
Spring Dance
Philip Barry


What readers are saying
Readers find the play to be a sparkling comedy filled with wit and romance. The charming dialogue and well-developed characters resonate with audiences, offering a satisfying yet unexpected ending. Many appreciate its Southern themes, despite the French setting.
Claiming that she is tired of love, an aging but still beautiful poet from the American South who now lives on the coast of France has decided to give away her young lover.
But how can this be?
Her goddaughter thinks she has actually fallen in love with a local fisherman while her dashing friend believes she is finally ready to accept his proposal.
The young lover is equally certain she really wants to marry him.
This bittersweet comedy of manners is a tribute to the grandeur of Southern style and a musing on what a smart woman might really want toward the end of her life.
"Pretty women, pretty men, pretty words...Marsha Norman's Last Dance [is] a play that suggests that if loveliness is not next to godliness, it is at least kind of divine."
— The New York Times
| Character |
|---|
Cab Charlotte's lover, also beautiful. In his late twenties. A poet. |
Georgeanne Charlotte's goddaughter. In her late twenties. Pale and shy, but not without resources. Also a poet. |
Randall Dellamar Charlotte's friend, a professor of herpetology in Savannah. Grand and sly and very entertaining. |
Charlotte a beautiful woman in her late forties. |
Last Dance is a American comedy play written by Marsha Norman and published by Samuel French in New York (2004).
No community reviews yet
Paperback
Samuel French · 2004 · 72 pp
Restrictions: Major Markets Only (US) / Standard Restriction (UK)
Apply for RightsPlays with similar themes, style, and content.
More plays from Marsha Norman that we think you'll enjoy.