找回密码
 立即注册

a taste of honey monologue

微信扫码登录

a taste of honey monologue

使用验证码登录

QQ登录

只需一步,快速开始

A Taste Of Honey Monologue -

Actors looking to showcase emotional range, naturalistic pacing, and the ability to find hope in hopelessness.

★★★★☆ (Essential for auditions and acting classes, but requires maturity beyond the character’s age.) a taste of honey monologue

Jo, pregnant and deserted by her Black sailor boyfriend (Jimmie), has been left alone again by her feckless, alcoholic mother, Helen. The monologue typically finds Jo talking to her unborn child or to the absent Jimmie. It’s not a rant; it’s a quiet, devastating inventory of her life: the cold flat, the lack of love, and the terrifying realization that she must become an adult overnight. It’s not a rant; it’s a quiet, devastating

In the canon of 20th-century theatre, few monologues capture the ache of abandonment and the fierce, fragile hope of survival quite like Jo’s speeches in Shelagh Delaney’s A Taste of Honey (1958). While the play is a masterclass in working-class realism, the monologue most often referred to—spoken by the teenage protagonist, Jo, near the end of Act Two or in her solitary moments—is a stunning, compact portrait of disillusionment. It’s not a rant

QQ|Archiver|手机版|小黑屋|肖琪模拟游戏站 ( 沪ICP备2023018581号-5|a taste of honey monologue沪公网安备31011702888952号 )

GMT+8, 2025-12-14 16:23 , Processed in 0.031545 second(s), 9 queries , Redis On.

Powered by Discuz! X3.5

© 2001-2025 Discuz! Team.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表