Almost a Honeymoon (play)

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Almost a Honeymoon is a 1930 play by Walter Ellis.[1] It debuted at the Garrick Theatre in London and later enjoyed a successful run at the Apollo Theatre.[2] A farce it concerns a young man who has secured a lucrative post in the colonial service. His problem is that the post requires him to be married, and he has just a day to find a woman to be his wife.

Original cast[edit]

  • Charles – Hylton Allen/George Relph
  • Bailiff – Christopher Steele
  • Basil Dibley – Gerald Pring
  • Cuthbert de Grey – Lamont Dickinson
  • Mr. Dixon – Edward Thane
  • Taxi Driver – Barry Lyndon
  • Margaret Brent – Grace Lane
  • Rosalie Quilter – Renee Kelly/Mercia Swinburne

Adaptations[edit]

The play was twice adapted for film. In 1930 Almost a Honeymoon directed by Monty Banks and starring Clifford Mollison and Dodo Watts and in 1938 Almost a Honeymoon directed by Norman Lee and starring Tommy Trinder and Linden Travers.[3][4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Wearing, J. P. (15 May 2014). The London Stage 1930-1939: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780810893047 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Smith p.232
  3. ^ "Almost a Honeymoon (1930) - | Cast and Crew". AllMovie.
  4. ^ "Almost a Honeymoon (1938) - Norman Lee | Cast and Crew". AllMovie.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Smith, Leslie. Modern British Farce. Barnes and Noble, 1989.