Dulcy is a 1920 play by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. It is a fast-paced three-act comedy with one setting and eleven characters. The story concerns a warm-hearted and wrong-headed woman who is a compulsive meddler and bromide; she cheerfully arranges other people's lives to their dismay. The action takes place within the living room of a house in Westchester County, New York, from Friday afternoon to Saturday morning. The authors based the play on the character Dulcinea, created by Franklin P. Adams for his newspaper column The Conning Tower.
Dulcy | |
---|---|
Written by | George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly |
Based on | Character created by Franklin P. Adams |
Directed by | Howard Lindsay |
Date premiered | August 13, 1921 |
Place premiered | Frazee Theatre |
Original language | English |
Subject | Charming chatterbox leaves mayhem in her wake |
Genre | Comedy |
Setting | Dulcy's living room, Westchester County, New York. |
The play was first produced by George C. Tyler and H. H. Frazee, staged by Howard Lindsay, and starred Lynn Fontanne with Gregory Kelly, John Westley, and Wallis Clark in support. After a tryout in Indianapolis and an opening engagement in Chicago during February 1921, the play made its Broadway premiere in August 1921, and ran through March 1922, for over 250 performances.
The play was never revived on Broadway, but did give rise to a 1923 silent film, and a 1940 movie.
Characters
editCharacters are listed in order of appearance within their scope.
Lead
- Dulcy Parker Smith is a chatterbox who knows what's best for everyone, newly married to Gordon.
- Gordon Smith is Dulcy's husband, owner of a small costume pearl manufacturing concern.
- C. Rogers Forbes, called "Charlie" by his wife, is 53, owner of a large costume jewelery firm, father to Angela.
Supporting
- William Parker, called Bill, is Dulcy's stock broker brother, whom she calls "Willie".[fn 1]
- Angela Forbes is about 20, Forbes daughter, using Sterrett and Leach to pique someone else she has in mind.
Featured
- Henry is the Smith's new butler, a check forger whom Dulcy has persuaded a judge to release to her custody.
- Tom Sterrett is an advertising executive, whose main client is the Forbes business.
- Vincent Leach is a motion picture scenarist, suave and immodest, who fastens on to Angela with Dulcy's encouragement.
- Schuyler Van Dyck is a tycoon in multiple industries, a tall, modest fellow who also plays piano.
- Mrs. Forbes is thirtyish, an amateur scenario writer, the newly married second wife to Forbes.
- Blair Patterson is an attorney with distressing news about one of the Smiths' guests.
Synopsis
editThe humor of the play is lost in summery, for it consists of Dulcy speaking in bromides while her brother Bill offers dry counterpoint. Gordon Smith is contemplating joining a combine Forbes is proposing, yielding his factory in exchange for 16% of the shares in the new firm. Smith has invited Forbes to spend the weekend to discuss business, while Bill Parker has invited himself to his sister's house.
