Another collection of 30 short plays by the Blogger is provided (often called "10-minute plays" or "shorts") across various genres.
Comedy
The Invisible Friend’s Intervention: A man’s imaginary friend from childhood stages an intervention because the man is "too boring" now.
Customer Service for Time Travelers: A clerk at a "History Repair" shop deals with a customer who accidentally killed their own grandfather.
The Supervillain’s HR Meeting: A villain has to explain to Human Resources why they can't stop monologuing during battles.
First Date with a Narrator: A couple tries to have a romantic dinner while a loud, dramatic narrator describes their every awkward move.
The Yoga Class for People Who Hate Yoga: A group of people try to achieve "zen" while complaining loudly about their hamstrings.
Pet Store for Mythical Creatures: A customer tries to return a "defective" dragon that only breathes bubbles.
The WiFi is Down (Post-Apocalyptic Edition): A family reacts to a router failure as if it’s the end of the world.
Aliens in the DMV: Two aliens try to get a driver’s license for their UFO while following human bureaucracy.
The Shakespearean Barista: A barista insists on taking every coffee order in iambic pentameter.
Zombies at a Job Interview: A zombie tries to convince a manager that their "undead" status makes them a tireless worker.
Drama
The Last Payphone in the City: Two strangers meet at a disconnected payphone and share secrets they can't tell anyone else.
Letters to the Future: An elderly woman reads a letter she wrote to herself 50 years ago and realizes she’s a different person.
The Bench: Two siblings sit on a park bench every ten years to decide if they still like each other.
Waiting for the Train: A soldier and a civilian wait for a train that may never come during a time of war.
The Inheritance: Three cousins must decide who gets their grandmother’s most prized—but utterly worthless—possession.
Silence in the Library: A student and a librarian have a high-stakes conversation entirely through handwritten notes.
The Art of Forgetting: A scientist offers a patient the chance to erase one specific, painful memory.
Shadows on the Wall: Two children hide under a bed during a thunderstorm and talk about their fears.
The Red Balloon: A symbolic play about a child losing their innocence in a crowded city.
Midnight at the Diner: A weary waitress gives advice to a runaway teenager.
Sci-Fi & Surrealism
The Mirror That Lies: A woman looks into a mirror that shows her "better" version, but the reflection starts demanding to switch places.
The Cloud Salesman: In a world where it never rains, a man sells small jars of "captured clouds."
The Backup Mind: A man realizes his wife is actually a digital backup of her original self.
Color Blind: A world where people can only see color once they fall in love.
The Clockmaker of Nowhere: A man repairs clocks that measure "feelings" instead of time.
Planet of the Bored: Astronauts land on a planet where the inhabitants have seen and done everything and are desperately bored.
The Echo Chamber: Two people are trapped in a room where they can only repeat what the other person just said.
Memory Lane (Literally): A street where every house you pass forces you to relive a specific year of your life.
The Robot’s First Tear: A laboratory assistant tries to figure out if their AI creation is truly sad or just malfunctioning.
Star Gazing: Two astronauts on a long voyage discuss whether Earth was actually real or just a story they were told.
If you are looking for ready-made scripts for students or theater groups, you can also explore resources like Drama Notebook or Off The Wall Plays, which offer hundreds of short scripts for performance.
Play 1: The Invisible Friend’s Intervention (Comedy)
Characters:
MARCUS: 30s, wearing a beige cardigan, looking stressed.
BINKY: A tall man wearing a neon-pink tuxedo and a top hat. Only Marcus can see him.
[SETTING: A bland living room.]
BINKY: (Slapping a spreadsheet out of Marcus's hand) Enough! Marcus, we need to talk.
MARCUS: Binky? Not now. I’m doing my taxes.
MARCUS: That’s called being an adult.
BINKY: It’s called being boring. I didn't manifest into existence for this. I’m an imaginary friend, Marcus, not an imaginary accountant. Look at this cardigan! It’s the color of oatmeal!
BINKY: (Gasps) I’m staging an intervention. Either we go outside right now and pretend the sidewalk is lava, or I’m moving out to live with your nephew. He still thinks spoons are airplanes.
MARCUS: (Sighs, looking at his taxes, then at Binky) Is the lava the "slow-moving" kind or the "explosive" kind?
BINKY: (Grinning) Explosive. Grab your helmet.
Play 2: The Last Payphone in the City (Drama)
Characters:
SAM: 20s, disheveled, holding a crumpled piece of paper.
ELARA: 70s, elegant, holding a vintage handbag.
[SETTING: A street corner. A battered, non-functional payphone stands under a streetlamp.]
