Private Lives
Private Lives | |
---|---|
Poster from the 1968 Theatre De Lys production | |
Written by | Noël Coward |
Date premiered | 18 August 1930 |
Place premiered | King's Theatre, Edinburgh |
Original language | English |
Subject | A divorced couple unexpectedly honeymoon at the same place with their new spouses |
Genre | Romantic comedy |
Setting | A hotel in Deauville, France and a flat in Paris in the 1930s |
Private Lives is a 1930 comedy of manners in three acts by Noël Coward. It concerns a divorced couple who, while honeymooning with their new spouses, discover that they are staying in adjacent rooms at the same hotel. Despite a perpetually stormy relationship, they realise that they still have feelings for each other. Its second act love scene was nearly censored in Britain as too risqué. Coward wrote one of his most popular songs, "Some Day I'll Find You", for the play.
After touring the British provinces, the play opened the new Phoenix Theatre in London in 1930, starring Coward, Gertrude Lawrence, Adrianne Allen and Laurence Olivier. A Broadway production followed in 1931, and the play has been revived at least a half dozen times each in the West End and on Broadway. The leading roles have attracted a wide range of actors; among those who have succeeded Coward as Elyot are Robert Stephens, Richard Burton, Alan Rickman and Matthew Macfadyen, and successors to Lawrence as Amanda have included Tallulah Bankhead, Elizabeth Taylor, Maggie Smith, Kim Cattrall and Lindsay Duncan. Directors of new productions have included John Gielgud, Howard Davies and Richard Eyre. The play was made into a 1931 film and has been adapted several times for television and radio.
Background
Coward was in the middle of an extensive Asian tour when he contracted influenza in Shanghai.[1] He spent the better part of his two-week convalescence sketching out the play and then completed the actual writing of the piece in only four days.[1] He immediately cabled Gertrude Lawrence in New York to ask her to keep autumn 1930 free to appear in the play. After spending a few more weeks revising it, he typed the final draft in the Peninsula Hotel in Kowloon and sent copies to Lawrence and his producer and manager, John C. Wilson, with instructions to cable him with their reactions.[2]
Coward received no fewer than thirty telegrams from Lawrence about the play. Her first said that she had read the play and there was "nothing wrong with it that can't be fixed." Coward "wired back curtly that the only thing that was going to be fixed was her performance."[3] Lawrence was indecisive about what to do about her previous commitment to André Charlot. Coward finally responded that he planned to cast the play with another actress.[4] By the time he returned to London, he found Lawrence not only had cleared her schedule but was staying at Edward Molyneux's villa in Cap-d'Ail in southeastern France learning her lines.[5] Coward joined her, and the two began rehearsing the scenes they shared. At the end of July they returned to London where Coward began to direct the production. Coward played the part of Elyot Chase himself, Adrianne Allen was his bride Sybil, Lawrence played Amanda Prynne, and Laurence Olivier was her new husband Victor. Coward wrote Sybil and Victor as minor characters, "extra puppets, lightly wooden ninepins, only to be repeatedly knocked down and stood up again".[6] He later insisted, however, that they must be credible new spouses for the lead characters: "We've got to have two people as attractive as Larry and Adrianne were in the first place, if we can find them."[7]
Rehearsals were still under way when the Lord Chamberlain took exception to the second act love scene, labelling it too risqué in light of the fact the characters were divorced and married to others. Coward went to St. James's Palace to plead his case by acting out the play himself and assuring the censor that with artful direction the scene would be presented in a dignified and unobjectionable manner.[8] Coward repeats one of his signature theatrical devices at the end of the play, where the main characters tiptoe out as the curtain falls – a device that he also used in Present Laughter, Hay Fever and Blithe Spirit.[9]
The play contains one of Coward's most popular songs, "Some Day I'll Find You". The Noël Coward Society's website, drawing on performing statistics from the publishers and the Performing Rights Society, ranks it among Coward's ten most performed songs.[10]
Synopsis
- Act 1
Following a brief courtship, Elyot and Sybil are honeymooning at an hotel in Deauville,[11] although her curiosity about his first marriage is not helping his romantic mood. In the adjoining suite, Amanda and Victor are starting their new life together, although he cannot stop thinking of the cruelty Amanda's ex-husband displayed towards her. Elyot and Amanda, following a volatile three-year-long marriage, have been divorced for the past five years, but they now discover that they are sharing a terrace while on their honeymoons with their new and younger spouses. Elyot and Amanda separately beg their new spouses to leave the hotel with them immediately, but both new spouses refuse to co-operate and each storms off to dine alone. Realising they still love each other and regretting having divorced, Elyot and Amanda abandon their spouses and run off together to Amanda's flat in Paris.
