a^r\ /*4 ^r jr n QV +/ v 1 UNI' RSITYOF CA i '^RNIA SA XEGO RY | YOf MIA GOJ PR 5132. -t>2 THE PLA YS OF ARTHUR W. PINERO Paper cover, is. 6d. ; cloth, as. 6d. each THE TIMES THE PROFLIGATE THE CABINET MINISTER THE HOBBY-HORSE LADY BOUNTIFUL THE ^MAGISTRATE 'DANDY 'DICK SWEET LAVENDER THE SCHOOLMISTRESS THE WEAKER SEX THE AMAZONS THE SECOND vMRS. TANQUERAY THE NOTORIOUS *MRS. SBBSMITH THE 'BENEFIT OF THE 'DOUBT THE PRINCESS AND THE BUTTERFLY TRELAWNY OF THE "WELLS" THE GAY LORD %UEX IRIS THE PINERO BIRTHDAY BOOK Selected and arranged by MYRA HAMILTON With a Portrait, cloth extia, price 23. 6d. LONDON: WILLIAM H El N EM ANN T>ICK In Three Acts BY ARTHUR W. PINERO LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN MCM1V First Impression, 1893 Second Impression, 1895 Third Impression, /yoo Fourth Impression, 1902 Fifth Impression, 1904 Copyright, January , i8<)3 All rightt reterved Entered at Stationers 1 Hall Entered at the Library of Con- gress, Washington, U.S.A. INTRODUCTORY NOTE " DANDY DICK" was the third of the farces which Mr. Pinero wrote for the old Court Theatre a series of plays which, besides giving playgoers a fresh source of laughter, and the English stage a new order of comic play, brought plentiful prosperity to the joint management of Mr. Arthur Cecil and the late Mr. John Clayton. But a kind of melancholy interest attaches to " Dandy Dick," for this play was, as it were, the swan-song of the old theatre and of the Clayton and Cecil partnership ; and it was the piece in which Mr. Clayton was acting when death over- took him, to the general grief. The production of "Dandy Dick" maybe considered as something of a tour deforce in its way. " The School- mistress " was at the end of its successful run, and Mr. Pinero was under contract to supply its successor by a certain date, when Mr. Clayton one day went down vi INTRODUCTORY NOTE to Brighton, where the dramatist was then at work, to hear him read the two completed acts of the new play. To Mr. Clayton's consternation, however, Mr. Pinero announced that he was dissatisfied with his work, and proposed to begin an entirely fresh play, as he had a more promising idea. But time was pressing, and a successor to "The Schoolmistress" was an immediate necessity. However, Mr. Pinero's idea of writing a play round a dean, who, while being a paragon of dignity and decorum, should be driven by an indiscreet act into a most undigni- fied dilemma, appealed to Mr. Clayton, and, hastening back to London with the sketches for the requisite scenes, he left Mr. Pinero to set to work at once upon the new scheme. And within a few weeks, indeed by the time the scenery was ready, the new play was completed, the rural constable of a village adjacent to Brighton having suggested the character of Noah Topping. " Dandy Dick" was produced at the Court Theatre on January 27th, 1887, and, meeting with a most favourable initial reception, it settled down immediately into a com- plete success. The following is a copy of the first-night programme : INTRODUCTORY NOTE vii ROYAL COURT THEATRE, SLOANE SQUARE, S.W. Lessees and Managers : MR. JOHN CLAYTON and MR. ARTHUR CECIL Programme. THIS EVENING, THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, At 8.30 punctually, DANDY DICK, AN ORIGINAL FARCE, IN THREE ACTS, BY A. W. PINERO. THE VERY REV. AUGUSTIN JEDD, D.D. (Dean of St. Marvells) . . Mr. JOHN CLAYTON. SIR TRISTRAM MARDON, Bart. . . Mr. EDMUND MAURICE. MAJOR TARVER T' Mr. F - KERR - MR DARBEY , EvRSFIELD< \ near St. Marvells BLORE (Butler at the Deanery) . . Mr. ARTHUR CECIL. NOAH TOPPING (Constable at St. Mar- vells) ...... Mr. W. H. DENNY. HATCHAM (Sir Tristram's groom) . . Mr. W. LUGO. GEORGIANA TIDMAN (a