SAM: (Picks up the receiver, listens, hangs up. Curses.)
ELARA: It hasn’t had a dial tone since 2004, dear.
SAM: (Startled) Then why are you standing in line?
ELARA: I’m not in line for a phone call. I’m in line for a memory. I come here every Tuesday to tell my husband about my day.
SAM: But... he’s not on the other end.
ELARA: (Smiling) Neither is whoever you were trying to call. You knew it was broken before you picked it up.
SAM: (Quietly) I just needed to say "I'm sorry" into the air. I thought maybe the wires would catch it and hold it.
ELARA: (Nods) The air here is very good at holding things. Go ahead. I’ll look at the stars while you talk.
Play 3: The Shakespearean Barista (Comedy)
Characters:
HAL: A barista in a green apron, posing dramatically.
CHAD: A guy in gym clothes, very confused.
[SETTING: A trendy coffee shop.]
HAL: (Boisterous) Soft! What light through yonder espresso machine breaks? ‘Tis the morning, and Chad is the sun!
CHAD: Uh... hey. Can I get a large iced coffee?
HAL: A "large"? Nay, sir! Seekest thou a Venti? A vessel so vast it could hold the very tears of Juliet herself?
CHAD: Just... caffeine, man. I have a meeting.
HAL: (Clutching his heart) A meeting! A pox upon thy meeting! Shall I infuse thy bean-water with the syrup of the Madagascar vanilla? Or doth thy soul crave the bitterness of the plain black brew?
HAL: (Slamming a cup on the counter) Thy drink shall be ready when the clock strikes the next minute! Bequeath unto me five dollars and sixty cents, or depart this realm empty-handed!
CHAD: (Hands over five bucks) Keep the change. Just... don't follow me.
BINKY: That’s exactly the problem! When we were eight, we fought space pirates. Yesterday, you spent forty minutes comparing interest rates on savings accounts.
MARCUS: It’s "Toasted Almond."
CHAD: (Looking around) Is there a camera? Am I being pranked?
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Moving right along! Here are the next three plays from the list, keeping them short, punchy, and ready for the stage.
Play 4: Customer Service for Time Travelers (Comedy)
Characters:
RENA: Overworked, cynical shop clerk.
ARTHUR: A frantic man wearing a toga over a business suit.
[SETTING: A cluttered shop with signs saying "NO REFUNDS ON PARADOXES."]
ARTHUR: (Slamming a bronze bust on the counter) It happened again! I went back for a simple sightseeing tour of Ancient Rome, and I tripped!
RENA: (Sighing) Did you step on a butterfly?
ARTHUR: Worse. I fell on a senator. Now everyone in the present speaks Pig Latin and the President is a horse.
RENA: (Checks a computer) Yeah, that’s the "Caligula Glitch." You bought the "Economy Protection" package. It doesn't cover equine world leaders.
ARTHUR: You have to fix it! I have a mortgage!
RENA: I can send you back, but it’ll cost you. I need two gallons of plutonium and your first-born child.
ARTHUR: My daughter?
RENA: Relax, it’s just for the paperwork. We return her once the timeline stabilizes. Mostly.
Play 5: Letters to the Future (Drama)
Characters:
CLARA: 80s, sharp but frail.
YOUNG CLARA: 18, vibrant, appearing as a memory/ghost.
[SETTING: An attic filled with boxes.]
YOUNG CLARA: (Reading from a yellowed paper) "Dear Clara at eighty: I hope you still have the blue dress. I hope you traveled to Paris. I hope you never became like Mom."
CLARA: (Touching her own plain grey sweater) The dress didn't fit after the kids, dear. And Paris... Paris was expensive.
YOUNG CLARA: But we were going to be an artist! We were going to paint the world!
CLARA: I painted the kitchen. Three times. It’s a very nice shade of eggshell.
YOUNG CLARA: (Disappointed) Is that all?
CLARA: (Softly) No. I also learned that the sound of a sleeping child is better than any gallery applause. I didn't become Mom. I became me. And "me" is tired, but she's happy.
YOUNG CLARA: (Fading) Promise?
CLARA: (Folding the letter) I promise.
Play 6: First Date with a Narrator (Comedy)
Characters:
BEN: Nervous, trying too hard.
SARAH: Polished, a bit skeptical.
THE VOICE: A booming, dramatic voice from the speakers.
[SETTING: A candlelit dinner table.]
BEN: You look lovely tonight, Sarah.
THE VOICE: Ben said, his voice trembling like a leaf in a hurricane of insecurity. He knew his breath smelled faintly of the onions he’d eaten for lunch.
