You Never Can Tell (play)
You Never Can Tell | |
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Olof and Frida Winnerstrand on stage 1908, as Valentine and Gloria | |
Written by | George Bernard Shaw |
Date premiered | 26 November, 1899 |
Place premiered | Royalty Theatre, by the Stage Society |
Original language | English |
Subject | A dentist falls in love and a family accidentally meet the father they have never known |
Genre | comedy |
Setting | A seaside town |
Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
You Never Can Tell is an 1897 four-act play by George Bernard Shaw that debuted at the Royalty Theatre. It was published as part of a volume of Shaw's plays entitled Plays Pleasant. In June 2011, the play was revived at the Coliseum Theatre in Aberystwyth, Wales, where it had been performed exactly one century earlier.
Characters
- Mr. (or Dr.) Valentine, the dentist - Mr. Yorke Stephens
- Gloria Clandon, the eldest daughter - Miss Margaret Halstan
- Walter, the waiter - Mr. James Welch
- Dolly Clandon, twin to Philip - Miss Winifred Fraser
- Philip Clandon, twin to Dolly - Mr. Roland Bottomley
- Mrs. Clandon, the mother - Miss Elsie Chester
- Mr. Fergus Crampton, the landlord and father - Mr. Herman Vezin
- Mr. Finch McComas, a solicitor - Mr. Sydney Warden
- Bohun, a QC (Queens Counsel) - Mr. Charles Charrington
- The Parlor-maid - Miss Mabel Hardinge
- Jo, another waiter - Mr. Edward Knoblauch
- The Cook - Mr. Leopold Profeit
Produced under the direction of Mr. James Welch
Original Theatre programme;
THE STAGE SOCIETY
First Meeting at Royalty Theatre, Dean Street,, Soho.
Sunday Evening November 26th 1899
Plot
The play is set in a seaside town and tells the story of Mrs Clandon and her three children, Dolly, Phillip and Gloria, who have just returned to England after an eighteen-year stay in Madeira.
The children have no idea who their father is and, through a comedy of errors, end up inviting him to a family lunch. At the same time a dentist named Valentine has fallen in love with the eldest daughter, Gloria. However, Gloria considers herself a modern woman and claims to have no interest in love or marriage.
The play continues with a comedy of errors and confused identities, with the friendly and wise waiter, Walter (most commonly referred to by the characters as "William," because Dolly thinks he resembles Shakespeare), dispensing his wisdom with the titular phrase "You Never Can Tell."
Setting
Time: One Day in August 1896
Place: An English seaside resort
- Act I
- A dentist's office
- Act II
- The Terrace of The Marine Hotel
- Act III
- The Clandons sitting room at The Marine Hotel
- Act IV
- The Clandons sitting room at The Marine Hotel - Later at Night
In performance
You Never Can Tell has also been performed at the Shaw Festival, Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario several times: in 1963, 1973, 1979, 1988, 1995, 2005 and most recently in 2015.
Audio Adaptations
The CBC broadcast a production in 1973 with Frances Hyland as Mrs. Clandon, Tony Van Bridge as Mr. Crampton, Chris Wiggins as William the Waiter, Maureen Fitzgerald as Gloria, Drew Russell as Valentine and William Osler as Mr. Bohun.
The BBC broadcast a production on 29 September 2013 directed by Martin Jarvis and starring Ian Ogilvy as William the Waiter, Jamie Bamber as Valentine, Christopher Neame as Mr. Crampton, Moira Quirk as Dolly, Adam Godley as Mr. McComas and Rosalind Ayres as Mrs Clandon.[1]