- Act 2
After dinner at the Paris flat several days later, Elyot and Amanda use their code word "Sollocks" to stop their arguments from getting out of hand. They kiss passionately, but the harmony cannot last: while Elyot and Amanda cannot live without each other, neither can they live with each other. They argue violently and try to outwit each other, just as they had done during their stormy marriage. Their ongoing argument escalates to a point of fury, as Amanda breaks a record over Elyot's head, and he retaliates by slapping her face. They seem to be trapped in a repeating cycle of love and hate as their private passions and jealousies consume them. At the height of their biggest fight, Sybil and Victor walk in.
- Act 3
The next morning, Amanda tries to sneak away early, but is surprised to find Sybil and Victor there. As they talk, Elyot comes in, and he and Amanda start bickering again. It has been decided that neither of the new spouses will grant a divorce for a year, to give Amanda and Elyot time to confirm if this is really what they want. As tempers rise, Sybil and Victor begin to bicker with each other, defending their respective spouses. Amanda and Elyot realise that Sybil and Victor are as suited to each other as they are, forgive one another and sneak out, leaving the younger two together. As Elyot and Amanda tiptoe out, Victor and Sybil have reached the point of mutual violence.
Productions
Original productions
Produced by C. B. Cochran, the play premiered on 18 August 1930, at the King's Theatre in Edinburgh, directed by Coward and starring Coward as Elyot, Adrianne Allen as Sybil, Gertrude Lawrence as Amanda, and Laurence Olivier as Victor. Sets and costumes were designed by Gladys Calthrop.[12] After successfully touring Liverpool, Birmingham, Manchester and Southsea for five weeks, the production opened the new Phoenix Theatre in London on 24 September 1930. A week after the play opened, Heinemann published the text; a week later, HMV issued recordings of scenes from the play performed by Coward and Lawrence.[13] Coward disliked appearing in long runs, and the London run was therefore a limited three-month season. It sold out within a week and was still playing to packed houses when, despite "the gratifying knowledge that we could have run on for another six [months]," it ended on 20 December 1930.[14]
The first Broadway production opened at the Times Square Theatre on 27 January 1931 with Coward, Lawrence and Olivier reprising their roles and Jill Esmond, who had married Olivier a few months earlier, as Sybil.[15] Walter Winchell described the production as "something to go quite silly over."[16] The New York critics were enthusiastic about the play and Coward's performance.[17] A few weeks before Coward and Lawrence were scheduled to be replaced by Otto Kruger and Madge Kennedy, Lawrence collapsed with a combined attack of laryngitis and nervous exhaustion. Coward appeared at five performances with her understudy, and then closed the production for two weeks to allow Lawrence to recuperate. She returned, and the two continued in their roles until 9 May 1931.[18] The production ran a total of 256 performances.[19]
Major revivals (1940s to 1970s)
The first West End revival was at the Apollo Theatre in 1944 starring John Clements and Kay Hammond.[20] Googie Withers took over as Amanda during the run.[21] Over the years, the play has been revived on Broadway six times. The first of these, in 1948, starred Tallulah Bankhead as Amanda and Donald Cook as Elyot, with Barbara Baxley as Sybil and William Langford as Victor, in a production directed by Martin Manulis at the Plymouth Theatre, where it ran for 248 performances.[22][23] The production toured all but three states of the U.S., and grossed more than $1.5 million.[24] Coward went to see the production "with my heart in my boots and was very pleasantly surprised ... her vitality was amazing, and, strange to say, she played the love scene quite beautifully."[25]
