primary English Starspangled Girl Nothing but Nonsense #2 Audition is Over
Come Blow Your Horn
Laundry & Bourbon #2
Oh Dad, Poor Dad,
Bums--Mary Diary Adam/Eve Jakes Women-Ma Luv Naomi Living Rm Sister Mary-Sis Sylvia Couple White Chicks Criminal Hearts #2
Bedroom Farce
Plaza Suite--Norma #1
Butterflies are Free
Bus Stop Diviners Jakes Women-Ka Marriage Bet/boo Missing Marisa Slow Dance Vanities Criminal Hearts #1 Triplet, the bride Nice People Dancing Good Country Music2 Plaza Suite--Norma #2 Schoolhouse Rock/Conspiracy Theory
Coupla Chicks Fortinbras Loss of Roses Mary, Mary One Sunday Anton in Show Laundry & Bourbon #1 The Foreigner Jakes Women
Couple White Chicks 2
Delicate Balance
Dramatic
Agnes of God Brdway Bound Crimes the Hrt 1 Father's Day I'm a Stranger Lettice & Lovage Our Town She Was Lost Streetcar #1 The Guest
All the way home Cat on Tin Roof 1 Crimes the Hrt 2 Gamma Rays 1 Independence Little Foxes Outrageous Sign in Sidney Streetcar #2 Teach Me How to Cry #1
Anne of 1000 day Cat on Tin Roof 2 Crucible I Never Sang Dad Invisible Friends Lost in Yonkers Picnic Sister Mary-Di Summertree Rashoman
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Bad Seed Catholic School Dark top Stairs I ought to be in pic Kennedy's Child 'night mother Out of Father's Stage Door Taken in Marriag The Necklace
Brighton Beach Central Pk West Diary Anne Frank Lemon Sky Nice People Danc Seascape Roosters To Be Young Gifted Blk Two for Seesaw She was Lost
Women
A Tantalizing Impromptu Chicago--Roxy Hart Lily Dale Quilters 3
Teach Me How to Cry #2 Don't Look Down Dancing w/Devil--Young woman They Shoot Fat Women (TV) Quilters 4
Seascape Sharks &Dancers Getting Out Laundry & Bourbon #3 Sisterhood of Traveling Pants Nuts
Dog Eat Dog Voices--Kate Haiku--Nell Quilters Annie Oh Dad, Poor Dad
Come Back Little Sheba Voices--Grace Never Been Kissed- movie Quilters 2
Classic Monologues (pre 1904)
CLICK HERE FOR THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
AYLI = As You Like It
MOV = Merchant of Venice
R & J = Romeo & Juliet
MAAN = Much Ado About nothing
MND = A Midsummer's Night Dream
AYLI Ros 3-2 MOV Por 3-2 MNDHel #3 3-2 Hamlet-Ophelia
AYLI Ros 5-2 MOV Por 4-1 MAAN Bea 2-1 Psyche
AYLI 5-4 Ros Ep MND Fairy 2-1 R& J Jul 2-2 The Miser--Frosine
AYLI Phebe 3-5 MND Hel#1/1-1 White Devil Midsummer's
AYLI Phe #2 3-5 MND Hel #2 2-2 Doll's House White Liars
MOV Port 1-1 MND Her #1 3-2 Ideal Husband The Seagull
Monologues not from scripts--appropriate for theatre one
Amanda Brianne Jill Sharon Strange Snow Karen Mr. Universe Only Ketchup Ashley
The Divorce
The First Day
Amy's View Cindy Kate Shirley Draw the Line Look at Yourself Good Behavior Sense of Humor Picture of Perfection
Emily--drama
Driver's License is Piece of Cake
Annie Darlene Love is a Place Sophistry Going to extremes Love Pill Meticulous Person Seductive Ditched Hallmark Holiday (comedy)
Arcata Promise Doll's Life Marcie The Audition Gossip Magnetic Person Mother's Day Betrayal Hello Rick
Real (drama)
Barbara
Betty
Ellen
Felicia
Mary
Rose
Unwedded
Victoria
It's not you
Kill our love life
Making Scenes
Migraines
Modern Day Manners One Moment
Outcast
Delinquent
Alexis
Phone Crazy (comedy)
Confused Teen (humorous)
Wrong and Ready
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Women
AGNES OF GOD by John Pielmeier AGNES
Where do babies come from? Well, I think they come from when an angel lights on their mother's chest and whispers into her ear. That makes good babies start to grow. Bad babies come when a fallen angels squeezes in down there. I don't know where good babies come out. (Silence) And you can't tell the difference except that bad babies cry a lot and make their fathers go away and their mothers get very ill and die sometimes. Mummy wasn't very happy when she died and I think she went to hell because every time I see her she looks like she just stepped out of a hot shower. And I'm never sure if it's her or the Lady who tells me things. They fight over me all the time. The Lady I saw when I was ten. I was lying on the grass looking at the