Best Contemporary Monologues for Men 18-35
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Self-Discovery
Personal Growth
Relationships
Friendship
Masculinity
Love Triangle
Fish Out of Water
Prodigal Son
Mentor
Love at First Sight
Unrequited Love
Hero's Journey
Star-Crossed Lovers
Reluctant Hero
Power of Friendship
Survival
Identity
Love & Relationships
Love
Disappointment
About this ebook
Lawrence Harbison
Lawrence Harbison was in charge of new play acquisitions for Samuel French, Inc., for over thirty years. He edits annual anthologies of best plays by new playwrights and women playwrights, best ten-minute plays, and monologues for men and for women. His column, “On the Aisle with Larry,” is a regular feature at www.applausebooks.com. Harbison was a member of the Drama Desk Nominating Committee for the 2010–2011 and 2011–2012 seasons. He works with individual playwrights to help them develop their plays (see his website: www.playfixer.com). Harbison is the editor of Best Contemporary Monologues for Women, Best Contemporary Monologues for Men, and Best Contemporary Monologues for Kids, also from Applause, who published his book How I Did It: Establishing a Playwriting Career in 2015.
Read more from Lawrence Harbison
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Best Contemporary Monologues for Men 18-35 - Lawrence Harbison
Copyright © 2014 by Lawrence Harbison
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, without written permission, except by a newspaper or magazine reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review.
Published in 2014 by Applause Theatre & Cinema Books
An Imprint of Hal Leonard Corporation
7777 West Bluemound Road
Milwaukee, WI 53213
Trade Book Division Editorial Offices
33 Plymouth St., Montclair, NJ 07042
Permissions can be found in Play Sources and Acknowledgments, which constitutes an extension of this copyright page.
Printed in the United States of America
Book design by John J. Flannery
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Best contemporary monologues for men 18-35 / edited by Lawrence Harbison.
pages cm
ISBN 978-1-4803-6961-0 (pbk.)
1. Monologues. 2. Acting--Auditions. 3. Men--Drama. I. Harbison, Lawrence, editor.
PN2080.B415 2014
812’.6--dc23
2014012575
www.applausebooks.com
Contents
INTRODUCTION
ABOUT SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION
by Sherry Kramer
AEROSOL DREAMS
by Nicole Pandolfo
AFTER
by Chad Beckim
AFTER
by Chad Beckim
AMERICAN DUET
by Mark Leib
APOSIOPESIS
by John P. McEneny
BABY PLAYS THE BANJO
by Kimberly Pau
THE BAD GUYS
by Alena Smith
BARBARY FOX
by Don Nigro
BETHANY
by Laura Marks
BLACKTOP SKY
by Christina Anderson
BROKEN FENCES
by Stephen Simoncic
BROKEN FENCES
by Stephen Simoncic
BRONX BOMBERS
by Eric Simonson
CHARLES WINN SPEAKS
by C.S. Hanson
A COMMON MARTYR
by Michael Weems
COMPLETENESS
by Itamar Moses
CRASHING THE PARTY
by Josh Tobiessen
CROSSING THE LINE
by J. Thalia Cunningham
CROSSING THE LINE
by J. Thalia Cunningham
THE DUNES
by Craig Pospisil
EMOTION MEMORY
by Don Nigro
EMOTION MEMORY
by Don Nigro
THE FALLEN
by Yasmine Beverly Rana
FETCH CLAY, MAKE MAN
by Will Power
FIVE MILE LAKE
by Rachel Bonds
FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY SKETCHES OF YOUR LEFT HAND
by Duncan Pflaster
FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY SKETCHES OF YOUR LEFT HAND
by Duncan Pflaster
GEORGIE GETS A FACELIFT
by Daniel Guyton
GOLDEN AGE
by Terrence McNally
GOLDEN AGE
by Terrence McNally
GOOD TELEVISION
by Rod MacLachlan
GOOD TELEVISION
by Rod MacLachlan
GREEN SOUND
by John Patrick Bray
HONKY
by Greg Kalleres
HOW TO GET INTO BUILDINGS
by Trish Harnetiaux
HOW TO GET INTO BUILDINGS
by Trish Harnetiaux
HOW WATER BEHAVES
by Sherry Kramer
THE HUNTER’S MOON
by Frederick Stroppel
IF YOU START A FIRE (BE PREPARED TO BURN)
by Kevin Kautzman
A KID LIKE JAKE
by Daniel Pearle
LAST FIRST KISS
by Chad Beckim
LEGACIES
by Kermit Frazier
LIVE BROADCAST
by John William Schiffbauer
LOOKING AGAIN
by Charles Evered
LOOKING AGAIN
by Charles Evered
LOVE SICK
by Kristina Poe
MANNING UP
by Sean Christopher Lewis
A MEASURE OF CRUELTY
by Joe Calarco
A MEASURE OF CRUELTY
by Joe Calarco
MIDDLEMEN
by David Jenkins
THE MOTHERF**KER WITH THE HAT
by Stephen Adly Guirgis
THE MOTHERF**KER WITH THE HAT
by Stephen Adly Guirgis
NEVA
by Guillermo Calderón (translation by Andrea Thome)
NIGHTNIGHT
by Lucas Hnath
NORTH TO MAINE
by Brenton Lengel
ONE NIGHT
by Charles Fuller
THE OTHER FELIX
by Reina Hardy
THE OTHER FELIX
by Reina Hardy
PALOMA
by Anne García-Romero
THE PATRON SAINT OF SEA MONSTERS
by Marlane Gomard Meyer
POLLYWOG
by John P. McEneny
PRINCES OF WACO
by Robert Askins
RADIANCE
by Cusi Cram
RAVISHED
by Don Nigro
THE RECOMMENDATION
by Jonathan Caren
THE RECOMMENDATION
by Jonathan Caren
THE RELEASE OF A LIVE PERFORMANCE
by Sherry Kramer
ROSE (from THE HALLWAY TRILOGY)
by Adam Rapp
ROUNDELAY
by R. N. Sandberg
ROUNDELAY
by R. N. Sandberg
A RUSSIAN PLAY
by Don Nigro
SAMUEL J. AND K.
