Hi, I know it's an old one, but I really enjoyed this video and would love to ask you about it. I'd like to share it with my local community cinema group in south-west Australia. How can I go about getting your permission? Can I send you my email address? Thanks.
Hey thanks haha! It's from The Importance of Being Earnest, but it's usually a duologue - I adapted it to make it a monologue but haven't got it written down anywhere now annoyingly. Check out the original play, though! It's a classic ☺️
Hey! It's Alice and Wonderland but I'm pretty sure I just found a Chesire Cat monologue on Google. Sorry I can't be much help - this was 8 years ago! 😬 Hope you find it!
There’s some bad Lisa monologues and then there’s the great ones like this set in a kitchen like the original technically it wasn’t a monologue however
Ah, thank you! Lovely to hear from a Wiganner. I was living over there, near the pier, for over a year but recently moved back down south for work. I do miss it!
TOO angry, too much energy, too much laughter. take it down three notches and add a smirk, and it will be smothly and nicely formed. on the pluss- this is giving mild olivia coleman energy. so well done.
You have a beautiful voice, nice words too, even though it's impossible to go wrong with miss Hepburn, the quintessence of kindness and all that is good with humanity.
I've used this moment quite a lot trying to learn Audrey's accent for fun, but man the original lines of her saying "Well look at it. I don't have the right to give him one" are like so fast, but so well spoken that even though in real speed sounds wrong, in 0.5 every word is audible, she truly got her money worth on her elocution lessons. The prettiest spoken english I've ever heard, and that's considering the likes of Sean Connery that was very good at it, but the singsong of Audrey's voice is unfair, I could listen to her for hours without tiring.