In 1963, at the start of what Coward called "Dad's Renaissance", a London revival directed by James Roose-Evans at the Hampstead Theatre Club heralded Coward's return to critical favour.[26] The success of the production, with Edward de Souza as Elyot and Rosemary Martin as Amanda, led to its transfer to the Duke of York's Theatre.[27] The West End producer wanted to cast established stars in the transfer, but Coward insisted that the young Hampstead cast should be retained.[28] It ran in the West End for 212 performances.[29] A May 1968 Off-Broadway production directed by Charles Nelson Reilly starred Elaine Stritch as Amanda, and ran for nine performances at the Theatre de Lys.[30][31] A 1969 production, directed by Stephen Porter and starring Brian Bedford as Elyot and Tammy Grimes as Amanda (winning a Tony Award for her performance), with David Glover as Victor and Suzanne Grossman as Sybil, opened at Broadway's Billy Rose Theatre and then moved to the Broadhurst Theatre to complete its run of 198 performances.[32][33] The last major revival during Coward's lifetime was at London's Queen's Theatre in 1972. It was directed by John Gielgud and starred Maggie Smith and Robert Stephens.[34] During the run of the production, John Standing took over as Elyot,[35] and Jill Bennett was a replacement as Amanda.[36] Gielgud directed a 1975 Broadway transfer of his production, starring Maggie Smith and John Standing at the 46th Street Theatre, where it ran for 92 performances.[37][38]
Major revivals (1980s to present)
In 1980, a production from the Greenwich Theatre transferred to the Duchess Theatre in the West End. It starred Michael Jayston and Maria Aitken, and it was directed by Alan Strachan.[39] Elizabeth Taylor as Amanda and Richard Burton as Elyot were the headliners in a highly anticipated 1983 Broadway production directed by Milton Katselas, which opened at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre in May 1983 following a pre-Broadway run at the Shubert Theatre in Boston in April 1983.[40][41] It co-starred John Cullum as Victor and Kathryn Walker as Sybil[42] and ran for 63 performances.[43] After closing on Broadway, this production toured to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in August and September 1983,[44] the Shubert Theatre, Chicago in September,[45] and the Wilshire Theatre, Los Angeles in October 1983.[46][47]
In 1990, a revival at London's Aldwych Theatre, starring Keith Baxter and Joan Collins, directed by Tim Luscombe, was not well received,[48] although Sara Crowe won an Olivier Award, Actress in a Supporting Role, as Sybil.[49] Arvin Brown directed Collins as Amanda and Simon Jones as Elyot in a 1992 Broadway production[50] that closed after only 11 previews and 37 performances at the Broadhurst Theatre.[51] The last West End production of the 20th century was at the National Theatre, running from May to September 1999, with Anton Lesser as Elyot and Juliet Stevenson as Amanda, directed by Philip Franks.[52][53]
A 2001 London revival emphasised the harshness and darker side of the play; it starred Alan Rickman and Lindsay Duncan, directed by Howard Davies at the Albery Theatre (subsequently renamed the Noël Coward Theatre). Duncan won the Olivier Award for her performance, Tim Hatley won for his set designs, and Jenny Beavan won for costumes.[54][55] A Broadway transfer of Davies's West End production, starring Rickman and Duncan, ran for 127 performances at the Richard Rodgers Theatre in 2002.[56][57] It won the Tony Award for Best Revival, while Duncan won for Leading Actress and Hatley won for sets.[58] In 2009 at its new home, the Hampstead Theatre presented a revival directed by Lucy Bailey, with Jasper Britton as Elyot and Claire Price as Amanda.[59]
A 2010 revival at the Vaudeville Theatre in London was directed by Richard Eyre and starred Matthew Macfadyen as Elyot and Kim Cattrall as Amanda.[60] The ten-week limited season ran from February to May 2010.[61] This production then moved to North America, starring Cattrall and Paul Gross. It had tryouts in Toronto from 16 September to 30 October 2011 and played on Broadway at the Music Box Theatre from 6 November, with an official opening on 17 November. Simon Paisley Day played Victor, and Anna Madeley played Sybil.[62] The production closed early, on 31 December 2011.[63]
In March 2011 Michael Buffong directed a production at the Royal Exchange, Manchester with Imogen Stubbs as Amanda Prynne, Simon Robson as Elyot Chase, Joanna Page as Sibyl Chase and Clive Hayward as Victor Prynne.
