Skip to main content

Welcome to our new website! We're excited to see you, and appreciate your patience as we finalize our upgrade! 

*** RETURNING USERS WILL NEED TO RESET THEIR PASSWORD FOR THIS NEW SITE. CLICK HERE TO RESET YOUR PASSWORD.***

Close this alert

A Taste Of Honey Monologue Apr 2026

In the canon of 20th-century theatre, few monologues capture the ache of abandonment and the fierce, fragile hope of survival quite like Jo’s speeches in Shelagh Delaney’s A Taste of Honey (1958). While the play is a masterclass in working-class realism, the monologue most often referred to—spoken by the teenage protagonist, Jo, near the end of Act Two or in her solitary moments—is a stunning, compact portrait of disillusionment.

Actors looking to showcase emotional range, naturalistic pacing, and the ability to find hope in hopelessness. a taste of honey monologue

Jo, pregnant and deserted by her Black sailor boyfriend (Jimmie), has been left alone again by her feckless, alcoholic mother, Helen. The monologue typically finds Jo talking to her unborn child or to the absent Jimmie. It’s not a rant; it’s a quiet, devastating inventory of her life: the cold flat, the lack of love, and the terrifying realization that she must become an adult overnight. In the canon of 20th-century theatre, few monologues

Delaney’s genius is in the specificity of the mundane. Jo doesn’t weep about a broken heart; she frets about the wallpaper, the gas bill, and the fact that she doesn’t know how to boil an egg properly. The line “I’m not a person anymore. I’m just a mother” lands like a punch. The monologue is threaded with a unique, dark wit—Jo’s sarcasm is a shield. The famous phrase “a taste of honey” refers not to sweetness, but to a fleeting, stolen moment of romance that leaves only a memory of bitterness. Jo, pregnant and deserted by her Black sailor

★★★★☆ (Essential for auditions and acting classes, but requires maturity beyond the character’s age.)