Skip to main content
Back to recommendations

SceneFiend library

Othello

By William Shakespeare - Stage play

Stage playStageACT II, Scene 1
A nineteenth-century painting of Othello and Desdemona in Venice.

Theodore ChasseriauPublic domainWikimedia Commons

Roles

  • Iago - Young Adult (20-35), Adult (36-50), Male

About this piece

Iago professes his plans of revenge against Othello

Summary

The story is set in Venice. The play starts with Roderigo, a rich and foolish gentleman, complaining to Iago, a high ranking soldier, about Desdemona's secret marriage to a Moorish general in the Venetian army, Othello. Desdemona is Roderigo's love interest and he has been paying Iago to help him seduce her. Iago tells him he hates Othello since he didn't give him a promotion that he thought he deserved and instead gave it to another man. Iago suggests to wake Desdemona's father, Brabanzio, and tell him about Othello's affair with his daughter. Brabanzio at first is skeptical but then believes them. He calls his men and goes out to get Othello. When he finds him, at first he accuses him of having stolen his daughter and "abused her delicate youth" and then orders his men to subdue him. He decides to solve the matter before the Duke of Venice but the Duke dismisses Brabanzio's plea, since he considers Desdemona's love for him genuine and admires Othello as a valiant military man. The Duke sends Othello to war, to protect the island of Cyprus against the Turks. Desdemona, Iago and Roderigo go as well. At the end of the scene Iago tells Roderigo that he plans to have Cassio fall out of favor with Othello. He urges him to start a quarrel with Cassio the same night. When Roderigo leaves, Iago delivers his second soliloquy where he tells the audience that he will get his revenge, either by sleeping with Desdemona or driving Othello crazy with jealousy.

Tone

AngryDescriptiveTalking to the audience

Use cases

classaudition
View on Actorama

Library metadata only. SceneFiend never includes script text here - pick up the published version to rehearse.

Similar pieces

  • good

    By good

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, solo.

  • Hippolytus

    By Euripides

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, solo.

  • The Bacchae

    By Euripides

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, solo.

  • Edward II

    By Christopher Marlowe

    Shares same format: monologue, stage piece, Renaissance.