Monday, Feb. 15, 1926
The Best Plays
These are the plays which, in the light of metropolitan criticism, seem most important:
SERIOUS
YOUNG WOODLEY - Glenn Hunter giving a poignant picture of a very young man in love with a married woman.
HEDDA GABLER - Emily Stevens as the most virile of Ibsen's heroines, with the usual gun play.
THE GREEN HAT - Michael Arlen's fashionable philosophies made almost sincere by the playing of Katharine Cornell.
CRAIG'S WIFE - An American wife who loves her spotless home better than her thoroughly human husband.
THE DYBBUK - A Jewish legend of religion and a young girl's love treated to the most amazingly fine production. Probably the best thing in town.
THE JEST - Reviewed in this issue.
LESS SERIOUS
IS ZAT SO? - Prizefighters and the social register caught in most hilarious complications.
THE LAST OF MRS. CHEYNEY - Ina Claire as the exceedingly lady-like crook who got caught.
ARMS AND THE MAN - Bernard Shaw's swift and diverting satire on war as it was once regarded.
THE BUTTER AND EGG MAN - What happens to a play before it is produced, and the absurd antics of the curious folk involved.
CRADLE SNATCHERS - A rowdy adventure of young boys and middle-aged women off for a weekend.
MUSICAL
For evenings set to music these are recommended: The Student Prince, Sunny, Vanities, Cocoanuts, Tip-Toes, No, No, Nanette, Artists and Models, The Vagabond King.