Act I (The Smith's living room, in Westchester County, New York. Friday afternoon.) Bill Parker is there when Gordon Smith comes in from his commute. Henry informs them Dulcy is at a social event. They warily discuss Dulcy's new reform project: Henry. Tom Sterrett has arrived to see Mr. Forbes, while Van Dyck and Leach join the living room party, each having been invited by Dulcy. Sterrett and Leach are both interesed in Angela Forbes, with Mr. Forbes taking Sterrett's part and Dulcy in favor of Leach. Angela disdains Sterrett for his preoccupation with business. Dulcy traps Forbes into agreeing to play golf with Van Dyck the next morning, and into riding horseback in the afternoon. She also tells Forbes that her husband has many business interests to manage, hoping to get him to increase his offer of 16%. However, Forbes reacts by telling Gordon his offer was predicated on a full-time commitment to the combine, and so may be lowered. Gordon tries to remonstrate with Dulcy about mixing in his business affairs, but as she sits in his lap can only admit how much he adores her. Dulcy then encouarges Leach to take Angela around the garden, while setting Van Dyck at Mrs. Forbes, since she writes scenarios and he owns film interests. She traps Forbes, Gordon, and Sterrett into playing bridge with her, after displaying an inadequate knowledge of the game. (Curtain)
Act II (Same, Friday evening, after dinner.) Forbes is delighted when Dulcy suggests he play billiards with Gordon, only to find she has misplaced the balls. Forbes is increasingly uncomfortable about Van Dyck and Mrs. Forbes, while Sterrett has given up on getting Angela alone. Bill plays the piano in a desultory manner, until Dulcy shoos him away in favor of Van Dyck. She then encourages Leach to talk about his latest work. Leach begins to recite his scenario for Sin, accompanied by Van Dyck on piano. (Three second curtain, to signal passage of thirty minutes.) Leach finishes his scenario recitation as Forbes fumes over his pursuit of Angela. Van Dyck suggests to Gordon that he provide financing to save and expand Gordon's business. Thus encouraged, Gordon tells Forbes he'll reject the combine offer. Dulcy encourages Leach and Angela to elope, and recruits Mrs. Forbes to bring Angela's luggage to the car. Bill offers to drive the couple to a minister, confounding Leach who was hoping to avoid formalities, while Angela is amused. Blair Patterson is brought in by Henry. Patterson informs an aghast Gordon that Van Dyck is really his cousin Hoarce Patterson, who has a mild eccentricity for impersonating the millionaire Van Dyck. (Curtain)
Act III (Same, Saturday morning.) Dulcy is subdued, as Gordon gently scolds her for interfering with business. She tearfully promises to try harder but immediately jumps in to offer Forbes a car so he can leave. Dulcy accidentally implicates Mrs. Forbes in the elopement, souring Mr. Forbes, who dreads having a "celluoid son-in-law". Gordon is surprised that Forbes still believes in the Van Dyck offer. Forbes knows Blair Patterson represents the Van Dyck interests, but doesn't realize Hoarce Patterson isn't Van Dyck. Patterson tries to hustle Hoarce away, but is unable to stop him offering to finance Sterrett in his own ad agency. Overhearing this, Forbes is more convinced than ever of the genuine nature of Van Dyck's proposition to Gordon. Meanwhile, Angela and Bill come in; they are now married, Leech having been decoyed out of the car and abandoned on the road just after they left last night. Forbes is so relieved, he offers Gordon 25% of the new combine shares to turn down Van Dyck. Gordon and Dulcy are reconciled. (Curtain)
Original production
editBackground
editDulcinea was a fictional bromide, created by newspaper columnist Franklin P. Adams for use in his column The Conning Tower, which ran in the New-York Tribune. His contribution was acknowledged in programs and on the title page of the published play, and more substantially with 10% of the author royalties.[1]
Producer George C. Tyler had given drama critic George S. Kaufman his start in playwriting, with an assignment to add a part for Lynn Fontanne to a play called Someone in the House, by Larry Evans and Walter Percival. Kaufman, who had been Adams' protege, gave Fontanne's character a personality based on Dulcinea. The play didn't last long, but Tyler was impressed by Kaufman's work. He asked him to write a whole play for Fontanne. Kaufman was willing, but wanted Marc Connelly as collaborator.[2] Tyler agreed, but when the play was ready, he couldn't find a theater in New York or Chicago with an open schedule. He then persuaded H. H. Frazee to present it at his Cort Theatre in Chicago and Frazee Theatre in New York, in return for 50% of Tyler's interest in the play.[1]
Tyler and Frazee announced the play on January 10, 1921, with an initial presentation scheduled for Chicago during February, but no New York performance until the following season.[3] By January 19, 1921, casting was completed and rehearsals scheduled to begin January 24, 1921.[4]
