The Breakfast Club Monologues

Monologues from The Breakfast Club

Monologues from The Breakfast Club, the Classic Film by Writer/Director John Hughes

Featuring monologues for teens and adult males from Claire, Andrew, Brian, Bender, Mr. Vernon and Carl the Janitor.

Story: Five high school students from different walks of life endure a Saturday detention under a power-hungry principal (Paul Gleason). The disparate group includes rebel John (Judd Nelson), princess Claire (Molly Ringwald), outcast Allison (Ally Sheedy), brainy Brian (Anthony Michael Hall) and Andrew (Emilio Estevez), the jock. Each has a chance to tell his or her story, making the others see them a little differently — and when the day ends, they question whether school will ever be the same.


‘The Breakfast Club’ (Brian): “Sincerely yours, the Breakfast Club”

Brian’s one minute dramatic monologue from the end of John Hughes’ classic film, The Breakfast Club.

‘The Breakfast Club’ (Claire): “What about you, you hypocrite!”

A dramatic one minute monologue for teen girls from the classic movie by John Hughes, The Breakfast Club.

‘The Breakfast Club’ (Bender): “What do you care what I think, anyway?”

A dramatic monologue for teen boys from the classic movie by John Hughes, The Breakfast Club.

‘The Breakfast Club’ (Brian): “Never got a F in my life”

A one minute dramatic monologue for teen boys from the classic movie by John Hughes, The Breakfast Club.

‘The Breakfast Club’ (Andrew): “I mean, how do you apologize for something like that?”

A dramatic monologue for teen boys from the classic movie by John Hughes, The Breakfast Club.

‘The Breakfast Club’ (Carl): “You wanna be a janitor?”

A one minute comedic monologue for men from the classic movie by John Hughes, The Breakfast Club.

‘The Breakfast Club’ (Vernon): “That’s the last time, Bender”

A dramatic monologue for men from the classic movie by John Hughes, The Breakfast Club.

‘The Breakfast Club’ (Vernon): “Any questions?”

A one minute comedic monologue for men from the classic movie by John Hughes, The Breakfast Club.

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