Difference between revisions of "Shall We Join the Ladies?"

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''Shall We Join the Ladies?'' a comedy in one act, by Sir James M. Barrie (1860-1937). The frivolous and gay air at a well-to-do dinner party is shattered rather suddenly when the host announces that all thirteen guests were at Monte Carlo several years ago on the night when his brother was murdered.
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''Shall We Join the Ladies?'' is a comedy in one act by Scottish dramatist J.M. Barrie [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._M._Barrie] (1860-1937).  
  
Produced by [[Muriel Alexander]] for the [[Johannesburg Repertory Society|Repertory Players]], April 1929, with [[Wilfred H. Patley|Wilfrid Patley]] and others.
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The frivolous and gay air at a well-to-do dinner party is shattered rather suddenly when the host announces that all thirteen guests were at Monte Carlo several years ago on the night when his brother was murdered.
  
 
Published by Samuel French.
 
Published by Samuel French.
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== Performance history in South Africa ==
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Produced by [[Muriel Alexander]] for the [[Johannesburg Repertory Society|Repertory Players]], April 1929, with [[Wilfred H. Patley|Wilfrid Patley]] and others.
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 14:40, 27 January 2016

Shall We Join the Ladies? is a comedy in one act by Scottish dramatist J.M. Barrie [1] (1860-1937).

The frivolous and gay air at a well-to-do dinner party is shattered rather suddenly when the host announces that all thirteen guests were at Monte Carlo several years ago on the night when his brother was murdered.

Published by Samuel French.

Performance history in South Africa

Produced by Muriel Alexander for the Repertory Players, April 1929, with Wilfrid Patley and others.

Sources

Footlights, 1(4):10, 1929.

http://www.samuelfrench.com/p/9883/shall-we-join-the-ladies


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