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Why Marry?


Why Marry? is a 1917 play written by American playwright Jesse Lynch Williams. It won the first Pulitzer Prize for Drama, in 1918.

Why Marry? premiered on Broadway at the Astor Theatre on December 25, 1917 and closed on April 1, 1918 after 120 performances. Directed by Roi Cooper Megrue, the cast featured Estelle Winwood (Helen), Edmund Breese (John), Lotus Robb (Jean), Harold West (Rex), Beatrice Beckley (Lucy), Ernest Lawford (Cousin Theodore), Nat C. Goodwin (Uncle Everett), and Shelley Hull (Ernest). The play was based on Williams' short story And So They Were Married.

The play won the 1918 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. A member of the Pulitzer Prize jury wrote: "I have seen 'Why Marry?'... and find it an admirable piece of comedy...There are some things in the piece which I do not like but on the whole it is the best piece of drama I have seen this year."

The East Lynne Theater Company presented Why Marry? in Cape May, New Jersey, April 2013.

The play takes place during a week-end at a country house.

The characters are: Jean, the host's youngest sister, brought up to be married; Rex, an unmarried neighbor; Lucy, the hostess; Cousin Theodore, a clergyman who does not believe in divorce; John, the host, who owns the house -- "and almost everyone in it" ---also does not believe in divorce; Uncle Everett, a judge, who does believe in divorce; Helen, the host's other sister who does not want to marry, although everyone wants to marry her; Ernest, a scientist who believes in neither marriage or divorce.

In the Introduction to the script, Williams wrote that near the end of the play, many relatives were to arrive for dinner, and to "influence the recalcitrant couple...though the family may have its place in the book, it proved to be an awful nuisance on the stage...It was not clear who was who...So we decided that the family had to be destroyed".

In his review for The New York Times Nat Goodwin wrote: "The holy estate was again up for inspection last night at the Astor. Jesse Lynch Williams would, it is to be presumed, acknowledge the debt to Bernard Shaw which is owed by so many writers of modern social comedy... his play is written from a thorougly original point of view, is as keenly satirical as Shaw at his best, and, last but not least, amusing.... a play which is perhaps the most intelligent and searching satire on social institutions ever written by an American."


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