A production ran at the Chichester Festival from 28 September (previews from 21 September) to 27 October 2012, starring Anna Chancellor as Amanda and Toby Stephens as Elyot, with Anthony Calf as Victor and Anna-Louise Plowman as Sibyl. It was directed by Jonathan Kent.[64][65] This production was reprised with the same cast at the Gielgud Theatre, in London, from 3 July (previews from 22 June) to 21 September 2013.[66][67][68] This performance was broadcast to participating cinemas in the UK from 6 February 2014, and in the US on 11 December 2013, by CinemaLive and Digital Theatre in their West End Theatre Series.[69]
The play has also been produced internationally in Singapore, in April 2006, by the British Theatre Playhouse.[70]
Critical reception
The original production received mixed reviews. Coward later wrote, "The critics described Private Lives variously as 'tenuous, thin, brittle, gossamer, iridescent, and delightfully daring'. All of which connoted in the public mind cocktails, repartee and irreverent allusions to copulation, thereby causing a gratifying number of respectable people to queue up at the box office."[71] The Times wrote, "What an entertaining play it is!", but wondered if any other performers could bring it off.[72] Allardyce Nicoll called it "amusing, no doubt, yet hardly moving farther below the surface than a paper boat in a bathtub and, like the paper boat, ever in imminent danger of becoming a shapeless, sodden mass."[73] The Manchester Guardian commented, "The audience evidently found it a good entertainment, but Mr. Coward certainly had not flattered our intelligence. The play appears to be based on the theory that anything will do provided it be neatly done."[74] The Observer also thought that the play depended on brilliant acting and thought the characters unrealistic, though "None the less, for a couple of hours they are delicious company when Mr. Coward is master of unceremonious ceremonies."[75] The New Statesman discerned a sad side to the play in its story of a couple who can live neither with nor without each other: "It is not the least of Mr. Coward's achievements that he has ... disguised the grimness of his play and that his conception of love is really desolating."[76]
When the text was published, The Times called it "unreadable",[77] and The Times Literary Supplement found it "inexpressibly tedious" in print but acknowledged that its effectiveness on stage was "proved by the delight of a theatrical audience."[78] T.E. Lawrence, however, wrote, "The play reads astonishingly well ... superb prose."[79] The editor of The Gramophone greeted Coward and Lawrence's 1930 recording of scenes from the play as a success and added, "I wish that Noel Coward would find time to write a short play for the gramophone, for neither of these extracts has enough completeness to bear indefinite repetition."[80]
Literary analysis
Private Lives has been the subject of literary analysis under a range of literary theories. Coward expressed a dim view of such analyses: "Many years ago an earnest young man wrote a book about my plays. It was very intelligent and absolute rubbish."[81] In a 2005 article, Penny Farfan analyses the play from the point of view of queer theory, arguing that "the subversiveness of [Coward's] sexual identity is reflected in his work," and that Private Lives questions "the conventional gender norms on which compulsory heterosexuality depends."[82] Positing that the leading characters' portrayal as equals is evidence in support of this theory, Farfan instances the famous image (shown above) of Coward and Lawrence as Elyot and Amanda smoking and "posing as mirror opposites".[82] Coward himself pronounced the play "psychologically unstable",[83] and John Lahr in a 1982 study of Coward's plays writes, "Elyot and Amanda's outrageousness is used to propound the aesthetics of high camp – an essentially homosexual view of the world that justifies detachment.[84] However, in a 1992 article on "Coward and the Politics of Homosexual Representation", Alan Sinfield, examining gay aspects of Coward's major plays, mentions Private Lives only in passing.[85] The critic Michael Billington writes of the piece, "It is not a closet gay play but a classic about the mysterious charm of androgeny."[52]
