![]() Rochelle is speaking to her future mother-in-law, who doesn’t think Rochelle is good enough for her son, Arthur.įor Godsakes, the buns cost ten cents each, Mrs. What’s he going to need a diploma for anyway? He’s not going to use it.Ī monologue from the play by Daniel Goldfarb I still … I don’t want to have anything to do with him and I think they should have just kicked him out. I noticed that after he came back to school … and he couldn’t play anymore …he never wore his jacket again.Īnd …it’s like, since then, I don’t know. He always wore it, like he was just a little more proud of it than anybody else. Tony Miller still wears his even though he quit playing football, but Marc always wore his jacket. I thought it was kind of weird, but … I mean, we all wear our team jackets, you know? It’s kinda like two Marcs: Marc before he got hurt and Marc after he got hurt.īefore he got hurt, he was okay, and you’d get close enough and you’d deal with it ‘cause we were all on teams, and he was kind of there, but after he got hurt… But maybe there is a gun and he’d have done it, too. Maybe there wasn’t a gun and they were just gonna take that kid’s money. What’s next, Mom? What does he have to do to make you see that he’s no good? You know he still hangs out with those idiots… with Jim and Chris. ![]() Marc, who is mentioned in the monologue, was once a jock and has changed drastically after a severe motorcycle accident. PRAYING FOR RAINĪ monologue from the play by Robert Lewis Vaughan The Laramie Project 24 Of The Best Dramatic Monologues For Teenage Females From Published Plays 1. Everything Will Be Different: A Brief History Of Helen Of Troy 24 Of The Best Dramatic Monologues For Teenage Females From Published Plays.
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