SARAH: (Frowning) Did you say something?
THE VOICE: Sarah wondered if she had made a terrible mistake. The red flags were waving, and they were the size of bedsheets.
BEN: (Looking at the ceiling) Can you shut up?! I’m trying to make a connection here!
THE VOICE: Ben’s desperation was palpable. It filled the room like a thick, salty fog.
SARAH: (Getting up) You know, I think the "thick, salty fog" is my cue to leave.
THE VOICE: And just like that, Ben was alone with his onions.
BEN: (Head in hands) I hate this theater.
That’s six down! Shall I keep going with the next batch, or do you want to tweak the style of the upcoming ones?
BEN: No! I—
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Next up! Here are the next three plays, diving into some "workplace" humor and a bit of poignant drama.
Characters:
DR. DEVASTATION: Wearing a spiked helmet and a cape.
MS. GORDON: A very calm HR representative in a pencil skirt.
[SETTING: A corporate office. Dr. Devastation is pacing.]
DR. DEVASTATION: I don’t see the issue! The sharks were hungry! It’s a biological necessity!
MS. GORDON: Doctor, the issue isn't the sharks. It’s the "Monologue Policy." Section 4.2 states that all evil plans must be executed before explanation.
DR. DEVASTATION: But the drama, Gordon! The flair! If I don't tell the hero how I bypassed the city’s power grid using a giant magnifying glass, what was the point of building it?
MS. GORDON: The point was to conquer the city. Because you talked for twelve minutes, the hero escaped with a toothpick and a piece of gum. We lost four henchmen and the magnifying glass was confiscated.
DR. DEVASTATION: They were interns! They’re replaceable!
MS. GORDON: (Sighs) This is your third strike. If you monologue during the "Doomsday Device" launch next week, we’re revoking your dental insurance.
DR. DEVASTATION: (Quietly) Not the dental... fine. I’ll just... I’ll send a group email after the explosion.
Play 8: The Bench (Drama)
Characters:
LEO: 20s (Scene 1), 30s (Scene 2), 40s (Scene 3).
MAYA: His sister, same ages.
[SETTING: A park bench. The lighting shifts to indicate decades passing.]
[SCENE 1 - AGE 20]
MAYA: I’m leaving for the city tomorrow. Don't let Mom sell my guitar.
LEO: I’ll hide it under my bed. Promise you’ll call?
MAYA: Every Sunday. We’re a team, right?
[SCENE 2 - AGE 30]
LEO: It’s been three months since you called, Maya.
MAYA: (Looking tired) The city is loud, Leo. I forgot what quiet felt like.
LEO: Come home for a weekend. The guitar is still under the bed.
MAYA: (Softly) I don't think I know how to play it anymore.
[SCENE 3 - AGE 40]
MAYA: (Sitting down heavily) I moved back. Yesterday.
LEO: I know. I saw the truck.
MAYA: Do you still like me? After all the missed Sundays?
LEO: (Hands her an old, dusty guitar case) I kept the team jersey. Let's see if you remember the chords.
Play 9: The Yoga Class for People Who Hate Yoga (Comedy)
Characters:
INSTRUCTOR: Overly peaceful, speaks in a whisper.
DAVE: In jeans, clearly forced to be here.
SARAH: Shaky, trying to hold a pose.
[SETTING: A yoga studio. Dim lights.]
INSTRUCTOR: Now, reach toward the heavens and let go of your earthly frustrations.
DAVE: My "earthly frustration" is that my hamstrings are currently screaming for a lawyer. Why are we doing this?
SARAH: (Gasping) Shut up, Dave. I’m trying... to find... my center.
DAVE: Your center is in your core, Sarah. My center is currently at the burger joint down the street.
INSTRUCTOR: (Floating by) Breathe into the discomfort, Dave. Imagine you are a tree.
DAVE: I’m not a tree. I’m a man in tight pants who just heard his hip make a sound like a dry twig snapping.
SARAH: (Falls over) I’m done. I hate the heavens.
SARAH: (Getting up immediately) Pizza.
That brings us to 9! We’re nearly a third of the way there. Ready for 10, 11, and 12?
Play 7: The Supervillain’s HR Meeting (Comedy)
DAVE: Pizza?
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Onward! Here are the next three plays, featuring mythical mishaps, bureaucratic aliens, and a very intense barista.
Characters:
CLYDE: A weary pet store owner.
BRENDA: An annoyed customer holding a birdcage covered by a cloth.
[SETTING: A shop filled with strange sounds—hissing, sparkling, and the occasional roar.]