The play has also been analysed as part of the theatre of the absurd. In a 1984 article, Archie J. Loss argues that nothing can ever happen in the relationship of Elyot and Amanda, because it is based on conflicting emotions: "they are bound to repeat themselves, playing out their scene again and again with different words and different props but always with the same result."[86] In a 2000 study of Coward, Jean Chothia instances surreal exchanges in the play, such as: "Have you ever crossed the Sahara on a camel?" "Frequently. When I was a boy we used to do it all the time. My Grandmother had a wonderful seat on a camel."[87]
Film and broadcast versions
Hanns Kräly and Richard Schayer wrote the screenplay for a 1931 film adaptation directed by Sidney Franklin and starring Norma Shearer as Amanda and Robert Montgomery as Elyot. Una Merkel and Reginald Denny played Sybil and Victor. The film received mixed reviews.[88] Coward thought it "passable."[89]
On British television, Peter Gray and Maxine Audley starred in a 1959 presentation, and Alec McCowen and Penelope Keith took the leads in a BBC production in 1976.[90] BBC Radio 4 broadcast a radio adaptation starring Paul Scofield and Patricia Routledge on 20 December 1975.[91] In January 2010, BBC Radio 4 broadcast another adaptation of the play directed by Sally Avens, starring Helena Bonham Carter as Amanda and Bill Nighy as Elyot.[92]
Awards
When Private Lives premiered, the various awards now given for achievement in musical theatre, such as the Olivier Awards and Tony Awards, had not yet been created, and therefore the original productions of the play received no such awards. The first Broadway production of Private Lives to receive major theatre awards was the 1969 production, for which Tammy Grimes won both the Tony Award for Leading Actress in a Play[93] and the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress[94] during the 1970 awards season. Brian Bedford won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actor.[94] Sara Crowe won an Olivier Award for her performance as Sybil in 1991.[49] For her performance as Amanda in the 1975 production, Maggie Smith was nominated for both the Tony[95] and the Drama Desk Awards.[96]
The 2001 London production won three Olivier Awards out of seven nominations, for Lindsay Duncan as Amanda and the set designs by Tim Hatley and costumes by Jenny Beavan.[55] On Broadway in 2002, the same production won three Tonys out of five nominations, including Best Revival, Best Actress (Duncan) and Best Scenic Design (Hatley).[95][97] It also won the corresponding three Drama Desk awards, out of seven nominations.[98]
Notes
- 1 2 Lahr, p. 59
- ↑ Coward (1937), p. 299
- ↑ Coward (1937), p. 307.
- ↑ Coward (1937), p. 308
- ↑ Coward (2007), p. 181
- ↑ Lesley, p. 136
- ↑ Lesley, p. 137
- ↑ Morley, p. 196.
- ↑ Kaplan, p. 113
- ↑ "Appendix 3 (The Relative Popularity of Coward's Works)", Noël Coward Music Index, accessed 9 March 2009
- ↑ Coward's opening directions in the text specify merely "a hotel in France", but in Act III (p. 87) Sybil makes it clear that the hotel is in Deauville
- ↑ "Gladys Calthrop", Who's Who in the Theatre, 14th edition 1967, Pitman
- ↑ "His Master's Voice", The Times, 8 October 1930, p. 19. The original recordings (catalogue number C2043) have been reissued on compact disc on several labels, such as Pavilion, PASTCD9715
- ↑ Coward (1937), p. 312; and "Theatres", The Times, 18 December 1930, p. 12
- ↑ Adrianne Allen was pregnant and unable to travel to New York. The child to whom she gave birth was Daniel Massey, to whom Coward was godfather. See Castle, p. 115
- ↑ Morley, p. 202.
