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Monologue, Scene and Script

Theatre Studies
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Monologue, Scene and Script

Theatre Studies
01 May 2026

The Monologue and Complete Script

Three Levels of Text

In Unit 4, your interpretation is grounded in three interconnected texts:

  1. The monologue — the specific speech you will perform
  2. The scene — the broader scene in which the monologue is embedded
  3. The complete script — the full play from which the scene derives

These three levels must all be understood. Working only from the monologue in isolation produces a thin, under-supported interpretation.

KEY TAKEAWAY: The monologue is the tip of an iceberg. What lies beneath — the scene, the script, the character’s full arc — is what gives the performance its depth and authority.

The Monologue

A monologue is an extended speech by a single character. It may be:

  • Addressed to another character (dramatic monologue): in-scene speech, reactive, relational
  • Addressed to the audience (direct address): breaks the fourth wall, creates intimacy or complicity
  • Interior monologue: externalised inner thought, not addressed to anyone in the theatrical world

Understanding the type of monologue shapes fundamental acting and staging choices.

The Scene

The scene provides the monologue’s immediate context:

  • What has just been said or done before the monologue begins?
  • Who else is on stage? What are their responses?
  • What is the physical and emotional environment?
  • What event or exchange provokes this outpouring of speech?

The scene’s context tells you the monologue’s emotional temperature at the moment of ignition.

The Complete Script

Reading the complete script allows you to understand:

What You Learn Why It Matters
Character arc How the character has changed before this moment
Relationships The history between characters that underlies each exchange
Thematic framework What the play as a whole is exploring
Structural position Where this moment sits in the dramatic arc
Playwright’s intentions The complete vision from which your excerpt is drawn

EXAM TIP: When writing about your interpretation, reference the complete script to demonstrate broader textual knowledge. Phrases like “Earlier in the play, when…” or “This moment echoes the opening scene where…” signal that you are working from the full text.

COMMON MISTAKE: Reading only the monologue and the scene. Without the full script, your understanding of the character’s motivation will be incomplete and potentially inaccurate.

Practical Approach

  1. Read the complete script for overall comprehension
  2. Re-read tracking your character’s journey
  3. Analyse the scene for immediate dramatic context
  4. Close-read the monologue for language, rhythm, and subtext
  5. Return to the full script to test and refine your interpretive choices

REMEMBER: Your performance will be assessed as a product of the complete text. Every interpretive choice must be justifiable from the script.

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