I take it you're female, which might make this even more memorable: Shakespeare's Saint Crispin's Day speech from Henry V, Act 4, Scene 3.
2006-10-13 15:38:34
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answer #1
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answered by open4one 7
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I am a professional actress. When you audition, have two monologues to do, one a comedy and one a drama. That's what agents in Hollywood and NY want to hear. Memorize these two and never write your own. You can do from Kennedy's Children, that play is all monologues. Many others, email me and I will help you. I also teach acting.
2006-10-13 18:06:45
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answer #2
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answered by Kitty L 3
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NO! Never ever EVER write your own monologue for an audition. Use one from a play, not a movie. Make sure you know the author, what the play is about, and who your character is in the context of the play. And steer clear of Shakespeare.
I suggest Martha's monologue from Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf. Try to read the play too.
2006-10-13 13:58:22
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answer #3
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answered by Joe 1
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THIS IS IF you cannot find a monologue, but I would do it anyways.
I suggest writing your own. 2 to 5 minutes tops. In drama years ago, this was actually a task every so often, and it was fun to do. This really impresses the directors and Judges. Write it about something similar to the play/musical you are performing.
Good luck!
2006-10-13 13:00:34
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answer #4
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answered by Norah 6
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Always play to your strengths. Pick a monologue that is age appropriate for the role you want, something you relate to and understand well, and something you enjoy. Same for a vocal piece - make sure it fits your age, your range, shows your strengths and a song you like to sing. Break a leg!
2006-10-13 15:34:22
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answer #5
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answered by b9lis 2
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I shop each script from each play I definitely have ever worked on, climate it became on degree or as a techie. they seem to be an stunning source for monologues. examine the audition observe and spot what sort of monologue they are finding for, present day, classic, dramatic or comedic. Then p.c.. a monologue with those charactersics. p.c.. a character you may play (approx your degree age and your gender) you may make a monologue out of a communicate between 2 characters, if between the characters in that scene in basic terms contributes short solutions in the scene (which includes "oh" and "extremely ?") in basic terms decrease out the different characters lines to create a monologue. you additionally can purchase playscripts very much less costly on the internet, you ought to purchase them 2d hand. If I definitely have sufficient observe of an audtion, i attempt to get a replica of the script before hand. I in basic terms finished a coaching consultation with my performing instructor for an upcoming audition. She extremely helped me alot. She directs a great sort of performs, and he or she pronounced that i purchase myself a monologue e book. (i actually checked one out on the libary ) So i don't think of that monologue books are a foul source for monolgues the two. There are a ton of books obtainable, with a lot of monologues, so i'm not apprehensive approximately choosing one a director has heard many cases before. besides, in case you provide it your individual interpretation, and don;'t attempt to mimic the type you will have heard somebody else examine it, they could have in no way heard that monologue finished which includes your INTEPRETATION OF IT.
2016-10-16 04:16:43
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Wow.... I can't believe the bullshite answers you've recieved so far. Do these people actually know ANYTHING about auditioning?
2006-10-13 16:37:36
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answer #7
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answered by Mark 4
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Check out this book. It has a lot of suggestions.
2006-10-14 07:50:06
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answer #8
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answered by Anon O Mus 2
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Look directly at the audience or who your during the scene with.Talk loudly!!!!!!!!!!Always add emotion!!!!!!!!!
2006-10-13 15:07:46
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answer #9
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answered by notanormalgirl123 2
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