

Kind Sir
Norman Krasna
"Fred Dickson, a young products analyst, is in a bad financial bind, which even his boss-and sometimes sweetheart-Jenny Corell cannot solve for him.
Unable to get an increase in pay, Fred hits on the scheme of hiring on at the office in the guise of Texan "Rick Laredo," so that-as his own assistant-he can get two salaries for one job.
Complications arise when Jenny proceeds to fall head-over-heels in love with "Rick," leaving Fred as his own love-rival.
(As he observes, "That woman is two-timing me...and so am I!") Things grow even more complex when Basil Pronker, the company's credit-check investigator, discovers that Fred is banking double what he actually earns, and tries to ferret out the extra source of Fred's income from "Rick" and Jenny.
How Fred manages to foil Basil, win Jenny's heart, and dispose of love-rival "Rick" make up the fast-moving plot of his hilarious romantic comedy."--from Story of the Play, page 3.
"Side splitting."
— Lerner Voice
"A comedy with the accent on fun."
— Beacon News
"Delightful...lighthearted, fast paced quality entertainment."
— Daily Chronicle
| Character |
|---|
| Jenny Corell Fred's employer, a liberated woman. |
| Basil Pronker a credit investigator. |
| Fred Dickson a mild-mannered products analyst. |
A Gentleman And A Scoundrel is a American comedy play written by Jack Sharkey and published by Samuel French (1973).
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