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- Dinner at Eight
-
-
- (October 31, 1932)
-
- In collaboration for the first time since they wrote The
- Royal Family, Playwrights George Kaufman & Edna Ferber have
- turned out a piece in which they should take pleasure and
- profit, too. Dinner at Eight is serio-comic, and it may be
- inferred that Miss Ferber supplied the serio-element, Mr.
- Kaufman the comic. The deft Kaufman hand, however, is thoroughly
- evident in this excellent play's shrewd direction.
-
- Millicent Jordan (Ann Andrews) is giving a dinner for Lord &
- Lady Ferncliffe, visiting social lion and lioness. To it are
- invited Socialite Dr. & Mrs. Talbot, a brutal financier named
- Packard and his wife who "speaks pure Spearment," Carlotta
- Vance, a dated theatrical beldame, and Larry Renault, a has-been
- film star. Into this tranche devie, from the minute the
- invitations are telephoned, steps tragedy. The film star, lover
- of the Jordans' daughter, is made to realize he is through.
- Packard ruins Mr. Jordan, determines to get a divorce from his
- wife, who is in love with Dr. Talbot. And Dr. Talbot must tell
- his host that he is about to die of heart failure. To complete
- the fiasco, when the cocktails are served it is revealed that
- the guests of honor will not be present. The others do not wait
- for Larry Renault. He is already dead in his hotel room. Loud
- dinner music bursts forth. The tragedians exchange limpid
- banalities: "The seasons are changing: they say there'll be palm
- trees someday where the Empire State Building is...Girls of 14
- today behave just as if they were 30...I love dogs. You grow
- just as attached to them as if they were children..." Curtain.
-
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