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- Private Lives
-
-
- (February 9, 1931)
-
- Private Lives is one of the crispest comedies that has come
- to Broadway for many a season. Perfectly acted by svelte
- Gertrude Lawrence, who has a fetching way of closing her eyes
- from the bottom when smiling, and deft Noel Coward, author and
- producer of the piece, it relates the adventures of a divorced
- couple who find themselves occupying adjoining suited and
- terraces at a French hotel on the first night of their separate
- new honeymoons. With the merriest of dialog they tenderly
- reunite, after quarreling with their respective new wife and
- husband.
-
- Then follows a most congenial scene in Miss Lawrence's Paris
- apartment, with brandy-drinking, song-singing ("Some Day I'll
- Find You," by Mr. Coward) and great fun on a couch. Says Mr.
- Coward:
-
- "Of course, according to the Catholic church we're not
- divorced at all."
-
- Miss Lawrence: ":But we're not Catholics."
-
- Mr. Coward: "I know, but it's rather nice to think they'd back
- us up." But their felicity is marred by violent bickering which
- culminates in a rough-&-tumble. At this point the deserted mates
- appear. The third act straightens matters satisfactorily.
-
- Private Lives is written with a basic honesty that is apparent
- even beneath its not extraordinary plot and glib lines, almost
- everyone of which is pure gold. Sample: "Some women should be
- struck regularly, like a gong."
-
-