Instructions
Write a dramatic monologue from the point of view of this fictional Balboa, expressing what he might have said aloud as he stood on the boulder surveying the Pacific Ocean.
Monologue
A monologue is a speech given by a single character in a play. The word is derived from the Greek-"mono" means "one," and "logos" means "speech." Typically, a monologue serves the purpose of having a character speak his or her thoughts aloud so that the audience and/or other characters can understand what the character is thinking.
WRITING A MONOLOGUE
Your character – the narrator
· who is this character?
· what is his/her background?
· what is his/her state of mind?
· why does he/she want to talk?
The character’s story
What is the story he/she has to tell? Such as
· a crime committed by him/her
· a crime committed against him/her
· a betrayal
· a secret
· something that has changed his/her life
Write down five details about this story that the character would think important.
The situation
Create a setting allowing the narrator character to tell that story. Such as,
· a police interrogation room
· an intensive care ward
· a pub
· an airplane
· a hitch-hiker in a car
Write down five details that would help the audience to picture this place.
The listener
To whom is the narrator's character telling his/her story? Such as,
· policeman/psychiatrist
· someone in intensive care/coma
· a sympathetic drinking buddy
· a fellow passenger
· the driver of a car who has picked up a hitch-hiker
Write down five details about this listener that will help the audience to picture him/her or become him/her.
- Divide the story into sections
- The most efficient way to do this in a very short story is by flashback technique:
1. start near the ending
2. go back and take us in stages through the build-up to the ending
3. return to the ending and finish it off with one of these possible endings:
a) a revelation/decision
b) a dilemma
c) a sense of the inevitability that something will happen