Weatherwise (play)
Weatherwise is a short comic play in two scenes by Noël Coward. It was written in 1923 and first produced at the Festival Theatre, Malvern in 1932.
The play portrays the turmoil caused by a mentally deranged aristocratic dowager who goes into a trance and behaves as if she were a dog. Her bouts of dog-mania are initiated by any mention of the weather.
Background and productions
The circumstances in which Coward wrote the play are unclear. He does not mention it in his autobiography Present Indicative. In 1923 he had had two modest successes with I'll Leave It to You and The Young Idea, but his first box-office triumph, The Vortex, was yet to come.The play was published as Weather Wise. A Shocking Tragedy in 1925 in The Crown & Anchor: A Chelsea Quarto, edited by Reginald Blunt.
The play was first performed in 1932, nine years after it was written, by The Noël Coward Company at the Festival Theatre, Malvern. The company was formed in 1932 as a touring ensemble, headed by Kate Cutler, to present Coward's plays around Britain. Weatherwise was the first of his plays directed by Coward himself, and it was given as an after-piece to Home Chat.
Roles and original cast
- Lady Warple – Marjorie Haywood
- Monica – Agatha Carroll
- Cynthia – Joyce Wodeman
- Violet – Marjorie Taylor
- The Rev Harold Bassett – Keith Shepherd
- Reggie Whistler – James Mason
- Maid – Janet Burnell
- Dr Twickenham – Farries Moss