Cast
editRole | Actor | Dates | Notes and sources |
---|---|---|---|
Dulcy Smith | Lynn Fontanne | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | |
Gordon Smith | John Westley | Feb 14, 1921 - Oct 29, 1921 | Westley left to direct and play the male lead in The Straw by Eugene O'Neill.[5] |
Reginald Mason | Oct 31, 1921 - Nov 19, 1922 | ||
John Westley | Nov 21, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | Westley returned to his former role.[fn 2][8] | |
C. Rogers Forbes | Wallis Clark | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | |
William Parker | Gregory Kelly | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 31, 1921 | Kelly left to run his own summer stock company in Indianapolis.[9] |
TBD | Apr 01, 1921 - May 7, 1921 | ||
Gregory Kelly | Aug 13, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | ||
Angela Forbes | Norma Lee | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | |
Henry | Harry Lillford | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | |
Tom Sterrett | Elliott Nugent | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | |
Vincent Leach | Howard Lindsay | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | Besides his own performance, Lindsay also staged the play for the producers. |
Schuyler Van Dyck | Gilbert Douglas | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | |
Mrs. Forbes | Constance Pelissier | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 | |
Blair Patterson | George Alison | Feb 14, 1921 - Mar 11, 1922 |
Tryout and opening engagement
editThe play had a week-long tryout in Indianapolis at English's Opera House, starting February 14, 1921.[10] Immensely popular in Indianapolis because of Seventeen, Gregory Kelly was forced to make many curtain calls at the opening, which the theatre manager had designated "Gregory Kelly Night". It was a trying situation for Lynn Fontanne, who was the star.[11]
The production opened at the Cort Theatre in Chicago on February 20, 1921.[12] Percy Hammond at the Chicago Tribune wrote "Lynn Fontanne is an impish beauty with the gift of disguising the broadest of fun in a veil of subtlety". He was also impressed with Howard Lindsay as the scenario writer Leach, calling his recitation of the scenario for Sin "one of the funniest of the season's episodes". The performances of John Westley, Gregory Kelly, Wallis Clark, and Elliott Nugent all received commendation.[12]
So nervous were the authors at their first opening night in a big city (the tryout didn't count), that they couldn't sit still in the theater, but instead paced up and down in the lobby and the street outside. Tyler said he could see it was a success after the second act, "but Kaufman and Connelly, poor innocents, suffered right on-- lord, how they did suffer!" Tyler later had Kaufman write up a description of their agony, which he did in the character of Connelly.[fn 3] Tyler sent it to Percy Hammond as a Sunday story, but Hammond "pinched it outright and ran it under his own name",[13] as "The Pessimistic Playwrights".[14]
After three months, the play closed in Chicago on May 7, 1921.[15]
Broadway premiere and reception
editDulcy had its Broadway premiere at the Frazee Theatre on August 13, 1921.[16] Fontanne "reduces the impersonation of Dulcinea to a consummate art", while Kelly delivers the most commonplace lines in subtle ways, according to McElliott in the Daily News.[16] Arthur Pollock in The Brooklyn Daily Eagle disagreed, saying Kelly was "ineffective by virtue of trying to be too effective", and that Kelly and Fontanne "have quite terrible voices".[17] The critic for The New York Herald thought the play "proved fresh and diverting" and showed "a promising talent for stage-writing". They identified Lynn Fontanne's performance as the source of the play's success: "she had all the indispensible nervousness and fidgets, the unending volubility and air of complete confidence" to portray the bromide.[18]
Bide Dudley in The Evening World confidently predicted "Dulcy will positively prove one of the biggest hits of the new season". He reported there were dozens of curtain calls at the premiere, and "genuine applause born of sheer delight."[19] Two months after the premiere, Elliott Nugent, who played Tom Sterrett, and Norma Lee, who played Angela Forbes, were married in the Notre Dame chapel. They had met at the first rehearsal for Dulcy, which was the first Broadway performance for either of them.[20] Dulcy reached its 100th performance on Broadway on November 8, 1921.[21] In December, Lynn Fontanne announced her engagement to Alfred Lunt, who was then playing opposite Billie Burke in The Intimate Strangers.[22]
Broadway closing
editDulcy closed on Broadway at the Frazee Theater on March 11, 1922, then crossed the East River to start touring in Brooklyn.[23]
Adaptations
editFilm
editNotes
edit- ^ This is a topical reference to actor Gregory Kelly, who created the role. He had earlier starred as William Baxter in Seventeen, in which his character also had a sister that called him "Willie".
