
Bestowed with the odd literary gong – pretentiously casual – Why not just say it? Recipient of awards too numerous to – No – No – All right. Award-winning – is that awful? It’s probably unprofessional not to mention the awards. An adventurer into the heartland of a nation’s cultural – An adventurer into the cultural heartland of a nation’s – It’s all a little too pith helmet. Always ready to plumb the depths of social and political change, he has – he has – convincingly merged an intellectual prowess with literary – no with a literary, no – with a distinctive literary style. George: First and foremost, a communicator. In this monologue he struggles to summarise his ‘life in a couple of paragraphs’ during an interview with Claudia, a young, beautiful journalist.

George is described as being ‘an attractive, youthful man around sixty’. When George leaves her for a woman not much older than their daughter, Honour must adapt to a new life by herself and work out who she is now that she is no longer a wife. Honour has sacrificed her writing career for her husband of 32 years George, an acclaimed journalist. This play is about Honour, a poet, wife and mother who is about sixty (but can be played as in her forties or fifties).
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Here are a few shorter monologues for your consumption from Joanna Murray-Smith’s Honour.