by Mat Smart
A SEAGULL IN THE HAMPTONS
by Emily Mann
SEX CURVE
by Merridith Allen
SEX LIVES OF OUR PARENTS
by Michael Mitnick
SHOW US YER TATS
by Kent Thompson
THE SNOW GEESE
by Sharr White
THE SNOW GEESE
by Sharr White
SOUSEPAW
by Jonathan A. Goldberg
STARS AND BARMEN
by Reina Hardy
THE STEADFAST
by Mat Smart
SUNSET BABY
by Dominique Morisseau
SUNSET BABY
by Dominique Morisseau
THIS IS FICTION
by Megan Hart
THE TIGER AMONG US
by Lauren Yee
THE TOTALITARIANS
by Peter Sinn Nachtrieb
TROPICAL HEAT
by Rich Orloff
TWO-MAN KIDNAPPING RULE
by Joseph Gallo
THE UNAVOIDABLE DISAPPEARANCE OF TOM DURNIN
by Steven Levenson
THE UNAVOIDABLE DISAPPEARANCE OF TOM DURNIN
by Steven Levenson
UNPLUGGED IN
by Brian Pracht
WHEN JANUARY FEELS LIKE SUMMER
by Cori Thomas
WHEN JANUARY FEELS LIKE SUMMER
by Cori Thomas
THE WHY OVERHEAD
by Adam Szymkowicz
THE WHY OVERHEAD
by Adam Szymkowicz
WHY WE LEFT BROOKLYN or THE DINNER PARTY PLAY
by Matt Freeman
WHY WE LEFT BROOKLYN or THE DINNER PARTY PLAY
by Matt Freeman
WILD
by Crystal Skillman
WILD
by Crystal Skillman
WOOF
by Y York
PLAY SOURCES AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Introduction
Here you will find 101 terrific monologues for men, all from recent plays. Most have a present-tense dramatic action, because I believe that these are the most effective, whether in class or for auditions. In the cases where I have included a story monologue, though, it was a great story. Some are comic (laughs), some are dramatic (generally, no laughs). Some are rather short, some are rather long.
Several of the monologues are by playwrights whose work may be familiar to you—writers such as Don Nigro, Itamar Moses, Terrence McNally, Stephen Adly Guirgis, Charles Fuller, Adam Rapp, and Emily Mann. Other monologues are by exciting up-and-comers such as Nicole Pandolfo, C.S. Hanson, Kimberly Pau, J. Thalia Cunningham, Rachel Bonds, Rod MacLachlan, Greg Kalleres, Chad Beckim, Lucas Hnath, Merridith Allen, Reina Hardy, and Dominique Morisseau. All represent the best in contemporary playwriting.
Many of the plays from which these monologues have been culled have been published previously and, hence, are readily available either from the publisher/licensor or from a theatrical bookstore such as the Drama Book Shop in New York. A few of the plays might not be published for a while, in which case you can contact the author or his or her agent to request a copy of the entire text of the play that contains the monologue that suits your fancy. Information on publishers/rights holders may be found in the Play Sources and Acknowledgments section in the back of this anthology.
Break a leg at that audition! Knock ’em dead in class!
Lawrence Harbison
Brooklyn, NY
ABOUT SPONTANEOUS COMBUSTION
Sherry Kramer
Seriocomic
ROB, late 20s to early 30s
ROB is an assistant district attorney—a fine, upstanding, and very frustrated young man. He is in love with AMALIA and she with him, but she won’t sleep with him because she’s scared that if they touch, or even get too close, they will explode into flames. ROB tries to bring his considerable legal skills to bear on the problem, listing possible causes of the irrational fear AMALIA has of loving him.
