Love and How to Cure It

!931 Program from Premiere at Yale small.jpgGlow-in-the-dark program from world premiere of Love and How to Cure It at Yale University, Nov 25, 1931
A Comedy
2 Men, 2 Women

This melodramatic comedy is set in SoHo, London, on the stage of the Tivoli Palace of Music in April of 1895. A young man is hopelessly in love with a teenage music-hall dancer who can't stand him, thinks he is stalking her (which he is), and fears that he is going to shoot her (which he isn't). Because she rejects him, he decides to kill himself. The girl's aunt, an actress and singer, and their friend, an over-the-hill comedian still mourning the death of his wife, try to intervene to "cure" him, and at the same time, teach the thwarted lover what true love really means. This is one of Wilder's many treatments of unrequited love.

Love and How to Cure It
was first produced November 25, 1931, at the Yale University theater in New Haven, Connecticut, by the Yale Dramatic Association and the Vassar College Philalethis, with The Long Christmas Dinner, Such Things Only Happen in Books, and The Happy Journey to Trenton and Camden.

"A laugh at sex is a laugh at destiny. And the stage is peculiarly fitted to be its home. There A woman is so quickly All Woman. What more telling ratification could be found of my favorite principle that the characters on the stage tend to figure as generalizations, that the stage burns and longs to express a timeless individualized Symbol. The accumulation of fictions-fictions as time, as place, as character-is forever tending to reveal its true truth: man, woman, time, place."
-Thornton Wilder, Journal, October 29, 1940

A Note on Publication:

TCG Volume I 98 dpi.jpg Library of America 99 dpi.jpg

Love and How to Cure it was one of the six one-act plays published in The Long Christmas Dinner and Other Plays in One Act (New York: Coward-McCann, 1931). It was reprinted in The Collected Short Plays of Thornton Wilder, published by TCG, edited by Donald Gallup and Tappan Wilder; and in Collected Plays & Writings on Theater edited by J. D. McClatchy, published by The Library of America in 2007.

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