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Monologues by Gregory L. Hudson is a compilation of thirty-two
monologues from some of his most profound stage plays, films and
television pilots. The literary works that these monologues were
chosen from are socially relevant, provocative and reflects the
good and bad aspects of society. Each monologue is different from
the next and provides a unique challenge to actors of all levels.
The characters are as varied as the colors in a rainbow and can be
exceptionally witty like the homeless but optimistic character Lee
Willie in Vagabond Love; or outrageously funny and likeable
character Bojack in No Harm, No Foul; to the down right mean female
correction officer Hurt character who doesn't feel that women
garner respect in Bronx House; or the respected and deceptive
racist bank manager Mr. Wallis whose main objective is to maintain
the status quo of segregation in the deep south in A Piece Of My
Dream. Other fun characters includes, the slick, smooth talking
pastor in A Piece of My Dream (the Movie); the grimy lawyer Mr.
Crooks in The Plaintiff; the lovable homeless character Abigail in
Vagabond Love; the wacky, over the top judge who fancys himself as
the sheriff, mayor, judge and everything else in No Harm, No Foul,
to the zany, flaming gay choreographer in the T.V. pilot Buck Wild
and more. The monologues are different, rich in unique dialogue and
range from one to five minutes in length.
SHOWTIME is the follow-up book to Monologues: Dramatic Monologues
For Actors. It is contains 16 hilarious comedic scenes for two
actors that range from one to ten minutes in length. All of the
scenes are original and are taken from selected plays, films, and
television pilots from Gregory's body of work. Like Monologues,
SHOWTIME was written to fill a much needed void for comedic scenes
for black and minority actors; although this book was written for
actors of all races. There are the many unique characteristics in
this book that separates it from similar books. The characters can
be performs by anyone and there are plenty of scenes for males and
females, males and males, older males and younger males, and so on.
There are scenes that are appropriate for middle school actors all
the way to professional actors. It is the perfect book to produce a
show consisting of short comedic scenes for two actors. Also, it is
the perfect book for directing funny scenes or shows at high
school, colleges, or professional level. SHOWTIME was written to be
a comedic actor and director's dream. The characters in each scene
allow the actors to explore a different character through:
researching, exploring, and understanding the motivation and
objective necessary to bring the character to life. For the
director, it allows him/her to utilize, enhance, broaden, and
develop many of their skills necessary for directing full-scale
productions. As a literary resource for educators, SHOWTIME
includes: a chapter on vernacular, commonly used vernacular terms,
a chapter on copyright infringement, a chapter on stage
terminology, a chapter on film/television terminology and more. It
is an excellent resource to teach: acting, scene study, and
character development. SHOWTIME is original, the characters are
diverse, very funny and lots of fun for acting, directing, or
teaching.
SHOWTIME is the follow-up book to Monologues: Dramatic Monologues
For Actors. It is contains 16 hilarious comedic scenes for two
actors that range from one to ten minutes in length. All of the
scenes are original and are taken from selected plays, films, and
television pilots from Gregory's body of work. Like Monologues,
SHOWTIME was written to fill a much needed void for comedic scenes
for black and minority actors; although this book was written for
actors of all races. There are the many unique characteristics in
this book that separates it from similar books. The characters can
be performs by anyone and there are plenty of scenes for males and
females, males and males, older males and younger males, and so on.
There are scenes that are appropriate for middle school actors all
the way to professional actors. It is the perfect book to produce a
show consisting of short comedic scenes for two actors. Also, it is
the perfect book for directing funny scenes or shows at high
school, colleges, or professional level. SHOWTIME was written to be
a comedic actor and director's dream. The characters in each scene
allow the actors to explore a different character through:
researching, exploring, and understanding the motivation and
objective necessary to bring the character to life. For the
director, it allows him/her to utilize, enhance, broaden, and
develop many of their skills necessary for directing full-scale
productions. As a literary resource for educators, SHOWTIME
includes: a chapter on vernacular, commonly used vernacular terms,
a chapter on copyright infringement, a chapter on stage
terminology, a chapter on film/television terminology and more. It
is an excellent resource to teach: acting, scene study, and
character development. SHOWTIME is original, the characters are
diverse, very funny and lots of fun for acting, directing, or
teaching.
Monologues by Gregory L. Hudson is a compilation of thirty-two
monologues from some of his most profound stage plays, films and
television pilots. The literary works that these monologues were
chosen from are socially relevant, provocative and reflects the
good and bad aspects of society. Each monologue is different from
the next and provides a unique challenge to actors of all levels.
The characters are as varied as the colors in a rainbow and can be
exceptionally witty like the homeless but optimistic character Lee
Willie in Vagabond Love; or outrageously funny and likeable
character Bojack in No Harm, No Foul; to the down right mean female
correction officer Hurt character who doesn't feel that women
garner respect in Bronx House; or the respected and deceptive
racist bank manager Mr. Wallis whose main objective is to maintain
the status quo of segregation in the deep south in A Piece Of My
Dream. Other fun characters includes, the slick, smooth talking
pastor in A Piece of My Dream (the Movie); the grimy lawyer Mr.
Crooks in The Plaintiff; the lovable homeless character Abigail in
Vagabond Love; the wacky, over the top judge who fancys himself as
the sheriff, mayor, judge and everything else in No Harm, No Foul,
to the zany, flaming gay choreographer in the T.V. pilot Buck Wild
and more. The monologues are different, rich in unique dialogue and
range from one to five minutes in length.
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