MY PRONOUNS

by Emma Goldman-Sherman

MONOLOGUE in which a character tries to explain who they are, or why they are,
or maybe even how they are who they are, and/or why.

MONOLOGUE in which a character tries to explain who they are, or why they are,
or maybe even how they are who they are, and/or why.

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MY PRONOUNS

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  • Ross Tedford Kendall: MY PRONOUNS

    Painful in a fantastic way, this play really touches on the emotions and puts you in the place of someone who has struggled with their identity, as well as the people in their lives that may not accept who they are. The specifics of the situation contrast with the idea that this could be anyone born in this world. A play that really speaks to humanity.

    Painful in a fantastic way, this play really touches on the emotions and puts you in the place of someone who has struggled with their identity, as well as the people in their lives that may not accept who they are. The specifics of the situation contrast with the idea that this could be anyone born in this world. A play that really speaks to humanity.

  • Lee R. Lawing: MY PRONOUNS

    Achingly beautiful and powerful. This monologue is pure poetry and is driven by such raw emotion that you can only empathize with the actor and put your own so called flaws in their place. Your so called damage and you become aware that there are so many of us out there who thought of ourselves as not right in our skin and the beauty of this monologue is that it brings those damages to the forefront and allows us all the just breath for once in our lives.

    Achingly beautiful and powerful. This monologue is pure poetry and is driven by such raw emotion that you can only empathize with the actor and put your own so called flaws in their place. Your so called damage and you become aware that there are so many of us out there who thought of ourselves as not right in our skin and the beauty of this monologue is that it brings those damages to the forefront and allows us all the just breath for once in our lives.

  • Jennifer Kokai: MY PRONOUNS

    This is a devastatingly honest piece with beautifully written lines about the enormous difficulty of identity and history. A brave, lovely piece.

    This is a devastatingly honest piece with beautifully written lines about the enormous difficulty of identity and history. A brave, lovely piece.