- ↑ "Private Lives", Globe Theatre Study Guide, 2004, accessed 17 March 2009
- ↑ Coward (2007), p. 219
- ↑ Morley, pp. 203–05.
- ↑ "Private Lives", The Times, 2 November 1944, p. 6
- ↑ Castle, p. 119
- ↑ Atkinson, Brooks. " "At the Theater". The New York Times (abstract), 5 October 1948, p. 30
- ↑ Private Lives, 1948". Internet Broadway Database listing, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Hoare, p. 372
- ↑ Coward (2007), p. 534
- ↑ "Timeless Revival of Coward", The Times, 26 April 1963, p. 6
- ↑ Fay, Gerard. "Private Lives at the Duke of York's", The Guardian, 4 July 1963, p. 7
- ↑ Hoare, p. 480
- ↑ Coward (2007), p. 709
- ↑ Sullivan, Dan. "The Theater: 'Private Lives' Revived; Noel Coward's Farce Stars Elaine Stritch". The New York Times, 20 May 1968, p. 59
- ↑ Private Lives, 1968. Internet Off-Broadway Database, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Barnes, Clive. "Theater: Tammy Grimes Cavorts in Private Lives; Noel Coward Comedy of 1929 Revived Brian Bedford Plays Well-Bred Mate" The New York Times (abstract), 5 December 1969, p. 52
- ↑ Private Lives, 1969. Internet Broadway Database, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Wardle, Irving. "Coward talk by moonlight ridicules without malice", The Times, 22 September 1972, p. 9
- ↑ Lewsen, Charles. "Private Lives", The Times, 19 April 1973, p. 15
- ↑ "Private Lives", The Times, 18 July 1973, p. 13
- ↑ Barnes, Clive. "Private Lives, Still Surprising, Returns". The New York Times (abstract), 7 February 1975, p. 14
- ↑ Private Lives, 1975". Internet Broadway Database, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ See Chaillet, Ned. "Still sparkling Coward: Private Lives, Greenwich", The Times, 8 March 1980, p. 8; and Wardle, Irving. "All the fun of the Master's fare: Private Lives, Duchess", The Times, 17 April 1980, p. 11
- ↑ Barnes, Martie. "Taylor and Burton Open in Noel Coward Play", The Associated Press, 8 April 1983, Domestic News. "Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton drew a packed house for their first joint appearance on stage in 17 years. ... The twice-married, twice-divorced couple portray a divorced couple ... at the Schubert [sic] Theater before a packed house of 1,688 people. ... The play is in previews here for two weeks before opening May 8 at the Lunt-Fontanne Theater".