ROB Let’s face facts, Amalia. If you’re not afraid of me because of the way I look, it follows that you do not love me for the way I look. That’s assuming a cause-and-effect relationship between love, fear, and spontaneous combustion. Because there’s a certain beauty about being loved for your looks. A certain . . . certainty. If someone loves you for your looks, chances are they are not going to change their mind. How could they change their mind about your looks? You look the way you look. They either love you for it or they don’t. And your looks are something you can be sure of, because . . . they are a self-evident fact, anybody can see them, you can see them, too. The further beauty of this system is that if you loved me for my looks but there was this one particular part, or two parts, even, of my looks you didn’t love—say these were the parts that frightened you—I could, without too much trouble, change them. If you loved me for my looks, I’d be crazy not to. But if you don’t love me for my looks, I don’t know where to start. There is a limit, a range, a—certainty—to the sound of my voice, in the color of my eyes. If you loved me for that particular sound, that shade of color—I’d be safe, secure. But there’s no telling what the rest of me—if it’s the rest of me you love—can do. If it’s something inside me—something I can never see and can never know—how will I identify it? How will I ever be able to make it go away? And if what has got you frightened is also what you love—then why should I?
AEROSOL DREAMS
Nicole Pandolfo
Seriocomic
TOMMY, 20s
TOMMY tends bar at a go-go joint in New Jersey. He is talking to B.J., a local cop, who has observed that some of the women in the bar have been eyeing TOMMY. TOMMY is not interested in them, which amazes B.J.
TOMMY I’ve banged so many hot chicks it’s ridiculous. I used to be in a band. MTV2 played our music video like on the hour the whole month of March 2009. We filmed the video ourselves. We did a major tour of New England. Played shows all up in Boston, Providence; even hit up some spots in Connecticut and Long Island. The Jersey Shore scene like mad. Then we started getting the Lower East Side spots, and then we started to really hit people’s radar.
[He reminisces a moment.]
That was so fucking awesome. Riding the wave of like, imminent success. One of the greatest feelings I’ve ever had. I scored so many chicks. So many hot chicks. Mostly NYU chicks in the city, but they’re kinda worldly, you know, harder to impress. The chicks in New England, it was like, these chicks were dying for a taste of something bigger than what they could get at their local Stop and Shop, and to be banging a future potential rock star just set them off like a firecracker. I haven’t gotten blown with that much enthusiasm since I was fifteen. [Beat.] We were . . . we were so close. Came really close to getting a gig with EMI, Sony, Capitol. [Beat.] But fucking Darin. The lead singer. He just, he just couldn’t not be a dick. It was like, he felt like finally, he was getting the recognition that was owed to him or some shit—so instead of being grateful for the opportunities, he was more like, fuck all of you for taking so long to notice.
[Beat.] So he dicked around with Sony; free drinks, free food, and then it was more money or fuck you.
Same story with EMI and Capitol and even some smaller labels. And pretty soon our one video got old, our manager dropped us, and no one was left to finance any new songs or set up any new gigs. [Beat.] And here I am, not playing with a band, tending bar for what will be the third year in a row. So if you wonder why I don’t go ape over all the hot chicks in the bar, it’s because I’ve fucked all the hot chicks already. And they liked me better when I was a rock star.
AFTER
Chad Beckim
Dramatic
WARREN: early 30s, American-Indian
WARREN works at a doggy day care. He is talking to MONTY, who has just gotten out of prison, exonerated for a crime he didn’t do. MONTY is applying for a job.
WARREN My father really is the destroyer of lives, though. That was his nickname for himself when I was a child. I got this record—Shamu and Friends—for my birthday one year? It was all of the characters from SeaWorld singing songs about the sea and about the environment. That was my shit, man—I played it over and over. And one day, my father came home in a bad mood, and I was playing it in my room and he came in and said, Turn it down.
And he closed my door, and I did, and then a few minutes later he came back in and said it again, Turn it down.
And even though I already did. And a few minutes later he came back in and grabbed the record and said, I told you to turn that fucking thing down!
and threw it against the wall and it shattered into a million pieces. And I cried and my mother came in and was like, Why didn’t you just turn it down?
even though I did. And I wouldn’t talk to him for a week, and finally a week later my mom came home with a new record and hands it to me, and it’s Sigmund the Sea Monster, which is not even nearly the same thing, and she’s like, This is from your father and me.
And when I told her that it wasn’t the same one, my father laughed and said, I’m the destroyer of lives.
Because he is.
AFTER
Chad Beckim
Dramatic
MONTY: mid-30s, Latino
MONTY has recently been released from prison, exonerated after serving 17 years for a rape he didn’t commit. He has just heard the news that his beloved dog, Ripley, was hit by a car and killed, and expresses his grief to the bearer of this bad news, CHAP, his friend and former counselor, who has also told him that he is to receive a payment of reparations from the state. LAURA MILLER is the woman whose testimony sent him to prison, who has been trying to contact him since he has been released.
MONTY Ripley was a good dog, man. A good dog. No, a great fucking dog. The best. I taught her to sit. I taught her to stay. I taught her to lie down. I taught her to shake—even though I wasn’t supposed to. I taught her to nudge someone’s hand when they were scared or angry or anxious or just, just shut the fuck down. Me. I did that. The first night in that place with me, she cried. She fucking whined, man. Just scared. Cold and dark and metal and concrete and fucking . . . hell, man.