Widow, the Dean's sister) .... Mrs. JOHN WOOD. SALOME) ., _. , ~ .. f Miss MARIE LEWES. [ the Dean s Daughters . ] , SHEBA / ( Miss NORREYS. HANNAH TOPPING (formerly in Service at the Deanery) . . , . Miss LAURA LINDEN. viii INTRODUCTORY NOTE ACT I. AT THE DEANERY, ST. MARVELLS. (MORNING.) ACT II. THE SAME PLACE (EVENING.) ACT III. THE NEXT DAY. SCENE I. " The Strong Box," St. Mat veils. SCENE 2. The Deanery again. The curtain will be lowered for a few minutes between the two scenes. Ntw SCENERY BY MR. T. W. HALL. PRECEDED, AT EIGHT O'CLOCK, BY "THE NETTLE." AN ORIGINAL COMEDIETTA BY ERNEST WARREN. "Dandy Dick" was performed 171 times between the first night and the 22nd of July, when, the old theatre being demolished, Mr. Clayton took a temporary lease of Toole's Theatre, and transferred the play thither, where it ran 75 nights more. INTRODUCTORY NOTE ix A company had already been sent out, under the auspices of the Court management, to perform " Dandy Dick" in the provinces; but, when the play was with- drawn from the London boards, Mr. Clayton set out himself with a company, and it was during this tour that he died at Liverpool. In America Mr. Daly produced " Dandy Dick," with Miss Ada Rehan in Mrs. John Wood's part, but no very great success was achieved ; whereas in Australia its reception was so enthusiastic that it ran for quite an unusual time both in Melbourne and Sydney. In the character of the Dean Mr. G. W. Anson achieved perhaps the greatest of his Australian successes, and Mr. Robert Brough made his mark as the policeman. MALCOLM C. SALAMAN. December 1893 TH8 TSl^ONS OF THS TLAT THE VEBY REV. AUGUSTIN JEDD, D.D. (The Dean of St. Marvells) SALOME) I (his Daughters) SlIEBA ) GEORGIANA TIDMAN (his Sister) BLOEE (Butler at the Deanery) SIB TBISTRAM MARDON. Bart. HATCHAM (his Groom) MAJOB TABVEB ( th Hussars, quartered at Durnstone. MB. DABBEY j near gt Marvells) NOAH ToppiNa (Constable of St. Marvells) HANNAH TOPPING THE FIRST ACT AT THE DEANERY, ST. MARVELLS THE SECOND ACT THE SAME PLACE (EVENING) THE THIRD ACT THE NEXT DAY DANDY DICK THE FIRST ACT The morning-room in the Deanery of St. MarveUs, with a large arched opening leading to the library on the right, and a deeply-recessed window opening out to the garden on the left. It is a bright spring morning, and an air of comfort and serenity per- vades the place. SALOME, a tall, handsome, dark girl of about three-and- twenty, is sitting with her elbows resting on her knees, staring wildly into vacancy. SHEBA, a fair little girl of about seventeen, wearing short petti- coats, shares her despondency, and lies prostrate upon the settee. SALOME. Oh ! oh my ! oh my ! oh my 1 SHEBA. [Sitting upright.'] Oh, my gracious goodness, good- ness gracious me 1 [They both walk about excitedly. SALOME. There's only one terrible word for it it's a fix 1 A 3 DANDY DICK SHEBA. It's worse than that ! It's a scrape I How did you ever get led into it ? SALOME. How did we get led into it ? Halves, Sheba, please. SHEBA. It was Major Tarver's proposal, and I believe, Salome, that it is to you Major Tarver is paying attention. SALOME. The Fancy Dress Masked Ball at Durnstone is pro- moted by the Officers of the Hussars. I believe that the young gentleman you have impressed calls him- self an officer though he is merely a lieutenant. SHEBA. [Indignantly.] Mr. Darbey is certainly an officer a small officer. How dare you gird at me, Salome ? SALOME. Very well, then. When to-night wo appear at the Durnstone Athenaeum, unknown to dear Papa, on the arms of Major Tarver and Mr. Darbey, I consider that we shall be equally wicked. Oh, how can we be BO wrong ? SHEBA. "Well, we're not wrong yet. "We're only going to be wrong ; that's a very different matter. SALOME. That's true. Besides, there's this to remember DANDY DICK 3 we're inexperienced girls and have only dear Papa. But oh, now that the Ball is to-night, I repent, Sheba, I repent ! SHEBA. I sha'n't do that till to-morrow. But oh, how I shtdl repent to-morrow ! SALOME. [Taking an envelope from, her pocket and almost cry in!