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"The Confessor" is a book on tape composed of 24 album chapters on 12 audio cassettes. With each album serving as a chapter, over 24 musicians and experimental sound artists created music for the unconscious epic poem by Bryan Lewis Saunders. "The Confessor" was created from app. 30 nights of somniloquy and dream descriptions.
30 Seconds was created by Calie Esterhuyse but its origin seems to be collaborative. In 1996, while on holiday in Gordon’s Bay, tennis player Marius Barnard came up with a game for the 20 people present. Each person had to write a name on a piece of paper and place it in a bowl. The papers were shuffled and guests were paired as partners.
He originated and popularised many songs, sketches and monologues in his music hall acts and made both sound [2] and visual [3] recordings of some of his work shortly before he died. Although brief, Leno's recording period (1901–1903) produced around thirty recordings on one-sided shellac discs using the early acoustic recording process. [ 2 ]
Ane Log: Moyako Nēsan no Tomaranai Monologue (Japanese: 姉ログ 靄子姉さんの止まらないモノローグ, Hepburn: Ane Rogu Moyako Nēsan no Tomaranai Monorōgu, lit. "Sister's Log: Moyako's Never-ending Monologue") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kenji Taguchi.
Eight is the first play written by Ella Hickson. [1] Hickson created eight monologues ready to premier at Edinburgh's Fringe Festival in August 2008. [2] These monologues (15 minutes each) were written with the goal of portraying a state-of-the-nation group portrait.
Lucky is most famous for his speech in Act I. The monologue is prompted by Pozzo when the tramps ask him to make Lucky "think". He asks them to give him his hat: when Lucky wears his hat, he is capable of thinking. The monologue is long, rambling word salad, and does not have any apparent end; it is only stopped when Vladimir takes the hat back.
The Climate Monologues is made up of a varying number of monologues in the voices of real people affected by or working to address climate change.Each of the monologues deals with a topic related to climate change, such as health and mountaintop removal mining, alternative energy, rail freight transport of coal and oil, and citizen activism.
Hitler delivered most of the "Table Talk" monologues at the Wolfsschanze (above) [1] and at Werwolf. [2]"Hitler's Table Talk" (German: Tischgespräche im Führerhauptquartier; literally "Table Talks at the Führer's Headquarters") is the title given to a series of World War II monologues delivered by Adolf Hitler, which were transcribed from 1941 to 1944.