1 Minute Monologues For Teens

You have the words, but how do you win the audition?

Sam (Gender-neutral) Setting: A job interview for a local pet store or fast-food place. Tone: Over-enthusiastic, eccentric, endearing.

Avoid pacing back and forth aimlessly. If you move, it should be because the character's internal emotional state forces them to move. 1 Minute Monologues For Teens

If you go to an audition with a three-minute monologue, you will likely get cut off at 45 seconds. Directors are watching hundreds of teens. They want to see if you have it immediately.

Teens often play the emotion instead of the action . If your monologue is sad, don't try to cry. Try to hide the tears. If it’s angry, try to stay calm . The audience leans in when they see you struggling to contain the feeling, not when you explode immediately. You have the words, but how do you win the audition

What is the ? (e.g., school play, agency showcase, film role)

: Shorter scripts highlight basic acting mechanics, including pacing, subtext, and vocal projection. How to Select Your Monologue Avoid pacing back and forth aimlessly

To help me tailor this guide or suggest more specific scripts, what (comedy, drama, classical) or character vibe are you focusing on for your next audition? Share public link

Put two chairs facing each other. You sit in one. Imagine the person you are talking to sits in the other. Every time you deliver a line, look at the empty chair. This builds "intimacy" (eye contact with nothing).

But maybe that’s okay. Maybe you don't have to have the lights on yet. Maybe you are allowed to sit in the dusk for a while. I’ve decided I’m not going to rush. I’m going to let the sky get dark. And when I’m ready? I’ll flip the switch myself."

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