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- What Price Glory
-
-
- (SEPTEMBER 15, 1924)
-
- What Price Glory. Heretofore, war in the theatre has been
- pretty generally concerned with the girl back home and the band
- playing the Marseillaise back stage. War has been essentially
- an adventure into which went certain souls; some of them came
- out, some were cowards and some were heroes; and the general
- effect was that of a Liberty Loan fight talk by William Jennings
- Bryan. What Price Glory is different. It tells the truth.
-
- Twenty marines and one French girl hold the stage. Two scenes
- behind the lines and one in a cellar at the front define the
- action. The soldier speech is salted with profanity; the
- telling of the story seasoned with a stronger irony; the point
- of the discussion that war is a filthy, futile fever of
- brutality.
-
- There is little plot. Captain Flagg and Sergt. Quirt have
- fought in many wars. Always the fighting has been incidental to
- their personal feud over one girl or another. Quirt is attached
- to Flagg's company as top sergeant. Five minutes after Flagg
- departs on leave, Quirt has attached himself to Flagg's French
- girl. The second act, at the front lien, is mainly a war
- interlude. In the last act, both men--with a chance to have the
- girl and escape the coming offensive--leave her standing in her
- dingy little bar.
-
- The extraordinary feature of this amazing play is its
- persistent wit. It had to be shortened after the opening night
- because laughter in the audience stretched the evening until
- 11:30. It is humor close to the soil; sometimes it shocks;
- always it bites. The authors (Laurence Stallings and Maxwell
- Anderson) owe no moderate debt to the cast for a performance
- that rubs elbows with perfection.
-
-