sun and the sun became a cloud and the cloud became the Lady, and she told me she would talk to me and then her feet began to bleed and I saw there were holes in her hands and in her side and I tried to catch the blood as it fell from the sky but I couldn't see any more because my eyes hurt because there were big black spots in from of them. And she tells me things like--right now she's crying, "Marie, Marie!" but I don't know what she means. And she uses me to sing. It's as if she's throwing a big hook under my ribs and tries to pull me up but I can't move because Mummy is holding my feet and all I can do is sing in her voice, it's the Lady's voice, God loves you! (silence) God loves you. (silence) I don't eat because I have been commanded by God. I'm getting fat, there's too much flesh on me. I have to be attractive to God. He hates fat people. It's a sin to be fat. Look at all the statues. They're thin. That's because they're suffering. Suffering is beautiful. I want to be beautiful. Christ said it in the Bible. He said, "Suffer the little children, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven." I want to suffer like a little child. I am a little child, but my body keeps getting bigger. I don't want it to get bigger because then I won't be able to fit in. I won't be able to squeeze into Heaven. I'm too fat! Look at this--I'm a blimp! God blew up the Hindendburg. He'll blow up me. That's what Mummy said. But if I stay little, it won't happen. She says God presents us to our mothers in bundles of eight pounds six ounces. I have to be eight pounds again. I'm being punished. I don't know why. (she holds out her hand, bleeding) It started this morning, and I can't get it to stop. Why me? Why me?
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ALL KIDDING ASIDE by Charles Johnson Scotty
Welcome to the show. My name is Scotty Devlin. I know what you're all thinking... How come she has a boy's name? Actually my real name is Heidi. But I had to change it when I lost my virginity. Everyone named Heidi must change their name when they lose their virginity. That's the rule. Look at these girls over here all rustling through their programs. You're all Heidis, right? Sorry. Am I embarrassed or what? Actually, I lied to you. Scotty is my real name. You see, when I was born the doctor was either far-sighted or a prankster, because as I popped out, I remember it vividly, he declared "it's a boy." In fact, I was a boy until my mother changed my diapers for the first time. Can you imagine their surprise. My mother fainted. My father just stared, "he can't be my boy." I was in stitches.They tried calling me Judy for a while but I just wouldn't respond. Would you have? There's a Heidi nodding her head. Oh, by the way, the part about all Heidis having to change their names when they lose their virginity, I didn't lie about hat. That is a known fact. Yes, it's true. Think about it. How many grown women do you know named Heidi? All the Heidis I know are about 8 years old with long blond braids down their backs. They all wear pink dirndls with little white aprons. And are surrounded by goats. They skip their way into high school, getting A's in Home Ec. Then one day, probably on their 21st birthday- wham- Veronica, Yvonne, Desiree. This is absolutely true, I promise you. You've never heard of a child being called Yvonne, have you? If I had been called Judy, I'd have to change my name when I
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Women
stopped wearing bangs. Have you ever met a seventy year old woman named Judy? It sounds like she should be chewing gum and skipping rope.I'm not making this up. Right before middle age sets in, Cindys become Harriet, or Beatrice, they have that option. All Wendy's die at puberty. Regrettable, but necessary. I sort of like being called Scotty, besides it's better than my middle name- Doug. Look, I gotta run. But before I go, I just want to say that I hope all the guys who are sitting here tonight with a girl named Heidi, wake up tomorrow morning with a Desiree.
