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This category comprises articles pertaining to monologues, speeches made by one person speaking their thoughts aloud or directly addressing a reader, audience or character Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
When Aziz Ansari hosted Saturday Night Live his stand-up monologue was one that goes down in history as one of the best stand-up monologues. Hosting the day after then-president Donald Trump's ...
"A Cream Cracker Under The Settee" is a dramatic monologue written by Alan Bennett in 1987 for television, as part of his Talking Heads series for the BBC. The series became very popular, moving onto BBC Radio, international theatre, becoming one of the best-selling audio book releases of all time and included as part of both the A-level and ...
These articles are podcasts produced in the format of a monologue with a single host, narrator, or speaker who reads a work of literature, narrates a story, or gives a speech or sermon. The monologue could be about any topic or genre and could be in the form of a scripted reading or a stream of consciousness .
In his “Saturday Night Live” monologue, Ramy Youssef called for a free Palestine and for the release of the hostages taken in the Israel-Hamas War. At the top of his monologue, Youssef joked ...
Eight is the first play written by Ella Hickson. [1] Hickson created eight monologues ready to premier at Edinburgh's Fringe Festival in August 2008. [2] These monologues (15 minutes each) were written with the goal of portraying a state-of-the-nation group portrait.
The Climate Monologues is made up of a varying number of monologues in the voices of real people affected by or working to address climate change.Each of the monologues deals with a topic related to climate change, such as health and mountaintop removal mining, alternative energy, rail freight transport of coal and oil, and citizen activism.
Publicity still for All at Sea (1940). Albert Arthur Powell MBE (30 January 1900 – 26 June 1982), known as Sandy Powell, was an English comedian best known for his radio work of the 1930s and for his catchphrase "Can you hear me, mother?"