BRENDA: Oh, he eats the coins. He’s very expensive to maintain. But he doesn't breathe fire. He breathes... bubbles. Lavender-scented bubbles.
CLYDE: Ah. You bought the "Eco-Friendly" model. Very popular in apartments. No soot on the ceiling.
CLYDE: Look, I can swap him for a Phoenix, but they’re high-maintenance. Every 500 years they turn into a pile of ash and you have to vacuum.
BRENDA: (Looking into the cage) Fine. Just... give me something that at least growls.
Play 10: Aliens at the DMV (Comedy)
Characters:
GLORB & ZORP: Two aliens in trench coats and sunglasses, looking suspicious.
MARGE: A DMV clerk who has seen everything.
[SETTING: A grey office. A long line is implied.]
MARGE: Next! Name?
GLORB: I am the Destroyer of Nebulas, Eater of—
ZORP: (Nudging him) He means "Steve." Steve Johnson.
MARGE: Fine, "Steve." Birthplace?
GLORB: The dying star of Xylophone-7, where the skies are liquid mercury!
MARGE: (Typing slowly) I’ll put down "Other." Do you have proof of residency?
GLORB: (Slaps a glowing, pulsating orb on the counter) This contains the soul of my home planet!
MARGE: I need a utility bill, honey. Electric or water.
ZORP: (Whispering) I told you the orb wouldn't work. (To Marge) Will a library card from the Andromeda Galaxy suffice?
Characters:
MOM: Looking out the window as if for raiders.
TEEN: Slumped on the sofa in total despair.
DAD: Pacing with a flashlight.
[SETTING: A dark living room. The router is blinking red.]
TEEN: It’s been twenty minutes. I’m starting to forget what the internet looks like. Is "Google" still a thing?
MOM: Stay strong. We have to ration the remaining battery life on the iPad.
DAD: I went outside. The neighbors are standing on their lawns, blinking at the sun. One of them tried to "like" a real-life flower. It’s chaos out there.
TEEN: (Looking at a book) What is this... paper-brick?
MOM: That’s an encyclopedia, son. It’s like Wikipedia, but you can’t argue with it in the comments section.
TEEN: (Opens it) There are no videos? How am I supposed to learn how to cook a grilled cheese without a 30-second montage?
DAD: (Solemnly) We may have to actually... talk to each other.
TEEN: (Horrified) No! Not that! Anything but that!
Play 11: Pet Store for Mythical Creatures (Comedy)
BRENDA: I want a refund. This "legendary fire-breather" you sold me is a scam.
CLYDE: (Sighing) Is it the dragon? What’s the matter? Is he not eating his gold coins?
BRENDA: I am a dark sorceress, Clyde! I have an image to maintain! I can’t go into battle surrounded by the smell of "Relaxing Lavender." My enemies are laughing at me!
MARGE: (Stares at them for a long beat) I’m going on break. You two stay here and try to look less... green.
Play 12: The WiFi is Down (Post-Apocalyptic Comedy)
Play 13: Waiting for the Train (Drama)
Characters:
ELIAS: A young soldier in a crisp, new uniform.
MARC: An older man in a tattered coat, sitting on a suitcase.
[SETTING: A foggy, desolate train platform at dawn.]
ELIAS: Is it always this late? The schedule said 0500.
MARC: The schedule is a suggestion made by people who don’t live here. The train comes when it’s hungry.
ELIAS: (Pacing) I have to get to the front. If I miss this, I’m AWOL.
MARC: You’re in a hurry to get to a place where everyone is trying to leave? That’s the tragedy of being twenty, I suppose.
ELIAS: It’s about duty.
MARC: (Points to his tattered coat) I had a "duty" once. Now I just have a suitcase full of rocks so the wind doesn't blow me away. Stay here, kid. The fog is safer than the destination.
ELIAS: (Hears a whistle in the distance) That’s it. That’s my ride.
MARC: (Sighs) No. That’s just the wind crying because it knows where you're going.
Play 14: The Inheritance (Comedy/Drama)
Characters:
SARAH: High-strung, wants things "fair."
JASON: Lazy, wants things "valuable."
BECCA: Emotional, wants things "sentimental."
[SETTING: A living room full of boxes. On a pedestal sits a hideous, neon-green plastic gnome.]
SARAH: Grandma’s will was very specific. The house goes to charity, the savings go to the cats, and "The Treasure" goes to us.
JASON: (Staring at the gnome) Please tell me that’s a disguise for a diamond.
BECCA: (Tearing up) It’s "Gnorman." She took him to every bingo game for forty years. He’s... he’s priceless.
