A monologue is a speech made by one person, either in the presence or absence of others. Julius Caesar is a play by William Shakespeare. "Julius Caesar Monologue" is a long speech made by someone in that play. Mark Antony has a long monologue in the play and so does Brutus. Various characters have shorter speeches long enough to consider as monologues: Cassius, Casca, Brutus and Antony again, and even Caesar.
soliloquy
Well, a monologue poem might talk about the narrator or author... but really, a monologue is just a speech spoken by one character in a play. It doesn't really mean that the subject has to be about that character... so it really could be about anything.
You only need permission for your monologue if you're planning on using to make money. What I mean is that you can't use a monologue and perform it and make people pay for a ticket. You don't need permission to use a monologue for trying out for a play or movie though.
its a stand alone piece written specifically as an audition monologue
"For my audition for the play, I prepared a monologue."
It's a monologue from a play by Anthony Minghella.
No they strongly suggest the monologue be from a published play.
It is not from a play. I wrote it as a stand alone monologue :)
monologue
yes its a dramatic play
A monologue is a speech made by one person, either in the presence or absence of others. Julius Caesar is a play by William Shakespeare. "Julius Caesar Monologue" is a long speech made by someone in that play. Mark Antony has a long monologue in the play and so does Brutus. Various characters have shorter speeches long enough to consider as monologues: Cassius, Casca, Brutus and Antony again, and even Caesar.
soliloquy
Yes, "S-M-I-L-E" by Walter Ben Hare is a monologue from a published play called "Hearts Afar." The play was first published in 1919.
Well, a monologue poem might talk about the narrator or author... but really, a monologue is just a speech spoken by one character in a play. It doesn't really mean that the subject has to be about that character... so it really could be about anything.
There is no specific monologue designated for a male character in "Same Time, Next Year" by Bernard Slade, as it is predominantly a two-character play focusing on Doris and George. However, you could explore George's lines throughout the play to find a suitable monologue.
A characters inner thoughts would be a soliloquy, monologue, or aside in a play.