An Actor's Guide to “Think not I love him, though I ask for him” - Phoebe monologue - As You Like It
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- Опубліковано 7 жов 2024
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Breaking down the meanings, context and acting choices for Phebe/Phoebe from As You Like It. Very funny Shakespeare monologue for women.
Jump to the end for the full read through to give you an idea of how it all flows together.
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This was incredibly helpful, thank you! Being able to explain the character and what they are feeling in the scene really helps.
THIS is so helpful thank you so so much! Doing this for my Shakespeare class in college and I am so excited to add a bunch of fun actions and comic timing to this.
this helped me so much for my audition for my university’s production! Im so excited to play her and I love coming back to this video for help, thanks so much!
this is such a joyful video to watch !! i love the way you explain the lines the way we’d say it nowadays and explaining context but still having so much fun w it!
Thank you Bec! That’s always my goal - it should be fun!
I'm back! I got Ariel in the Tempest and you totally made me understand this. I rocked my audition!
YEEEEEEESSSSSSS!!! That’s awesome! So happy for you! ❤️❤️❤️❤️👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
😜😊😀
Just discovered your channel, so brilliant and useful!!
Hurray! Glad you’re here 😍
So so so helpful thank you🥰
Thankyou so much this was beyond useful for my drama school audition
This is definitely helping me and I have audition next month
Good luck! Have some fun with it 😊
Thank you so much! I’m doing this monologue for auditions for drama schools. Thanks for helping me out so much!
Hurray! I love this monologue, it’s hilarious. Good luck 😁
This was extremely helpful! Thank you so much!!🥺❤️
Hi! I just wanted to come back to thank you again for this video because I actually used this monologue for some university auditions and got call backs for my two top schools which are extremely hard to get into so thank you so so much I wouldn’t have been able to do it without you🥰
OMG sorry I'm so late to reply, I was just going through my comments and saw this! Congratulations, that is wonderful that you got those callbacks. I hope this year has turned out great for you ❤️
Really good video, thank you!
You’re so welcome! And thank you 😊
You explained it perfectly!!
thank uu!!! totally helped me!
SO helpful! thank you
Hurray! Glad it helped.
You are so awesome! Your videos have helped me so much. Can you do Celia from As You Like It?
Wow this's great!!
this is awesome!!
Thank you Emily! ❤️
please do Rosalind’s ‘And why, I pray you?’ monologue!!
Yes sure! I can do that in the next 2-3 weeks 😊
@@ShakespearewithSarah ahh thank you so much!
I am still looking for a monologue for my audition, I read a lot plays and form differents authors and type of comedy...I am really nervous do you recommend this monologue for a person who is preparing her first monologue in comedy for drama school?
Thanks and congratulations for you beautiful videos.💜✨🎊🎉 new subscriber
Hi Stefania, this monologue is not too bad for a beginner, but it does have lots of very fast thought changes that can be difficult to manage. I always like to say though that what you ENJOY matters. If you enjoy this one, then commit to it and work on the thought changes. But if you don’t really enjoy it, maybe it’s not the right one for you. You might want to look at my most recent video of Olivia, that’s a bit easier and can be very funny ua-cam.com/video/MQQv4vG0F5c/v-deo.html
I also have a video on how to choose a drama school monologue ua-cam.com/video/rDqeU7Rvkmg/v-deo.html
Hope this helps!
Waoooo you are so nice, an inspiration.
Thank you so much for your suggestions, I will check the links.
Thank you again 😍🥰✨💜💖🌌
@@stefaniahidalgo1992 No problem! Also I just thought - have a look at Phebe's other monologue "I would not be thy executioner". That one is less commonly done and it also jumps around less so it's a bit easier if you're new to Shakespeare. ua-cam.com/video/_IAW9p4peNE/v-deo.html
@@ShakespearewithSarah Thank you so much for your help and suggestions , I was checking all the information and the links that you send me and of course the Shakespeare play and finally I decided to follow your advice, This monologue is so funny, I feel so good and I really ENJOY and as you told me this is a really important ingredient to choose a monologue.
I think that all your suggestions are really good, I think that I am able to make the character of Phoebe and in fact I want to try it, It's challenging 😀 and the challenges always help us to grow.
Thanks again and I am happy to have found your channel.
Thanks again, I will return with the result of the audition.
😀💖🎊😍🥰👏🏼💜💗🎇🌌✨
You're an absolute legend for doing all of these; they are so helpful! I think I'm going to use this monologue for a drama school audition, and this vid has been brilliant for my preparation. Just a quick question - do you know if this monologue is very overused in drama school auditions? Thank you!
Yes it is I’m afraid. But if you love it then just do it! Otherwise, have you considered her other monologue- “I would not be thy executioner”? I think that one is just as funny and barely anyone does it.
@@ShakespearewithSarah ooh I have looked at that one, although I haven’t got much time left and I didn’t think I could be as creative with it. But thank you for your help! 🥰
Could you do Tamora's - ' Have I not reason, think you' - Titus Andronicus
Sorry I didn’t spot your comment! Yes I can but it’ll take a couple of weeks because I’m getting so many requests at the moment. ❤️
Hi! I’m late but I’m doing this for an audition, but I’m trying to figure out blocking and I’m stuck.
Oh no, sorry I just saw this! If you still need it, I have a video on movement and gesture. Honestly, you don't need to do blocking for auditions. You just need to understand the impetus. If anything, concentrate on working out your focal points, that's what will help the most. Movement video is here, it has some exercises to try: ua-cam.com/video/gXltJpvl43c/v-deo.html
so if you are performing for an audience can you treat them as Silvius ?
Hmm good question. This is a monologue where she'd probably be speaking sometimes to Silvius and sometimes to the audience, so the main thing is to be clear about who you're speaking to at each point. The simplest way is to imagine Silvius is on stage with you - but if it's for a showcase or something and you want to utilise comic effect, you could choose an audience member as Silvius and speak to them occasionally. This works particularly well if the audience is visible (as in the house lights are on so the audience can see each other) or if they are close enough for you to walk right up to so it's clear that you're speaking to them. You might even want to build in a comic moment where it seems like you're waiting for them to answer you, but then you keep going. You have to be a bit ballsy to do this kind of comic interaction though.
So short answer; yes you can, just make sure you really think through how you're going to do it.
@@ShakespearewithSarah what would be your advice if am performing it in front of the audience
Is this monologue a speech in verse or prose?
Verse!
I don’t understand what’s happening 😰
Hey Holly, is it the context that you don't understand? Like, who she's talking to and why, and that sort of thing, or is it the language (what she's saying during the monologue)?