Acting Insights with Richard Kline

In-depth acting articles and insights on technique, auditions, and the business of acting. Written by a working actor and respected acting teacher, drawing from decades of studio training and professional experience.

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Personalizing Your Work with the Personal Monologue

You need to be personal in your work. Not “emotional” in a general sense, not “interesting,” not “watchable.” Personal. Specific. Connected to something real inside you.

That is where the personal monologue comes in. It is one of the most powerful tools you can use in your actor training because it strips away performance habits and forces you to work from your own life.

And when you do that honestly, everything changes.


 

What Is a Personal Monologue?

A personal monologue is exactly what it sounds like. You write or improvise a piece based on something from your own life, something you feel strongly about.

This is not about writing a perfect scene. It does not have to be theatrical. It does not have to be clever. It just has to be honest.

It could be:

  • Your struggle with a parent who never expressed love
  • The pressure of trying to start a family
  • Growing up feeling like you did not belong
  • The voice in your head that sabotages your auditions

I have seen actors write about all of these. And when they commit to it, really commit, the work becomes alive in a way that technique alone cannot create.


 

Why Actors Stay General, and Why It Hurts Their Work

Most actors avoid being personal. Not consciously, but instinctively.

They generalize emotions. They indicate feelings. They perform the idea of a moment instead of living inside it.

Why? Because being specific is risky.

It means:

  • Letting go of control
  • Allowing real emotion to show up
  • Admitting something truthful about yourself

But here is the truth. If it is not personal to you, it will not be compelling to an audience.

The camera sees through general work immediately. Casting can feel when something is disconnected. The personal monologue trains you out of that habit.


 

The Goal Is Not to Perform, It Is to Experience

When you do a personal monologue, your job is not to “act it well.” Your job is to experience it truthfully.

You are not presenting something. You are going through something.

This is where real listening and reacting begins. The same principles we focus on in my acting classes online apply here:

  • Stay connected to the moment
  • Let the thoughts affect you
  • Allow behavior to come out of that experience

If you are controlling it, shaping it, or trying to make it “good,” you are already moving away from the work.


 

Vulnerability Is the Muscle You Are Training

The personal monologue demands vulnerability. There is no way around it.

You are dealing with your life, your feelings, your emotional history. That can feel uncomfortable at first. It should.

But this is not about exposure for its own sake. It is about developing access.

When you allow yourself to go there, you begin to:

  • Trust your emotional life
  • Stop forcing results
  • React more freely in your work

This is what creates depth. Not technique alone, but technique supported by real, personal connection.


 

Make It About Something

Here is where many actors go off track. They confuse “personal” with “complaining.”

The personal monologue is not about listing everything that went wrong in your life. It needs to be about something.

You are working something out.

Ask yourself:

  • What am I trying to understand?
  • What am I struggling with?
  • What do I want from the person I am talking to?

That gives the monologue direction. It gives it behavior. It gives it life.

And just as important, get specific. General stories create general acting. Specific moments create real behavior.


 

How to Work a Personal Monologue

You can approach this in a simple, practical way:

  1. Choose a real situation

    Pick something that still affects you emotionally.

  2. Define who you are talking to

    This is not abstract. Make it a real person.

  3. Know what you want

    Are you seeking understanding, forgiveness, validation?

  4. Let it be messy

    Do not try to clean it up or structure it perfectly.

  5. Stay present

    Let thoughts and feelings come as they happen, not pre-planned.

This is the same kind of process we apply to scene study and audition technique. The difference is that here, the material is coming directly from you.


 

Bringing This Into Scripted Work

This is where the personal monologue becomes incredibly valuable.

Once you experience what it feels like to be fully connected, you can start bringing that same immediacy into scripted material.

Whether you are working on Shakespeare, a film scene, or a short TV audition, the goal is the same:

  • Make it feel like it is happening to you
  • Respond as yourself within the circumstances
  • Let the writing live through your personal experience

Every role should feel as if you wrote it. Not literally, but emotionally. As if the thoughts are yours.

That is what separates actors who are watchable from actors who are compelling.


 

Your Personal Stamp as an Actor

From Hamlet to a one-line role on a TV spot, your job is the same. Bring yourself to it.

Not a version of yourself that you think casting wants. Not a polished performance. You.

The personal monologue proves that you can do that. It shows that you can be:

  • Emotionally available
  • Behaviorally truthful
  • Fully engaged in the moment

And once you have that, you can apply it anywhere.

This is a core part of the work we do in my acting classes online, training actors to stop presenting and start experiencing.


 

Final Thought

The personal monologue is not just an exercise. It is a process.

If you do it honestly, it will affect you, not just as an actor, but as a person. You will discover things. You will shift how you approach your work.

And most importantly, you will stop acting “in general” and start working from something real.

If you want to go deeper into this kind of work, you can explore it in a practical, supportive environment through a Free Audit Class and see how this approach applies directly to auditions, scene study, and professional acting technique.


 

FAQ: Personal Monologues for Actors

What is a personal monologue in acting?

A personal monologue is a piece created from your own life experiences, focused on something emotionally meaningful and specific to you.

Do I need to write it ahead of time?

You can write it or improvise it. The key is staying connected to the experience, not the exact words.

How does this help with auditions?

It builds emotional access and authenticity, which translates directly into stronger, more believable audition work.

What if I feel uncomfortable being that personal?

That is part of the process. Start where you can, but understand that growth comes from gradually allowing more honesty into your work.

Can I use this approach for scripted roles?

Yes. The goal is to bring the same personal connection and immediacy into any script you are working on.

Written by your acting coach, Richard Kline.