Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Overruled (play)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.2
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6.2
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Written by
  
George Bernard Shaw

Place premiered
  
Duke of York's theatre

Setting
  
A seaside hotel

Playwright
  
George Bernard Shaw

3.1/5
Goodreads

Date premiered
  
14 October 1912

Original language
  
English

First performance
  
14 October 1912

Genre
  
Comedy of manners

Overruled (play) t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQPjRMk4cEUUNmekJ

Subject
  
Two couples want to switch partners

Similar
  
Great Catherine: Whom Gl, The Inca of Perusalem, Getting Married, Augustus Does His Bit, O'Flaherty V C: A Recruitin

Overruled by george bernard shaw


Overruled (1912) is a comic one-act play written by George Bernard Shaw. In Shaw's words, it is about "how polygamy occurs among quite ordinary people innocent of all unconventional views concerning it." The play concerns two couples who desire to switch partners, but are prevented from doing so by various considerations and end up negotiating an ambiguous set of relationships.

Contents

Characters

  • Gregory Lunn
  • Mrs. Lunn
  • Sibthorpe Juno
  • Mrs. Juno
  • Plot

    Gregory Lunn and Mrs Juno are in love, having met during a sea voyage. On a sofa in a hotel where both are staying, they discuss their feelings. They are both already married, so they decide they must part, but are unable to do so. They then recognise the voices of their respective spouses, apparently staying together at the same hotel. They leave in confusion. Mrs Lunn and Mr. Sibthorpe Juno enter and sit together on the same sofa that the other pair have just left. Sibthorpe says he is in love with Mrs Lunn, but she says she is only mildly attracted to him. Sibthorpe wants her to either accept or reject him outright. Her willingness to merely have an affair disturbs him. Gregory and Mrs. Juno re-enter and both couples reveal their conflicting feelings. They all find they have differet views about the situation. Gregory feels that there is a morally unacceptable contradiction between his desires and his honour. Sibthorpe, in contrast, says that such mixed feelings are fine, as long as one acts according to moral principles. Mrs Lunn believes that moral rules are silly. She thinks that as long as everyone gets the best they can out of the situation, that's all that matters. She's quite happy for Mrs Juno to have her husband for a while, and to return to compliment by enjoying her affair with Sibthorpe. Sibthorpe says that this is justifying polygamy. Mrs Lunn says she intends to continue the affair with Sibthorpe, because she enjoys it. Mrs Juno likewise refuses to stop seeing Gregory, because she enjoys being adored by him. So they agree to leave things as they are.

    Production

    The play was first produced at the Duke of York's theatre on 14 October, 1912, as part of an evening with other short plays by J. M. Barrie and Arthur Wing Pinero. The four characters were played by Claude King, Adolphus Vane Tempest, Miriam Lewes and Geraldine Olliffe.

    Critical views

    Shaw's friend Archibald Henderson, noted that the play was not well received at the time. Henderson also thought it a poor work: "The conversations are forced and unnatural: people do not say such things in real life. The situations are mechanical; and critics 'abused' the play, to Shaw's unrestrained disgust."

    References

    Overruled (play) Wikipedia