Merrily We Roll Along
By Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman
4.5/5
()
About this ebook
Moss Hart
Born in New York City in 1904, Moss Hart began his career as a playwright in 1925 with The Hold-Up Man, yet achieved his first major success in the 1930 collaboration with George S. Kaufman, Once in a Lifetime. In addition to numerous Broadway productions, such as The Man Who Came to Dinner and You Can't Take it With You, which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1938, Hart wrote screenplays for Gentleman's Agreement and A Star is Born. Moss Hart also gained universal recognition for his award-winning direction of My Fair Lady in 1956.
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Reviews for Merrily We Roll Along
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Long before there was Norman Mailer's Charley Eitel of "Deer Park," there was Richard Niles of Kaufman and Hart's "Merrily We Roll Along." Niles fights harder to preserve his idealism and integrity and hence is a more sympathetic protagonist. But when the sell-out is sealed in the first scene of the Second Act, it feels as tragic as any moment in any play I have ever read. I recommend this play for everyone who still has dreams of their youth or has abandoned them. This is a profoundly tragic American play, the equal of "Death of a Salesman."
Book preview
Merrily We Roll Along - Moss Hart
Merrily We Roll Along
by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart
First published in 1934
This edition published by Reading Essentials
Victoria, BC Canada with branch offices in the Czech Republic and Germany
For.ullstein@gmail.com
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, except in the case of excerpts by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.
Merrily We Roll Along
by
George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart
The action of the play moves backward. Each scene takes place at an earlier time than the scene preceding.
SYNOPSIS OF SCENES
ACT ONE
ACT TWO
ACT THREE
ACT ONE
SCENE I
The country house of Richard Niles—Sands Point, Long Island, an evening in September, 1934. The room we see is oval in shape and is fringed with French windows, which look out upon the Sound itself. It is night, but there is a glimpse of tall white pillars through the windows.
It is the kind of room you have often seen as a fullpage illustration in Town and Country, over a caption reading: This unusual décor is a glimpse of the drawing room in the Long Island home of . . .
There are some ten or twelve people present, the men in tails, the women in evening dress. There is a game of bridge, a game of backgammon. A dark-haired young Man is at the piano, playing, with a good deal of skill, one of the popular tunes of the day. Leaning across the piano, listening with a professional interest, is a handsome, flaxen-haired Lad of about twenty-three or four. A Lady with a highball in her hand sits a little apart, surveying the scene with a certain detachment. There is a relaxed air about all of these people—it is merely an informal Sunday evening on Long Island.
For a moment the music plays, the flaxen-haired young man hums a little, the bridge and backgammon games go on. Through the music, you catch the routine chatter at the tables: Double.
. . . "I’ll take it. . . .
Spade. . . .
Two hearts. . . .
Pass. . . .
Pass. . . .
Two spades. . . .
Pass. . . .
Pass. . . .
Pass."
After a bit of this, David Haskell comes in through the French windows. He is an ardent young man of about twenty-six, with a rather sensitive face. He goes to the liquor table, mixes a drink, and then notices the lady with the highball. Julia Glenn is a woman close to forty. She is not unpretty, but on her face are the marks of years and years of quiet and steady drinking—eight, ten hours a day. In contrast to the modish evening clothes of the other women, Julia wears something from about three years ago, and which wasn’t quite right then. Withal, there is about her definitely an air. Here is a person.
David raises his glass to her in grave salute.
Julia
(Returning the salute with her own glass. Then, ever so brightly)
Know what I’m having?
David
What?
Julia
(Grimly)
Not much fun.
(David gives an appreciative chuckle and goes out through the windows with the highball)
(An extremely beautiful girl named Ivy Carroll comes down the stairs, a book tucked rather showily under her arm. For a moment she stands surveying the room and its occupants with a quiet superiority, then she moves up to the windows, breathes deeply, and is gone)
(The flaxen-haired young man, who has been humming, now finishes a song in full voice and breaks away from the piano. His name is Val Burnett)
Rosamond Ogden
(Who has been watching her husband at the backgammon board)
Tell me, Mr. Burnett—I thought you broadcast every Sunday night. Is that changed now?
Val
Oh, sure. That was the Miracle Mayonnaise Hour. I’m on the Black Star Axle Grease Hour now. Tuesdays and Fridays, eight-thirty.
Rosamond Ogden
Really? I must listen.
Julia
(Into her drink)
Mayonnaise to axle grease. Just a step.
Val
It’s really the biggest hour there is. Blue and Red network, you know. National hook-up.