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ALL THE WAY HOME by Tad Mosel MARY
Why don't they all leave? You too, Hannah. For I am not going to the funeral. You were right, Hannah. God is coming harder to me now. And Jay, too! I can't seem to find either one of them. Whatever made Jay do it, ever! The night we moved into this house, where did he go! And when he first went to work in Papa's office--! (stopping, remembering more softly) Not when Rufus was born, though. He was very dearly close to me then, very. But other times, he'd feel himself being closed in, watched by superinten-dents, he'd say, and--There was always a special quietness about him afterwards, when he came home, as if he were very far away from where he'd been, but very far away from me, too, keeping his distance, but working his way back. No, I'm not going to the funeral. Do you think he'll rest simply by lowering him into the ground? I won't watch it. How can he rest when he was lost on the very day he died! That's just what I don't know, if he was lost, or drunk or what. I never knew. Not for sure. There were times we all knew about, of course, but there were other times when it wasn't always the whiskey. He'd be gone for a night, or a day, or even two, and I'd know he hadn't' touched a drop. And it wasn't any of the other things that come to a woman's mind, either, in case you're thinking that. Those are easy enemies. It was Market Square. And talking to country people about country secrets that go way back through the mountains. And anyone who'd sing his old songs with him. Or all-night lunch rooms, and even Charlie Chaplin. What's wrong with Charlie, he'd ask me, not because he didn't know what I'd say, but to make me say it. He's so nasty, I'd say, so vulgar, with his nasty little cane, looking up skirts. And Jay would laugh and go off to see Charlie Chaplin and not come home. Where he went, I can't even imagine, for he'd never tell me. It was always easier to put everything down to whiskey. Why couldn't I let him have those things, whatever they were, if they meant something to him? Why can't I let him have them now? I'm glad Ralph didn't tell me if Jay were drunk when he was killed. I must just accept not knowing, mustn't I? I must let Jay have what I don't know. What if he was drunk? What in the world if he was? Did I honestly think that was a gulf. This is a gulf! If he was drunk, Hannah, just if he was, I hope he loved being. Speeding along in the night--singing at the top of his lungs--racing because he loved to go fast--racing to us because he loved us. And for the time, enjoying--revelling in a freedom that was his, that no place or person, that nothing in this world could ever give him or take away from him. Let's hope that's how it was, how he looked death itself in the face. In his strength. That's what we'll put on the gravestone. In his strength.
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ANNE OF THE THOUSAND DAYS Maxwell Anderson Anne
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Women
Will you give back what you stole from the monasteries, and the men executed? Will you resume with Rome? When you do that I*ll take your word again, But you won*t do it. And what you truly want-- you may not know it-- Is a fresh, frail, innocent maid who*ll make you feel fresh and innocent again, and young again; Jane Seymour is the name. It could be anyone. Only virginal and sweet. And when you*ve had her you*ll want someone else. Meanwhile, to get her, you*ll murder if you must. (Lashinq out.) Before you go, perhaps You should hear one thing-- I lied to you. I loved you, but I lied to you! I was untrue! Untrue with many! You may think this is a lie. But is it? Take it to your grave! Believe it! I was untrue! Only what I take to my grave you take to yours! With many! Not with one! Many! I*ve never thought what it was like to die. To become meat that rots. Then food for shrubs, and the long roots of vines. The grape could reach me. I may make him drunk before many years. Some one told me the story of the homely daughter of Sir Thomas More, climbing at night up the trestles of London Bridge where they*d stuck her father*s head on a spike, and hunting among the stinking and bloody heads, of criminals, still she found her father*s head, his beard matted and hard with blood. And climbing down with it, and taking it home. To bury in the garden, perhaps. Would they fIx my head up on London Bridge? No. Even Henry would object to that. I*ve been his queen. He*s kissed my lips. He wouldn*t want it. I*ll lie in lead--or brass. Meat. Dead meat. But if my head were on the Bridge he wouldn*t climb to take it down. Nobody*d climb for me. I could stay and face up the river, and my long hair blow out and tangle round the spikes--and my small neck. Till the sea birds took me, and there was nothing but a wisp of hair and a cup of bone. I must think of something to say when the time comes. If I could say it--with the axe edge toward me, Could I do it? Could I lay my head down-- and smile, and speak? Till the blow comes? They say it*s subtle. It doesn*t hurt. There*s no time. No time. That*s the end of time. Go your way, and I*ll go mine. You to your death, and I to my expiation. For there is such a thing as expiation. It involves dying to live. Death is a thing the coroner can see. I*ll stick by that. A coroner wouldn*t know you died young, Henry. And yet you did.