- ↑ "Liz Taylor and Richard Burton Leave Boston With Private Lives", The Associated Press, 25 April 1983, Domestic News
- ↑ Rich, Frank. "Theater: Private Lives, Burton and Miss Taylor". The New York Times, 9 May 1983, p. C12
- ↑ Private Lives, 1983. Internet Broadway Database, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Richards, David. "Private Lives: A Public Spectacle;Liz & Dick's Clumsy Coward at the Kennedy Center", The Washington Post, 22 August 1983, p.C1
- ↑ "The show finally went on as Elizabeth Taylor, whose illness had forced the cancellation of four performances of "Private Lives," opened the Chicago run of the Noel Coward classic." "People in the News", The Associated Press, 15 September 1983
- ↑ "People in the News", "Domestic News", The Associated Press, 13 October 1983
- ↑ "'Private Lives'". Dame Elizabeth Taylor.com, accessed 7 March 2011
- ↑ Billington, Michael. "A looker lost for laughs", The Guardian, 20 September 1990, p. 29
- 1 2 "Olivier Winners, 1991". Olivierawards.com, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Rich, Frank. "Theater: Private Lives; For the Ardent Fans of Collins and Coward". The New York Times, 21 February 1992
- ↑ "Private Lives Closing Early". The New York Times, 17 March 2011
- 1 2 Billington, Michael. "Love and Violence: Private Lives", The Guardian, 14 May 1999, p. 18
- ↑ "Private Lives, 1999" albemarle-london.com, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Taylor, Paul. "Another masterly reunion: Private Lives", The Independent, 8 October 2001, p. 10
- 1 2 "Olivier Winners, 2002". Olivierawards.com, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Brantley, Ben. "Theater Review; Take Hate, Add Love and Shake Tenderly for a Coward Cocktail". The New York Times, 29 April 2002
- ↑ "Private Lives, 2002" Internet Broadway Database, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Pogrebin, Robin. "At Tonys, Millie Is Tops, but Its Book and Score Aren't; Winners Include Stritch and Albee, Private Lives and Urinetown". The New York Times, 3 June 2002
- ↑ Billington, Michael. "Cocktails and carping on Coward's trip to the dark side", The Guardian, 28 January 2009, p. 21
- ↑ Billington, Michael. "Cattrall proves irresistible in a funny, clever take on Coward", The Guardian, 5 March 2010
- ↑ "Theatre history", Vaudeville Theatre, accessed 7 March 2011.
- ↑ Jones, Kenneth. "Prior to Broadway, Kim Cattrall and Paul Gross Play Private Lives' Balcony Scenes in Toronto Sept. 16-Oct. 30", Playbill, 16 September 2011
- ↑ Gans, Andrew (13 December 2011). "Broadway Revival of Private Lives, Featuring Kim Cattrall, Will Close Early". Playbill.com.
- ↑ Michael Billington (30 September 2012). "Private Lives – Minerva, Chichester". The Guardian.
- ↑ Bosanquet, Theo. "Calf & Plowman join Chancellor & Stephens in Chichester Private Lives", What's On Stage, 14 August 2012
- ↑ Quentin Letts (5 July 2013). "Don't quibble, Sibyl, this is first-class fun".
- ↑ Louise Jury and Josh Pettitt (4 July 2013). "It's odd kissing Toby Stephens with his wife in the cast, says Private Lives actress Anna Chancellor". Evening Standard.
- ↑ Paul Taylor (4 July 2013). "Theatre review: Private Lives". The Independent.
- ↑ "Digital Theatre and CinemaLive broadcast Private Lives". WhatsOnStage.com, Inc. Retrieved 11 December 2013.
- ↑ http://www.britishtheatreplayhouse.com/past_products.html
- ↑ Richards, p. 48
- ↑ "Phoenix Theatre", The Times, 25 September 1930, p. 10
- ↑ Morley, pp. 197–98.
- ↑ Brown, Ivor. "Private Lives", The Manchester Guardian, 25 September 1930, p. 17
- ↑ "The Week's Theatres", The Observer, 28 September 1930, p. 15. Both the Guardian and Observer reviews were by Ivor Brown, whose austere view in the former (a daily paper) had evidently mellowed by the time he wrote for the latter, a Sunday paper.