Albert Ogden
(Shaking his dice cup)
Yeah! Fifteen minutes twice a week and gets more than the President of the United States.
Rosamond Ogden
Really, we’re so spoiled! Here’s Mr. Burnett—millions of people listen to him every time he broadcasts—and here he is tossing off these golden notes—
Val
(Assuming a false modesty)
Oh, I’m just a crooner. I guess you people would rather hear Lawrence Tibbett, or something like that.
Julia
Why, Mr. Burnett, we would not!
(Scornfully)
Lawrence Tibbett! I’ll bet you he couldn’t croon if he tried.
Val
I never know whether you’re kidding me or not, Miss Glenn, but honest—do you like my singing?
Julia
Like it? Why, I’m your greatest admirer.
Val
Say, that means more to me than you think, because I’m just crazy about your stories. I think you write just about the best stories I ever read. That one about the boy and the girl—I read it over and over.
Julia
Why, I’m—touched. Didn’t you get it the first time?
Sam Frankl
(At the piano)
Hey, Val! Remember this one?
(He plays a phrase or two)
Val
Do I?
(His voice picks up the music)
Cyrus Winthrop
(Putting down his cards)
Two and one.
Lady Patricia Dorson
(Also a bridge player. She has listened to the music, rapt)
Oh! That divine song! It just swept London. The Prince couldn’t get enough of it. He still sings it. The Prince has quite a nice voice, you know.
Julia
What hour is he on?
Lady Pat
(Abstractedly)
H’m?
Cyrus Winthrop
I think we make three no-trump, too.
Richard Niles
Do you?
Rosamond Ogden
Lady Dorson, didn’t I read somewhere that the Prince was coming over for a visit?
Lady Pat
Well, there was some talk about it just before I left.
Julia
(Into that same drink)
I should say there was.
Cyrus Winthrop
(Who has been thinking it over)
No, I guess we go down one.
Lady Pat
I say, Mr. Frankl, there was another song of yours the Prince simply adored.
(She hums a fragment; Frankl picks it up on the piano)
That’s it. Isn’t that too soothing, my dear?
Laura Nash
(The fourth bridge player)
I love everything of Sam’s.
(Raising her voice)
Sam, why don’t you write more songs like that? You never do any more.
Frankl
Well, I’ve been pretty busy lately on my concerto. I promised Stokowski he’d get it by the fifteenth.
Rosamond Ogden
But, Sam, those glorious songs! We’ll have nothing to dance to next winter.
Frankl
Oh, I’ll do a show or two, I suppose—they’re always after me. I’m in the middle of a new symphony, too. You see, the trouble with me is——
(He rises from the piano)
I’ve got three different careers. My light music, my serious music, and my sculpture.
Lady Pat
Sculpture? Why, I didn’t know you were a sculptor, too.
Frankl
Oh, sure. Didn’t you see those heads I did of myself? They were in the Times.
Lady Pat
How astonishing!
Ivy
(In the windows)
Oh! To play under the stars on a night like this! The Greek theatre must have been magnificent.
Laura Nash
Who dealt?
Winthrop
I did. . . . Pass.
Lady Pat
(Resuming her seat)
Oh, so sorry. What happened?
Winthrop
I dealt and passed.
Richard
I pass.
Lady Pat
Is there a score?
Winthrop
They’re vulnerable. We have sixty.
Lady Pat
I pass.
Laura Nash
I’m bidding.
Ivy
Mr. Frankl, play me that Chopin Waltz—you know the one I mean. Opus 3, Number 9.
Frankl
Sorry. I don’t play Chopin.
Julia
You’ll take Frankl or nothing.
(The piano starts up again; Julia makes a slight genuflexion in the direction of the music)
Laura Nash
Two no-trump.
Winthrop
By me.
Richard
Three no-trump.
Lady Pat
I pass.
Laura Nash
Pass.
Winthrop
My lead?
Richard
(Putting down his hand as Winthrop leads)
The clubs aren’t so good, but I’ve got my values.
(He rises. Richard Niles, at forty, is the layman’s idea of what a fashionable playwright should look like. His portrait by Pirie MacDonald has long been familiar to readers of Vanity Fair. He is faultlessly attired, has that distinguished touch of gray at the temples)
Well! . . . How are you backgammon boys coming along? Who’s winning?
Ogden
(Indicates Nash)
He doesn’t have to produce plays for a living. I never saw such luck.
(Nash rolls the dice)
My God! Doubles again!
Richard
Tell me, Everett—where do you go from London?
Nash
Well, I’ve got to stay there