Honey Monologue |link| - A Taste Of

You ever notice how people give you things that are really just warnings? "Here, have this." And what they mean is, "Don't get too close. I'll fly off."

Jo is from Salford, near Manchester. Do not attempt a generic "Northern" accent or a cockney accent. The Lancashire inflection is flat and musical. Dropping the 'h' ("'ave" instead of "have") and using glottal stops is essential. If you can't do the accent cleanly, drop it entirely. A fake accent is worse than a neutral one. a taste of honey monologue

You want a moral? Here’s your moral. Life is a greasy pole and everyone’s wearing buttered gloves. You climb, you slip, and you land in a heap with the rest of the rubbish. And the only thing that tastes like honey? Is the five seconds before you realize it’s just sugar water with a bee in it. You ever notice how people give you things

My mum used to say, "Don't ask for the moon, Jo. You'll only choke on the dust." She wasn't wrong. She was never wrong about that part. The choking. She just forgot to tell me that you choke just as easy on the small stuff. On the ordinary Tuesday afternoons. On the lukewarm tea and the half-smile across a crowded bus. Do not attempt a generic "Northern" accent or

But the audience feels the fragility beneath the bravado. Delaney never allows Jo’s monologues to become self-pitying. Instead, they are sharp, funny, and devastatingly clear-eyed. Jo knows her situation is grim, but she refuses to perform misery for pity.

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