Lungs By Duncan Macmillan Monologue -
She admits that having a child has always been a "given" for her, independent of her relationship with M. She describes an image of herself "glowing" or "pushing a pram," often with a "blurring background generic man" as the father.
At first glance, Duncan Macmillan’s lungs (2011) is the ultimate contemporary two-hander: a raw, 90-minute, no-interval dialogue between a man and a woman, simply named W and M, as they navigate love, panic, parenthood, and planetary collapse. But actors and directors have discovered a secret buried in its overlapping, breathless rhythms: lungs contains two of the most demanding, interwoven monologues in modern theatre. lungs by duncan macmillan monologue
