Monologue Search Monologues http://www.monologuesearch.com/ This channel provides quotes from the ten most recently monologues added by the members of MonologueSearch.com. en-us The image title goes here http://www.urlofthechannel.com/images/logo.gif http://www.urlofthechannel.com/ Home http://www.monologuesearch.com Monologue Search is a free searchable monologue database and index for actors, teachers, directors, and authors. Forums http://www.monologuesearch.com/index.php?module=phpwsbb&PHPWSBB_MAN_OP=list Monologue Search offers a forum with a wide variety of theatre-related topics. All Articles http://www.monologuesearch.com/index.php?module=article&view=news Members of Monologue Search contribute monologues related to theatre that are published on the front page and are subsequently stored in an archive for future research. Plays On Tap http://www.monologuesearch.com/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=2 Monologue Search is excited to provide exposure for up and coming playwrights by making their plays available on Monologue Search in our Plays On Tap program. Monologues Database http://www.monologuesearch.com/index.php?module=monologues The backbone of Monologue Search! This free database is an ever-growing, ever-changing, compilation of monologues for actors, teachers, directors, and authors. #3902 — Test19 from Test19 by Test19 Test19 http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3902 "Test19" #3901 — Test 18 from Test 18 by Test 18 Test 18 http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3901 "Test 18" #3900 — Test17 from Test17 by Test17 Test17 http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3900 "Test17" #3883 — Joy from Fading Joy by Walter Wykes http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3883 "JOY: (Looking up into the sky.) Hello? Mother Moon? It's me. Joy. Can you hear me? (Pause.) Hello? (Pause.) I know you're up there. I can see you, but ... you're so far away. Why are you so far away? (Pause.) I just want to talk for a few minutes…" #3882 — Anne Frank from The Diary of Anne Frank by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3882 "Anne: (Looking up through the skylight) Look, Peter, the sky. What a lovely day. Aren’t the clouds beautiful? You know what I do when it seems as if I couldn’t stand being cooped up for one more minute? I think myself out? I think myself on a walk in the…" #3881 — Julia from Two Gentlemen of Verona by William Shakespeare http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3881 "O hateful hands, to tear such loving words! Injurious wasps, to feed on such sweet honey And kill the bees that yield it with your stings! I'll kiss each several paper for amends. Look, here is writ 'kind Julia:' unkind Julia! As in revenge of thy ingratitude, I throw thy…" #3880 — Alice from The Unwritten Laws by May Ryan http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3880 "I sometimes think it would be braver just to die, just to let one less mouth , one less ****ed up, attention starved, love hungry person be in this world competing. I never helped anyone, probably stood in their way, probably would kill someone if I felt strongly enough, but…" #3879 — Touchstone from As You Like It by William Shakespeare http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3879 "Now I am he sir. He that must marry this woman. Therefore, you clown, abandon,–which is in the vulgar, leave,–the society,–which in the boorish is company,–of this female,–which in the common is women,–which together is abandon the society of this female; or, clown, thou perishest; or, to thy better understanding…" #3877 — Elizabeth Sawyer from The Witch of Edmonton by Thomas Rowley http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3877 "And why on me? Why should the envious world throw all their scanadalous malice upon me? 'Cause I am poor, deformed and ignorant, and like a bow buckled and bent together by some more strong mischiefs than myself, must I for that be made a common sink for all the…" #3876 — shaylee from stone Cold Dead Serious by Adam Rapp http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3876 "SHAYLEE Wynne, you know about six months ago I had a baby? It cam out dead. It was about the size of a tomato. I put in a McDonald’s bag and threw it in the garbage. I talked about it in group today. How I keep dreamin about it. How…" #3875 — Elizabeth Swann from Hoist The Colors by Pirates http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3875 "You will listen to me. Listen! The Brethren will still be looking here, to us, to the Black Pearl to lead. And what will they see? Frightened bilge rats aboard a daridick ship? No. No they will see free men, and freedom! And what the enemy will see is the…" #3874 — Buttercup from The Princess Bride by William Goldman http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3874 "Buttercup: I love you, I know this must come as something of a surprise, since all I've ever done is scorn you and degrade you and taunt you, but I have loved you for several hours now, and every second, more. I thought an hour ago that I loved you…" #3873 — Mags from Painting Churches by Tina Howe http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3873 "MAGS: It was wintertime, because I noticed I'd left some crayons on my radiator and they'd melted into these beautiful shimmering globs, like spilled jello, trembling and pulsing. Naturally, I wanted to try it myself, so I grabbed a red one and pressed it down against the hissing lid. It…" #3872 — Puck from A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3872 "My mistress with a monster is in love. Near to her close and consecrated bower, While she was in her dull and sleeping hour, A crew of patches, rude mechanicals, That work for bread upon Athenian stalls, Were met together to rehearse a play, Intended for great Theseus' nuptial day…" #3871 — Lisabette from Anton in Show Business by Jane Martin http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3871 "I'm Lisabette Cartwright from La Vernia, Texas. Graduated SMU, but then I taught third grade for two years bein' scared of an actor's life, and Maple Elementary loves me and wants me back anytime, but in a dream the Lord himself reaffirmed my calling so I made my comeback with…" #3870 — Drew from Richard Fisher's Funeral by Kellie Powell http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3870 "Drew attends her estranged father's funeral. When pressured to speak, she resists - at first politely, then firmly, and finally, she erupts with frustration. DREW: You don't get it. I've been afraid of my father all my life. My first memory... is the day my brother spilled a can of…" #3869 — Prince from Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3869 "Rebellious subjects, enemies to peace, Profaners of this neighbour-stained steel,-- Will they not hear? What, ho! you men, you beasts, That quench the fire of your pernicious rage With purple fountains issuing from your veins, On pain of torture, from those bloody hands Throw your mistemper'd weapons to the ground…" #3868 — *none* from Markeim by Robert Louis Stevenson http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3868 "I do not say so, but I look on these things from a different side, and when the life is done my interest falls. The man has lived to serve me, to spread black looks under colour of religion, or to sow tares in the wheat-field, as you do, in…" #3866 — mrs. chan from As the Crow Flies by David Henry Hwang http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3866 "I arrive in America one day, June 16, 1976. Many times, I have come here before, to visit children, but on this day, I arrive to stay. All my friends, all the Chinese in the Philippine, they tell me, "We thoughtyour are stupid when you send all your children to…" #3865 — Alex from Out Loud by Susan Picillo http://www.monologuesearch.com/monologues/3865 "Hi. My name is Alex, I'm sixteen, and I love to play basketball. I'm pretty good... I think. When I'm not shooting hoops, I'm hanging out with my friends, just kicking back, hooking in to what's going on. When I first found out I had cancer, it was in 2002…"