/.] You'd repent now if you had seen the account for the fancy dresses. SHEBA. Has it come in ? SALOME. Yes, the Major enclosed it to me this morning. You know, Sheba, Major Tarver promised to get the dresses made in London, so I gave him our brown paper patterns to send to the costumier. SHEBA. [Shocked,] Oh, Salome, do you think he quizzed them? SALOME. No ; I sealed them up and marked outside " To be opened only by a lady." SIIEBA. That's all right. I hate the plan of myself in brown paper. SALOME. Well, of course Major Tarver begged to be allowed to pay for the dresses, and I said I couldn't dream of 4 DANDY DICK permitting it, and then he said he should be most un- happy if he didn't, and, just as I thought he was going to have his own way [bursting into tears], he cheered up and said he'd yield to a lady. [Taking a large account frorn the envelope.] And oh ! he's yielded. SHEBA. Read it ! Don't spare me 1 SALOME. [Reading.] " Debtor to Lewis Isaacs, Costumier to the Queen, Bow Street. One gown period, French Revolution, 1798 Fifteen guineas ! " SHEBA. [Sinking on her knees, clutching the table] Oh I SALOME. "Trimmings, linings, buttons, frillings Seven guineas ! " SHEBA. [Hysterically.] Yah ! SALOME. That's mine 1 SHEBA.' [Putting her fingers into her ears.] Now for mine, oooh ! SALOME. [Reading.] " One skirt and bodice flower girl- period uncertain. Ten guineas." SHEBA. Less thnn yours ! What a shame I DANDY DICK 5 SALOME. " Trimmings, linings, buttons, frillings Five guineas ! Extras, Two guineas. Total, Forty pounds, nineteen. Ladies' own brown paper patterns mislaid. Terms, Cash! " [They throw themselves into each other's arms.] Oh, Sheba ! SHEBA. Salome 1 Are there forty pounds in the wide world ? SALOME. M'y heart weighs twenty. What shall we do ? SHEBA. If we were only a few years older I should suggest that we wrote nice notes to Papa and committed suicide. SALOME. Brought up as we have been, that's out of the question 1 SHEBA. Then let us be brave women, and wear the dresses I SALOME. Of course we'll do that but the bill ! SHEBA. We must get dear Papa in a good humour and coax him to make us a present of money. He knows we haven't been charitable in the town for ever so long ! 6 DANDY DICK SALOME. Poor dear Papa ! He hasn't paid our proper dress- maker's bill yet, and I'm sure he's pressed for money. SHEBA. But we can't help that when we're pressed for money poor dear Papa 1 SALOME. Suppose poor Papa refuses to give us a present ? SKEBA. Then we must play the piano when he's at work on his Concordance poor dear Papa. SALOME. However, don't let us wrong poor Papa in advance Let us try to think how nice we shall look. SHEBA. Oh yes sha'n't I ! SALOME. Oh, I shall 1 And as for stealing out of the house with Major Tarver when poor dear Papa has gone to bed, why, Gerald Tarver would die for me ! SHEBA. So would Nugent Darbey for me ; besides I'm not old enough to know better. SALOME. You're not so very much younger than I, Sheba ! DANDY DICK. ^ SIIEBA. Indeed, Salome ! Then why do you keep me in short skirts ? SALOME. Why ! you cruel girl ! You know I can't lengthen you till I'm married ! [BLORE, the butler, a venerable-looking person, with rather a clerical suggestion about his dress, enters by the window. BLOKE. [Benignly.] The two soldier gentlemen have just rode hup, Miss Salome. [The girls clutch each other's hands. SALOME. You mean Major Tarver ? SHEBA. And Mr. Darbey. They have called to inquire after poor Papa. SALOME. Poor Papa 1 BLOKE. Shall I show them hin, Miss Sheba ? SHEBA. Yes, Blore, dear, and hang your h's on the hat- stand. [BLOKE laughs sweetly at SHEBA and shakes his fingers at her playfully. 