Synopsis
The Happy Time
Samuel Taylor from Robert Fontaine
Published by Dramatists Play Service
8 Male 4 Female
Bibi's father is a good-humored whimsical musician, leader of a vaudeville orchestra, who wants his son to grow up to appreciate the warmth and humor of life, and to understand that "to be truly a man one must know two things: one must know love, one must know truth"
The other men of the family are: young, exuberant Uncle Desmonde, bon vivant, travelling salesman, and "Casanova of Canada"; Uncle Louis, who drinks wine from a water cooler, and "has not let the thought of work disturb his slumbers in twenty years";and Grandpere, who believes that one lives only as long as one loves, and is determined to live forever
The quieting influence in this mercurial household is Bibi's mother, Maman, a Scot among Frenchmen, who tries with amused determination to rule her men with some kind of order and usually fails, though in so doing she manages to retain her good-humored tolerance
It is Maman who warns the men that their carefree ways may someday get Bibi into trouble, but when her prediction comes true and the trouble comes, for they really rally like the Three Musketeers, rise to the occasion, and show their true honesty and humanity
They strike a blow for freedom, and in a scene that is warmly humorous and deeply touching, Bibi learns what it is "truly to be a man"
A great comedy success on Broadway, and a most happy and carefree theatrical treat