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ANTON IN SHOW BUSINESS By Jane Martin Casey
So, the casting agent says to me, "You're not right for it; you're a character woman." I die. My blood congeals. Fissures appear. It's the actresses' death knell. I go through menopause in five seconds. All fluids dry. I become the Mojave Desert. Character woman! I, who have screwed every leading man on the East Coast, become their mother. Vertigo. I scream out in a silent, un attending universe: "I'm too young to be a character woman!" and the echo replies, rolling out of infinite space: "They want to see you for the funny aunt at the wedding!" (She ritually disembowels herself) Bad day. I once believed I could be very good. I wanted to be so concentrated, so compressed, so vivid and present and skillful and heartfelt that any- one watching me would literally burst into flame. Combust. I never did it. It never happened. I used to think that theatre could change people's lives. The truth is, two months later the audience can't remember the name of the play. I mean, honestly, has anybody you know to be a sentient being ever walked up to you and said the play changed their life? No, fine, okay. You know who is changed by Chekhov? Me. I finish a play, it's like, "Get me an exorcist!" He eats my life. He chews me up. He spits me out. I'm like bleeding from Chekhov. The audience? Who knows what their deal is? They come from the mists; they return to the mist. They cough, they sneeze, they sleep, they unwrap little hard candies, and then they head for their cars during the curtain call. And once, once I would like to step out and say to the ones who are
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Women
up the aisles while we take the bows, "Hey! Excuse me! Could you show a little mercy because I just left it all out here on the stage and even if you don't have the foggiest notion what it was or what it meant, could you have the common courtesy to leave your goddamn cars in the garage for another forty seconds and give me a little hand for twenty years of work!"
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THE BAD SEED Maxwell Anderson Mrs. Daigle
Thanks. I'm Mrs Daigle. You didn't have to let me in, you know. I'm a little drunk. I guess you never get a little drunk. Now, you, Mrs. Penmark. You've always had plenty. You're a superior person. Oh yes, your father was rich. Rich Richard Bravo. I know. Me, I worked in a beauty parlor. Miss Fern used to come there. She looks down on me. I was that frumpy blonde. Now I've lost my boy and I'm a lush. Everybody knows it. But I know what I'm about just the same. Just the same. May I call you Christine? I'm quite aware that you come from a higher level of society. You prolly made a debut and all that. I always considered Christine such a genteel name. Hortense sounds flat--that's me, Hortense. "My girl, Hortense," that's what hey used to sing at me, "hasn't got much sense. Let's write her name on the privy fence." Children can be nasty, don't you think? You're so attractive Christine. You have such exquisite taste in clothes, but of course you have amples of money to buy `em with. What I came to see you about, I asked Miss Fern how did Claude happen to lose the medal, and she wouldn't tell me a thing. You know more than you're telling. You're a sly one--because of the school. You don't want the school to get a bad name. But you know more than you're telling, Miss Butter-Wouldn't-Melt Fern. There's something funny about the whole thing. I've said so over and over to Mr. Daigle. Rest. Sleep. When you can't sleep at night, you can't sleep in the daylight. I lie and look at the water where he went down. There's something funny about the whole thing, Christine. I heard that your little girl was the last one who saw him alive. Will you ask her about the last few minutes and tell me what she says? Maybe she remembers some little thing. I don't care how small it is! No matter how small! Oh, my poor little Claude! What did they do to you? Somebody took the medal off his shirt, Christine. It couldn't come off by accident. I pinned it on myself, and it had a clasp that locks in place. It was no accident. He was such a lovely, dear little boy. He said I was his sweetheart. He said he was going to marry me when he grew up. I used to laugh and say, "You'll forget me long before then. You'll find a prettier girl, and you'll marry her." And you know what he said then? He said, "No, I won't, because there's not a prettier girl in the whole world than you are." Why do you put your arms around me? You don't give a damn about me. You're a superior person and all that, and I'm--oh, God forgive me! There were those bruises on his hands, and that peculiar crescent-shaped mark on his forehead that the undertaker covered up. He must have bled before he died. That's's what the doctor said. And where's the medal? Who took the medal? I have a right to know what became to the penmanship medal! If I knew, I'd have a good idea what happened to him. I don't; know hwy you took it on yourself to put your arms around me. I'm as good as you are. And Claude was better than your girl. He won the medal, and she didn't--I'm drunk. It's a pleasure to stay drunk when your little boy's been killed.
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Women
BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS by Neil Simon BLANCHE
I'm not going to let you hurt me, Nora. I'm not going to let you tell me that I don't love you or that I haven't tried to give you as much as I gave Laurie... God knows I'm not perfect because enough angry people in this house told me so tonight... but I am not going to be a doormat for all the frustration and unhappiness that you or Aunt Kate or anyone else wants to lay at my feet... I did not create
this Universe. I do not decide who lives and dies, or who's rich or poor or who feels loved and who feels deprived. If you feel cheated that I had a husband who died at thirty-six. And if you keep on feeling that way, you'll end up like me... with something much worse than loneliness or helplessness and that's self-pity. Believe me, there is no leg that's twisted or bent that is more crippling than a
human being who thrives on his own misfortunes... I am sorry, Nora, that you feel unloved and I will do everything I can to change it except apologize for it. I am tired of apologizing. After a while it becomes your life's work and it doesn't bring any money into the house... if it's taken you pain and Aunt Kate's anger to get me to start living again, then God will give me the strength to make it up to you, but 8I will not go back to being that frightened, helpless woman that I created!.. I've already buried someone I love. Now its time to bury someone
I hate.
