

I Like It Here
A.B. Shiffrin
Willoughby is a stuffy, too-dutiful young man who abides by everything his three maiden aunts tell him.
Willy is his impish inner self - his true self, if Willoughby would only realize it and unbend.
Despite initial resistance on Willoughby's part, Willy is soon helping him to assert himself - enough to notice girls!
And that's when the problems really begin.
With Willy cheering him on, Willoughby manages to solve not only this problem, but is even able to inform his aunts that he's going to live his life as he wants to - in fact, Willoughby and Willy become one.
| Character |
|---|
| Inner Willy Willoughby's "inner self," visible only to Willoughby. |
| Stanley Clark 16, bashful, but a "regular guy." |
| Marybelle Turner 16, the girl next door, plain and completely unexciting. |
| Trudy And Janet Marshall lively, 16 year old twins who do not necessarily look alike. |
| Carol Martin 16, the girl whom Willoughby secretly admires. |
| Willoughby Adams 16, a well-behaved, likeable boy. |
The Inner Willy is a comedy play written by Bettye Knapp and published by Samuel French (1946).
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