The Cocktail Party | |
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Written by | T. S. Eliot |
Characters | Edward Chamberlayne Lavinia Chamberlayne Celia Coplestone Sir Henry Harcourt-Reilly Miss Barraway Peter Quilpe Julia Shuttlethwaite Alexander MacColgie Gibbs |
Date premiered | Edinburgh: 22 August 1949 Broadway: 21 January 1950 |
Place premiered | Edinburgh Festival Edinburgh, Scotland Broadway: Henry Miller's Theatre New York City, New York |
Original language | English |
Setting | London, England |
The Cocktail Party is a verse drama in three acts by T. S. Eliot written in 1948 and performed in 1949 at the Edinburgh Festival. It was published in 1950.[1] The play was the most popular of Eliot's seven plays in his lifetime, although his 1935 play, Murder in the Cathedral, is better remembered today. It focuses on a troubled married couple who, through the intervention of a mysterious stranger, settle their problems and move on with their lives.[2]
The Cocktail Party was written while Eliot was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey.[3] In 1950 the play had successful runs in London and New York theaters (the Broadway production received the 1950 Tony Award for Best Play).
The play starts out seeming to be a light satire of the traditional British drawing room comedy. As it progresses, however, the work becomes a darker philosophical/psychological treatment of human relations. As in many of Eliot's works, the play uses absurdist elements to expose the isolation of the human condition. In another recurring theme of Eliot's plays, the Christian martyrdom of the mistress character is seen as a sacrifice that permits the predominantly secular life of the community to continue. As a morality play, the play is based on Euripides' play Alcestis.[4]
In 1951, in the first Theodore Spencer Memorial Lecture at Harvard University Eliot criticised his own plays in the second half of the lecture, explicitly the plays Murder in the Cathedral, The Family Reunion, and The Cocktail Party. The lecture was published as "Poetry and Drama" and later included in Eliot's 1957 collection On Poetry and Poets.