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BROADWAY BOUND by Neil Simon KATE
What do I want to do? Is that how it works? You have an affair, and I get the choice of forgetting about it or living alone for the rest of my life?...It's so simple for you, isn't it? I am so angry. I am so hurt by your selfishness. You break what was good between us and leave me to pick up the pieces...and still you continue to lie to me. I knew about that woman a year ago. I got a phone call from a friend. I won't even tell you who..."What's going on with you and Jack?" she asks me. "Are you two still together? Who's this woman he's having lunch with every day?" She asks me...I said, "Did you see them together?" ,,She said, "No, but I heard."...I said, "don't believe what you hear. Believe what you see!" and I hung up on her...Did I do good, Jack? Did I defend my husband like a good wife?...A year I lived wit that, hoping to God it wasn't true, and if it was, praying it would go away...and God was good to me. NO more phone calls, no more stories about Jack and his lunch partner...no more wondering why you were coming home late from work even when it wasn't busy season...until this morning. Guess who calls me?...Guess who Jack was having lunch with in the same restaurant twice last week?... Last year' lies don't hold up this year, Jack...This year you have to deal with it
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Women
BUMS by Robert Shaffron
Evelyn
I don*t know when I stopped living my life and my life started living me. (A beat.) My mother was a Christian. A Bible slamming, fire and brimstone, halleluhjah Christian. I remember the day -- the night -- of her conversion. I was sleeping. She tore into the apartment -- I slept on the couch -- and she was out of breath, and her hair was, well, some of it had slipped out from under the elastic band she always had it pulled back in. And she ran around the room turning on all the lamps, and she turned on the light in the little half-kitchen, and she turned on the lights in her bedroom and left the door open so the light came into theliving room where I was sleeping. I sat up, I was scratching and trying to straighten the crumpled sheets under me with my eyes closed the lights were so bright and I asked her, "Ma why are you turning all the lights on like that it hurts my eyes." And she rushed over to me and she pulled me off the couch onto the floor and said, "Evelyn, we*re gonna get down on our knees and pray. In the light. And we*re gonna pray to the Lord that we may always live in the light. The clean, pure holy light that falls down on us from the good Lord in heaven." We*d never prayed in our lives. I didn*t even know what praying was, really. I knew people prayed in church. I*d seen pictures of churches, and they always looked beautiful and scary with the colored lights all coming through the stained glass windows and shiny wood benches and gigantic stone arches, and I wondered how in hell we were gonna pray in our little apartment with the greasy walls and the chipped tile floors and bare lightbulbs -- scary but not beautiful like the churches. (A beat.) All Mother wanted was a man who wouldn*t leave her so she brought God home. And he stayed. Mother went crazy with religion. And as soon as I was old enough, I did the only thing I could think to do. I got pregnant and left home. Amen
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BUMS by Robert Shaffron
Mary
MARY is sitting, writing furiously in the margins of a discarded newspaper. SHE suddenly stops writing, and looks up at the audience, suspicious.)
Whattaya lookin at? Whattaya lookin at?? Bastids always lookin, lookin -- wanna see what Im writin here. Dirty bastids always lookin at me outa the sides a their eyes so they think I dont know theyre lookin. Know what Im writin here? Im writin the Bible. Thats right. Ya read the Bible, aint ya, ya dirty bastid? Well, I wrote it. Only it aint finished. I gotta finish it. Sometimes I aint got enough paper and I gotta write it on the New York Newsday. Only first I gotta cross out all the words thats already printed there so nobody gets the Bible mixed up with the New York Newsday. (A n outburst.) HEY YOU TRYIN TO LOOK UP MY DRESS YOU DIRTY BASTID I KNOW WHAT YOU WAS LOOKIN AT YOU SLIMY SCUMBAG YOU JUST GET YOUR EYES OUTTA THERE AINT NOTHIN UP THERE YOU GOT NO BUSINESS GOOGLIN AT! I KNOW WHAT YOU WAS TRYIN TO LOOK AT SNEAKINPEEKS UP MY DRESS WHILE
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