LGBTQ comedic monologues that are actually funny

Book - 2016

Specifically for actors auditioning for LGBTQ roles, this book features works by LGBTQ writers and comics (and their allies) who have written and/or performed for Comedy Central, Backstage magazine, NBC, the Huffington Post, the Onion, Second City, E!, and many more.

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Subjects
Genres
Drama
Monologues (Drama)
Published
Milwaukee, WI : Applause Theatre & Cinema Books 2016.
Language
English
Physical Description
vii, 212 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781495025150
  • Introduction
  • Weeping Willows Never Cry
  • Breaking Bad News
  • Dostoyevsky Secret
  • The Slumber Party
  • Poem
  • Thanksbringing
  • Death's a Drag
  • Sugar Coat It
  • Bi the Way
  • Miss USA Choreographer
  • Severance
  • For Manifred
  • Golf
  • I'm Very Anxious, so Here Are My Needs for Your House Party
  • Ethereal Epiphany
  • Fried Chicken
  • A Lifeline
  • Chicks
  • I Need a Dollar
  • Cold as Ice
  • Portrait, of an Angel
  • Britney's#1 Fan
  • A Formal Presentation
  • Fairy Godmother
  • Feeling Suicidal
  • You Need Therapy from Therapy
  • Own That Shit
  • Parting Words
  • The Extra Mile
  • Love Makes You Do the Craziest Things
  • Moving Boxes
  • Liberal Propaganda
  • Chubz
  • Work It Out
  • The Art of Cruising
  • Dining with Eleanor Roosevelt
  • QVC
  • Two Sides of the Same Coin
  • Fake It Till You Make It: A Classroom Monologue
  • The Siren's Lament
  • I Don't Have to Explain What Love Is
  • Obsessed with Odor in the Air
  • The Problem, Is ... (the Starbucks Monologue)
  • Game Over
  • Girls Like Us
  • Hmmm ...
  • When We Were Still Us
  • Judy's Guy Friday
  • If Only
  • The Talk
  • Transition
  • Uber Uber
  • Meat Is Murder
  • Pray the Gay Away
  • Threes a Crowd
  • Contributors
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Choice Review

This book offers 55 contemporary comedic monologues for male and female actors. Written in a variety of styles but all intended for the GLBTQ character, the monologues were contributed by 23 individuals, Gaddis (an EMMY-winning actor) among them: most contribute one entry but several contribute multiple entries. The length of the monologues varies, with delivery time ranging from two to five minutes, and the characters represent a wide variety of people (ages range from 13 to 70) in various circumstances and locations--e.g., a therapist's office, work, bars and coffee shops, church. Offering an interesting collection of comedic LGBTQ monologues, this volume joins Caroline Gage's Monologues and Scenes for Lesbian Actors (1999) and Queer Monologues: Stories of LGBT Youth (2013). What sets the present book apart is the age range it spans. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. --Jo Tomalin, San Francisco State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.