Easy Virtue

Play

Writers: Noël Coward

Overview

Show Information

Category
Play
Number of Acts
3
First Produced
1925
Genres
Comedy, Drama
Settings
Period, Unit/Single Set
Time & Place
The hall of Colonel Whittaker’s House , The English countryside, 1920s
Cast Size
large
Licensor
None/royalty-free
Ideal for
Community Theatre, Regional Theatre, Professional Theatre, College/University
Casting Notes

Includes mature adult, young adult, adult, late teen characters

Synopsis

Noel Coward wrote Easy Virtue in 1924 when he was just 23, and it remains one of his least-known works. The play centers around the Whittaker’s, a dysfunctional family who seem to depend on tension and trauma. Colonel Whittaker is a former philanderer who now takes any and every opportunity to annoy his repressed and uptight wife, while their daughters, Marion and Hilda, are both highly strung and prone to meddling. Into this explosive mix enters John, their only son who has returned from the continent. However, the family is shocked to find that he has also returned with a wife, an older, glamorous divorcee with a scandalous past. It takes just three months for John and his wife, Larita, to learn that they married on impulse and are radically unsuited to each other. The play climaxes with Larita’s dramatic, jewel-laden appearance at the family dance, as she leaves the shrewish Whittaker women behind and returns her young husband to the hands of his wholesome former sweetheart.

Lead Characters


Easy Virtue guide sections