they practice
The cast of Remember Africville - 1991 includes: Delvina Bernard as Narrator
...One, hence the term monologue. As for the background you can have any number of actors, but they do not have any lines.
The cast of Branch Lines of Gloucestershire - 2012 includes: Colin Maggs as Himself - Presenter
The cast of Visible Panty Lines - 2011 includes: Ronke Coote Edori Fertig Joo Lee Bharti Thakkar
they get up early so they can make the show or movie faster and practice there lines
Film actors do not have to be over the top or remember lots of lines in a group. Stage actors do.
In order for the actors/actresses to remember their lines more easily during the plays.
To answer your question; just like an actor for a movie or for the theatre television actors memorize their lines, usually through repatition. Scripts for a given episode are written at least a week, usually serveral weeks before the episode is to be shot and the actors are provided with a copy with ample time to memorize them with their own personal techniques. This preperation ahead of time along with rehersals with the other actors in the sceen and in certain situations the use of cue cards makes it relatively simple for actors to remember their lines.
If you remember that the rungs of a ladder are like the latitude lines on that ladder. That's how I remember it.
Two reasons: great lines and great characters. Actors love being able to say lines that are beautiful and sit well in the mouth. They are easier to remember and say than awkward badly written lines. Shakespeare wrote some of the best lines for actors to say. Actors also love the challenge of wrestling with a part that is not simple. Everyone wants to play Hamlet because he is a character full of contradictions, and everyone wants to try to get them all right.
for spaces remember the word FACE for lines remember the word GBDF (green bus drives forward) thats how i remember it anyway thats for the notes inside the lines not above or below
Just try to remember Latitude lines go left to right" or "Lat Left"
To remember your lines, cues, to speak in a loud clear voice l
Latitude lines are imaginary lines that run East to West but measure North to South on the Globe. I remember latitude is fatitude. Longitude lines go North to South but measure East to West. I remember it as LONGitude.
The song "Yellow" by Coldplay has that line.
The rhyme scheme of "Remember Me" by Ray Mathew is ABAB. This means the first and third lines of each quatrain rhyme, as do the second and fourth lines.
Stage actors don’t just “memorize lines” — they train their memory in smart ways. First, repetition. Actors read the script many times. They rehearse daily, saying the lines out loud again and again until they become natural. Second, understanding the meaning. Instead of memorizing word by word, actors focus on the intention behind each line. When they understand what their character wants in a scene, the dialogue becomes easier to recall because it follows emotional logic. Third, cues. Actors memorize their lines along with the line that comes before it. When their co-actor speaks a certain sentence, it triggers their next dialogue automatically. Fourth, blocking and movement. On stage, actors move to specific positions. Physical actions are linked to lines, so the body helps the brain remember. Fifth, muscle memory. After many rehearsals, the lines become almost automatic, like lyrics to a favorite song. Most importantly, theatre involves teamwork. If someone forgets a line, co-actors often guide the scene back naturally without the audience noticing. So it’s a mix of practice, understanding, physical movement, and repetition that helps stage actors remember long dialogues.