- ↑ Quoted in Ellis, Samantha. "Private Lives, London, September 1930", The Guardian, 17 September 2003, accessed 7 March 2011
- ↑ The Times classed Coward alongside dramatists from Ben Jonson to J. M. Barrie as better on the stage than on the page. See Edwards, Oliver, "On Reading Plays", The Times, 17 May 1956, p. 13
- ↑ Morgan, Charles. "A Group of Plays", The Times Literary Supplement, 23 October 1930, p. 858
- ↑ Lesley, p. 139
- ↑ Mackenzie, Compton, "Editorial", The Gramophone, December 1930, p. 3
- ↑ Richards, p. 24
- 1 2 Farfan, Penny. "Noel Coward and Sexual Modernism: Private Lives as Queer Comedy". Modern Drama, 48.4 (2005), pp. 677–88, Project Muse, accessed 6 March 2011. (subscription required)
- ↑ Coward (1937), p. 296
- ↑ Lahr, p. 66
- ↑ Sinfield, Alan. "Private Lives/Public Theater: Noel Coward and the Politics of Homosexual Representation", Representations, No. 36 (Autumn, 1991), pp. 43–63, accessed 6 March 2011 (subscription required)
- ↑ Loss, Archie K. "Waiting for Amanda: Noël Coward as Comedian of the Absurd," Journal of Modern Literature, Vol. 11, No. 2 (July 1984), pp. 299–306, accessed 6 March 2011.(subscription required)
- ↑ Chiothia, Jean. "Playing with the audience" in Kaplan, p. 111
- ↑ The Times, 8 February 1932, p. 10; Hall, Mordaunt. "Spatting Couples of Private Lives Meet With High Favor". The New York Times 19 December 1931, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Coward (2007), p. 279
- ↑ "Private Lives on Television", The Times, 17 January 1959, p. 4; and Morley, Sheridan. "The darker side of Coward: Private Lives, BBC 1", The Times, 29 December 1976, p. 7.
- ↑ It was reissued as a part of the BBC Audio Collection under the title Noël Coward Double Bill: Private Lives & Hayfever. It is also found on a BBC America audio cassette, Private Lives/Present Laughter (1989) and was rereleased in CD format by BBC in February 2010."Private Lives". BBC. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
- ↑ "Private Lives". BBC. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
- ↑ Tony Awards and Nominations, Tammy Grimes, 1961 and 1970. Tonyawards.com, accessed 6 March 2011
- 1 2 "'Private Lives' Awards at Internet Broadway Database". IBDB.com, accessed 6 March 2011
- 1 2 Tony Awards and Nominations, 'Private Lives', 1975 and 2002. Tonyawards.com, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Drama Desk Awards and Nominations, 1974–1975. Dramadesk.com, accessed 6 March 2011
- ↑ Jones, Kenneth. "Millie Is Big 2002 Tony Award-Winner; The Goat Grabs Best Play". Playbill.com, 3 June 2002
- ↑ Drama Desk Awards and Nominations, 2001–2002. Dramadesk.com, accessed 6 March 2011
References
- Castle, Charles. 1972. Noël. London: W. H. Allen. ISBN 0-491-00534-2.
- Coward, Noël. 1930. Private Lives: An Intimate Comedy in Three Acts. London: Methuen. Reissue, 2000. ISBN 0-413-74490-6.
- Coward, Noël. 1937. Present Indicative. Autobiography to 1931. London: Heinemann. Methuen reissue, 2004 ISBN 978-0-413-77413-2
- Coward, Noël; Barry Day (ed). 2007 The Letters of Noël Coward. London: Methuen. ISBN 978-0-7136-8578-7.
- Hoare, Philip. 1995. Noël Coward, A Biography. London: Sinclair-Stevenson. ISBN 1-85619-265-2.
- Kaplan, Joel and Sheila Stowel. 2000. Look Back in Pleasure: Noël Coward Reconsidered. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-413-75500-2.
- Lahr, John. 1982. Coward the Playwright. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-413-48050-X.
- Lesley, Cole. 1976. The Life of Noël Coward. London: Cape. ISBN 0-224-01288-6.
- Morley, Sheridan. 1969. A Talent to Amuse: A Biography of Noël Coward. Rev. ed. London: Pavilion, 1986. ISBN 1-85145-064-5.
- Richards, Dick. 1970. The Wit of Noël Coward. London: Sphere Books. ISBN 0-7221-3676-5