The Philadelphia Story: A Comedy in Three Acts

by Philip Barry

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"This Broadway hit starred Katharine Hepburn as Tracy Lord of the Philadelphia Lords, an inhibited and spoiled daughter of the privileged. Divorced from C.J. Dexter Haven, she is engaged to a successful young snob. A gossip weekly sends a reporter and a camera woman to report the wedding arrangements and they are injected into the house by Tracy's brother who hopes to divert their attention from father's romance with a Broadway dancer. Tracy finds herself growing interested in Connor, the show more fascinating reporter. At the end of a pre wedding party, Tracy and Connor take a moonlight dip in the pool and meet her ex husband and finance [should be, fiancé] on their way back to the house. The following morning her intended agrees to forgive her, but his smug attitude enrages Tracy and she breaks off the engagement. Connor offers to marry her, but she turns him down and remarries Dexter, to the satisfaction of everyone."--Page 4 of cover. show less

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The comedies about Barry, a product of Baker's 47 Workshop, is best remembered for his witty and elegant marriage among the well-to-do. His most noted play is The Philadelphia Story (1939), about a wealthy young woman who on her wedding day switches from a dull social climber to remarry her first husband. Other drawing room successes include Paris show more Bound (1929) and Holiday (1928). Barry also wrote more serious plays but with less critical and popular success. Hotel Universe (1930), in which a group of strangers relive personal crises in their lives, and Here Come the Clowns (1938) are experimental dramas with a mystical side, reflecting a Freudian interpretation of character and existential doubt. In Tomorrow and Tomorrow (1931) a man discovers that his mistress is more his wife in behavior and love than the woman to whom he is legally married. Of Barry, Brendan Gill wrote, "No matter how ambitious the intentions of his plays, he kept the plays themselves modest in scale. He wrote often in the now unfashionable genre of high comedy but his comedies strove to be deeper than they were high." (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
812.5Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican drama in English20th Century
LCC
PS3503 .A648 .P5Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960
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150
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217,359
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(4.21)
Languages
English
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Paper
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2
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8