Quality Street (play)

Quality Street

A young man dressed all in white with a matching top hat and cane sits, head cocked, looking to his left

Illustration of Seymour Hicks as Valentine Brown
Written by J. M. Barrie
Characters See below
Date premiered November 11, 1901 (1901-11-11)
Place premiered Knickerbocker Theatre
Original language English
Genre Comedy
Setting Napoleonic times

Quality Street is a comedy in four acts by J. M. Barrie, written before his more famous work Peter Pan. The story is about two sisters who start a school "for genteel children".

The original Broadway production opened in 1901 and ran for only 64 performances. The show was then produced in London, where it was a hit, running for 459 performances. It was frequently revived until World War II.

Roles and 1902 London cast

Terriss and Hicks in Quality Street

Plot

The play is set in Napoleonic times.

Act 1

There is heightened anticipation as the local gossips of the town discuss the developing relationship between Miss Phoebe Throssel and Valentine Brown. Phoebe then confesses to her sister, Susan, that Brown intends to drop by later that day, and both are certain he means to propose. When he finally does appear, it is not to ask for Phoebe's hand in marriage but to announce his intention to join the fight in Europe against Napoleon. This leaves the girls devastated.

Act 2

Ten years after the departure of Brown, we find the girls have set up a school in order to pay the rent. Phoebe has not accepted any other suitor and has allowed herself to become an "Old Maid" and school mistress. Phoebe, however, longs for her youth, and the return of Captain Brown only deepens her melancholy. "I am tired of being lady-like," she declares. With some encouragement from her maid, Patty, she creates the fictional character of Miss Livvy, a more energetic, flirtatious and naughty version of her younger self, and begins to tease Captain Brown who, captivated by her, persuades her and Susan to accompany him to the ball.

Act 3

At the ball, and Phoebe is still playing the part of Miss Livvy. In this guise, she has captured the eyes of many of the young men and the scorn of ladies. However, Phoebe is now annoyed that Brown seems to prefer this unsubstantial 'young' flirt that she has created to her true personality and qualities. Her actions cause events to come to a head as her act is almost brought to light by the local gossiping girls Fanny Willoughby and Henrietta Turnbull. In a final confrontation with Captain Brown, we discover that he has found his love for Miss Phoebe and not for Miss Livvy, as he insists that "I have discovered for myself that the schoolmistress in her old maid's cap is the noblest Miss Phoebe of them all."

Act 4

Miss Livvy still hangs heavy over the sisters: having been created, she is now difficult to dispose of. The local gossips watch for any sign of Miss Livvy and frequently visit the sisters' home. Brown comes to ask for Phoebe’s hand and is turned down without explanation. As a result, he becomes aware of the disguise and the sisters' plight and sets out to right all wrongs, even his own.

Productions

The play opened at the Knickerbocker Theatre in New York on November 11, 1901, produced by Charles Frohman and starring Maude Adams, but ran for only a modestly successful 64 performances. It then opened at the Vaudeville Theatre in London on 17 September 1902 and ran for a very successful 459 performances, starring Ellaline Terriss, Seymour Hicks and Marion Terry, making it one of the first American productions to score a bigger triumph in London than in New York.[1]

The piece enjoyed numerous revivals and tours until World War II.[1] These included a 1913 revival at London's Duke of York's Theatre.[2] A brief revival played in 1908 at the Empire Theatre in New York, starring Adams, and other revivals followed in America, at least into the 1920s.[3]

In 2010, London's Finborough Theatre mounted the first professional production of the piece in London in over six decades.[1][4]

Adaptations and legacy

The play was adapted twice for film; the first, in 1927 starred Marion Davies, and the second, in 1937, starred Katharine Hepburn. A musical theatre adaptation, Dear Miss Phoebe, written by Christopher Hassall and Harry Parr Davies, premiered in 1950.[5]

The play was so popular that Quality Street chocolates and caramels were named after it, and the confectionery originally used characters from the play in their advertising and packaging.[6][7] When Hicks and Terriss moved to a new home, The Old Forge at Merstham, Surrey, their cul-de-sac was renamed "Quality Street".[8]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Logan, Brian. "Quality Street", Variety, December 5, 2010, accessed January 30, 2012
  2. "Quality Street Revived", The New York Times, November 26, 1913, p. 2, accessed January 30, 2012
  3. "Quality Street", Bookmice.net, accessed January 30, 2012
  4. Fisher, Philip. "Quality Street", The British Theatre Guide, 2010, accessed January 30, 2012
  5. Andrew Everett MA (13 February 2015). Accompanying Gracie: The Life, Times and Music of Harry Parr Davies (1914-1955). AuthorHouse. pp. 131–34. ISBN 978-1-4969-9451-6.
  6. Quality Street candy history. Société des Produits Nestlé S.A., accessed 2 March 2010
  7. Twigg, Venetia. "Venetia Twigg gives Quality Street ★★★★", London Festival Fringe, accessed January 30, 2012
  8. Photos and information about Hicks and Terriss's home at "Quality Street" in Merstham
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