JASON: He’s plastic, Becca! I looked him up on eBay. He’s worth four dollars, and three of those are for the shipping!
SARAH: We have to decide who keeps him. Or we can’t close the estate.
JASON: I’ll pay one of you twenty bucks to take it.
BECCA: I want him, but only if he’s loved!
SARAH: (Grabs the gnome) Fine. I’ll take him. I’ll put him in the garden.
JASON: (Noticing a loose bottom) Wait. What’s that clicking sound?
(Sarah unscrews the base. A shower of vintage gold coins falls onto the carpet.)
JASON: I take it back! I’ve always loved Gnorman! He’s like a father to me!
Play 15: Silence in the Library (Drama/Experimental)
Characters:
THE STUDENT: Frantic, looking at a ticking clock.
THE LIBRARIAN: Stern, communicates only via signs and writing.
[SETTING: A library. Total silence. The characters communicate by writing on a large legal pad.]
STUDENT: (Writes) I lost my thesis. It’s on the cloud, but the cloud is gone. Help me.
LIBRARIAN: (Writes) The books remain. The cloud is vapor.
STUDENT: (Writes) I have ten minutes before I fail my entire life. Is there a book on "The History of Everything"??
LIBRARIAN: (Points to a massive, dusty tome in the corner. It’s chained to the wall.)
LIBRARIAN: (Writes) Knowledge is heavy. It tries to sink through the floor.
STUDENT: (Scrawls desperately) I don’t have time for metaphors! Open it!
LIBRARIAN: (Slowly slides a key across the table. Writes:) Read fast. The ink starts to fade the moment you look at it
Here are the next three plays, focusing on memory, hidden fears, and a very unusual shop.
16.The Art of Forgetting (Drama)
Characters:
Dr Vance :it's a simple procedure Elias.We map the neutral pathway of the specific event.Apply a localized pulse and ......poof.The memory is gone.
DR. VANCE: Calm, clinical, wearing a lab coat.ELIAS: Nervous, fidgeting with his wedding ring.[SETTING: A sterile, futuristic office.]ELIAS: And I won't remember her at all?DR. VANCE: You’ll remember her name. You’ll remember you were married. But the pain—the way your heart sinks when you see her favorite coffee mug—that will be erased.ELIAS: (Looking at the machine) Will it leave a hole?DR. VANCE: Like a missing tooth. You’ll feel the space with your tongue for a while, but eventually, you’ll forget there was ever a tooth there at all.ELIAS: (Quietly) What if the pain is the only thing I have left of her?DR. VANCE: Then you have to decide: do you want to keep the ghost, or do you want the room back?ELIAS: (Stands up) I think... I think I’ll keep the mug for one more week.
Play 17: Shadows on the Wall (Drama/Suspense)Characters:TOBY: 8 years old.LUCY: 10 years old, his protective sister.[SETTING: Underneath a bed. We only see their faces peeking out from a blanket.]TOBY: (Whispering) Is it still out there?LUCY: It’s just a thunderstorm, Toby. The thunder is just the clouds bumping into each other.TOBY: No, the other thing. The thing that makes the floorboards creak.LUCY: That’s just the house stretching. Like it’s waking up from a nap.TOBY: (A loud crack of thunder) I don’t like the way the shadows look tonight. They look like hands.LUCY: (Grabs his hand) Look at my hand. It’s real. It’s warm. The shadows are just pretend.TOBY: When I grow up, I’m going to build a house made of light.LUCY: I’ll bring the lightbulbs. Now close your eyes. If you can’t see the shadows, they can’t see you either.
Play 18: The Cloud Salesman (Surrealist Comedy)Characters:BARNABY: A man in a dusty coat with many pockets.MAY: A cynical gardener in a drought-stricken town.[SETTING: A cracked, dry garden.]BARNABY: Good afternoon, Madam! Might I interest you in a "Cumulus Lite"? Perfect for light shade and a gentle afternoon drizzle.MAY: Get off my lawn, Barnaby. You’re selling jars of fog.BARNABY: (Offended) Fog? This is Grade-A moisture! (He opens a jar; a tiny puff of white smoke floats out and hovers over a dead daisy.)MAY: It’s not enough to save a single petal. We haven't seen a real storm in three years.BARNABY: That’s why you need the "Thunder-Box." (He pulls out a heavy iron crate.) It’s loud, it’s angry, and it’s guaranteed to drop two inches of rain or your money back.MAY: How much?BARNABY: Three memories of your childhood and a song you’ve forgotten the lyrics to.MAY: (Pauses) Fine. It was a song about a bicycle. I think... I think it went like this..
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