- ^ Westley, who had staged The Straw and was to play the male lead, abruptly resigned from the cast, causing its opening to be delayed. Otto Kruger took his place.[6] Both Dulcy and The Straw were produced by George C. Tyler. The latter play closed after just two weeks, on November 26, 1921.[7]
- ^ The humor in Kaufman's article is far more accessible to the modern reader than that of the play.
References
editSynopsis source
- George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly (1921). Dulcy: A Comedy in Three Acts. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York.
Citations
- ^ a b Hammond, Percy (April 3, 1921). "The Theaters". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. p. 79 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Tyler and Furnas, p.282
- ^ "The Stage Door". New York Tribune. New York, New York. January 11, 1921. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Theatre Notes". The Brooklyn Daily Times. Brooklyn, New York. January 19, 1921. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Joins "Dulcy" Cast". Brooklyn Citizen. Brooklyn, New York. October 26, 1921. p. 7 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ ""The Straw" Postponed". The New York Times. New York, New York. November 7, 1921. p. 15 – via NYTimes.com.
- ^ "Greenwich Village Theatre (ad)". The New York Times. New York, New York. November 26, 1921. p. 18 – via NYTimes.com.
- ^ "The Stage Door". New York Tribune. New York, New York. November 21, 1921. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "The Kellys Will Arrive Sunday". Indiana Daily Times. Indianapolis, Indiana. April 2, 1921. p. 7 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Gregory Kelly and a Promising Premiere". The Indianapolis News. Indianapolis, Indiana. February 15, 1921. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Gee! How Indianapolis Loves Gregory Kelly". Indiana Daily Times. Indianapolis, Indiana. February 15, 1921. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b Hammond, Percy (February 21, 1921). ""Dulcy" A Happy Satire". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. p. 17 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Tyler and Furnas, p.283
- ^ Hammond, Percy (April 3, 1921). "The Pessimistic Playwrights". The Kansas City Star. Kansas City, Missouri. p. 24 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Cort (ad)". Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. May 7, 1921. p. 11 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b McElliott (August 13, 1921). "Bromide Lady Stirs Pretty Kettle Of Fish". Daily News. New York, New York. p. 15 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Pollock, Arthur (August 15, 1921). ""Dulcy"". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, New York. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ ""Dulcy", Clever Burlesque Of Womand Who Utters Bromides". The New York Herald. New York, New York. August 15, 1921. p. 9 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Dudley, Bide (August 15, 1921). "The New Plays". The Evening World. New York, New York. p. 17 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Sweethearts In Play, Now They Are Married". The New York Herald. New York, New York. October 16, 1921. p. 15 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ ""Dulcy" At The Frazee". Brooklyn Citizen. Brooklyn, New York. November 6, 1921. p. 17 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Miss Lynn Fontanne Of 'Dulcy' And Alfred Lunt Are To Be Married". The New York Herald. New York, New York. December 10, 1921. p. 6 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Theatre Notes". The Brooklyn Daily Times. Brooklyn, New York. March 8, 1922. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
Bibliography
edit- George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. Dulcy: A Comedy in Three Acts. G. P. Putnam's Sons, The Knickerbocker Press, 1921.
- George C. Tyler and J. C. Furnas. Whatever Goes Up. Bobbs Merrill, 1934.
- Ruth Gorden. My Side: The Autobiography of Ruth Gordon. Harper & Row, 1976. ISBN 0-06-011618-8.