MALE INFORMATION 1.) Please choose one monologue and
Transcription
MALE INFORMATION 1.) Please choose one monologue and
MALE INFORMATION 1.) Please choose one monologue and MEMORIZE it 2.) Please bring a PHOTO 3.) Please sign up for an audition slot on the board in the C-Wing 4.) Please learn the vocal selection closest to your voice part (either tenor or bass) Tenor – One Last Kiss (pickups to letter B to letter D) Bass – Rosie (pickups to letter B to letter F) Male Monologues – 2014 Spring Plays “Call Me Casanova” I’m a babe magnet, a regular Don Juan. I am “The Man.” You can call me Casanova. Mindy Matthews, the finest girl of all at High Grove Prep School, said she’d go out with me. Me, Dan Johnson, your everyday Joe, has just been elevated to legend status. See, Mindy doesn’t go out with just anybody. Heck, she doesn’t even hang out with just anybody. She’s really picky about the company she keeps, so if you’re hanging with Mindy Matthews, you’re really somebody. That’s me, Mr. Somebody. Yesterday I was nothing but the PE field dirt on the bottoms of her very expensive but incredibly beautiful feet. Today though, I’m Dan Johnson, Boy Hero, Man of the Gods. From “Tango” (Slowomir Mrozek) Marry me! That’s the first step. No more promiscuity, no more dolce vita. A real marriage. Not just dropping into city hall between breakfast and lunch. A genuine old-fashioned wedding with an organ playing and bridesmaids marching down the aisle. I’m especially counting on the procession. It will take them by surprise. That’s the whole idea. And, from then on, they won’t have time to think, to organize resistance and spread defeatism. It’s the first shot that counts. Catching them off guard like that, we can force them to break out of conventions they’ll never break out of again. T’s going to be the kind of wedding they’ll have to take part in, and on my terms. I’ll turn them into a bridal procession and at long last my father will be forced to button his fly. What do you say? Everything strictly according to the rules. And at the dame time you’ll be helping all the women in the world. The rebirth of convention will set them free. What used to be the first rule of every encounter between a man and a woman? Conversation. A man couldn’t get what he wanted just by making inarticulate sounds. He couldn’t just grunt, he had to talk. And while he was talking, you – the woman – sat there demurely, sizing your opponent up. You let him talk and he showed his hand. Listening serenely, you drew up your own order of battle. Observing his tactics, you planned your own accordingly. Free to maneuver, you were always in command of the situation. You had time to think before coming to a decision and you could drag things out as long as you wanted. Even if he gnashed his teeth and secretly wished you in the bottom of hell, you knew he would never dare hit you. Up to the very last minute you could move freely, securely, triumphantly. Once you were engaged, you were safe, and even then traditional avenues of escape were open to you. Such were the blessings of conversation! But nowadays? Nowadays a man doesn’t even have to introduce himself – and you will admit it’s handy to know who a man is and what he does for a living. Les Trois Dumas (Charles Smith) The Academy is to open it’s ranks to you? The Academy will never induct you. Victor Hugo, maybe, but you, never. If the Academy were a popularity contest, you would have been inducted years ago. But it is not a popularity contest. The Academy maintains standards of literary tastes, and when it comes to taste, literary or otherwise, you just don’t have any. Your morals are in a shambles. You move from seamstress, to courtesan, to actress without any regard as to the consequences of your liasons. Victor Hugo, on the other hand, is a family man of high morals and unreproachable ethics. Victor Hugo can be seen most any day strolling down the avenue with his wife and children. You don’t have a wife and I doubt if you’re even aware of how many children you have. The way you’ve spread your seed around only God knows how many children you really have. I may have brothers and sisters all over Paris. I’ve made it into a bit of a game, actually, as I walk down the avenue. I always search the eyes of strangers looking for hints of recognition. A sparkle in the eye. A curl in the corner of the lip. Or perhaps a distinctive swagger in the way one walks. Who knows when I may stumble upon the remnants of one of your elicit liasons? Is it your intention to ridicule all of France by suggesting that the academy would open it’s arms to the likes of you? That’s a fiction more outrageous than one of your novels. It will never happen. It will not.