8 DANDY DICK BLORE. [Vindictively, behind their backs.] 'Ussies ! [He goes out. SALOME. Am I all right, Sheba? SHEBA. Yes. Ami? SALOME. Yes. [Looking out at window.] Here they are 1 How well Gerald Tarver dismounts ! Oh ! SHEBA. He left his liver in India, did'nt he ? SALOME. No only part of it. SHEBA. Well part of it. SALOME. And that he gave to his Queen, brave fellow ! SHEBA. [Seating herself in an artificial attitude.] Where shall we be here ? SALOME. [Running to the piano.] All right, you be admiring my voice ! SHEBA. Oh, I daresay ! DANDY DICK SALOME. Here they are, and we're doing nothing ! Let's run away and then come in unconsciously. SALOME. Yes unconsciously. {They run off through the Library. BLORE shows in MAJOR TARVER and MR. DARBEY, who are both in regimentals. MAJOR TARVER is a middle-aged tall, angular officer with a thin face, yellow complexion, and red eyes. He is alter- nately in a state of great excitement and depression. MR. DARBEY is a mere boy, but with a pompous, patronizing manner. DARBEY. The Dean's out of the way, eh ) BLORE. Yes, sir, he his. TARVER. Eh ? How is the Dean ? Never mind perhaps Miss Jedd is at home ? BLORE. You, sir, she his. TARVER. It would be discourteous to run away without ask- ing Miss Jedd after her father. 10 DANDY DICK DARBEY. [Throwing himself on the settee.] Deuced bad form ! BLORB. The ladies were 'ere a minute ago. [SALOME and SHEBA walk in together. SALOME has her arm round her sister's waist and looks up to her with a sweet trusting smile. They start in confusion on seeing TARVER and DARBEY. SALOME. Major Tarver ! SHEBA. Mr. Darbey 1 TARVER. [Taking SALOME'S hand eagerly. ] My dear Miss Jedd! DARBEY. [Rising and putting a glass to his eye.] Hah yah 1 Hah yah ! SALOME. [With her hand on her heart.] You quite startled us. TARVER. [In an agony of contrition.] Oh, did we ? DARBEY. Awfully cut up to hear it. SHEBA. We never dreamt of finding two visitors for Papa. DANDY DICK II BLORE. "Why, you told me to show the gentlemen hin, Miss Sheba ! [The two girls start guiltily and glare at BLOKE. SALOME. [With suppressed rage.] You needn't wait, Blore ! BLORE. [To himself.] Let 'em 'ang that on the 'atstand ! [BLORE goes out. DARBEY and SHEBA stroll together into the library. TARVER. [To SALOME.] We thought we'd ride over directly after parade to make the final arrangements for to- night. Have the costumes arrived ? SALOME. Yes, they came yesterday in a hamper labelled ' Miss Jedd, Secretary, Cast-off Clothing Distribution League." TARVER. That was my idea came to me in the middle of the night. SALOME. Dear Major Tarver, surely this terrible strain on your nerves is very, very bad for you with your * your TARVER. My liver say the word, Miss Jedd. 12 DANDY DICK SALOME. [Drooping he* head.] Oh, Major Tarver ! TABVEE. It is frightfully injurious. Of course I'm excited now, and you see me at my best, but the alternating fits of hopeless despondency are shocking to witness and to endure I SALOME. Oh! TARVER. It's all that damned India! Oh! what have I said ! You will never forgive me. SALOME. Indeed, indeed I will ! TARVER. Never. Oh, Miss Jedd, my forgetfulness has brought me one of my terrible attacks of depres- sion ! SALOME. Major Tarver f [She leads him to a chair into which he sinkt in a ghastly state. DAIIBEY strolls in from the library with SIIEBA. DARBEY. [To SHEBA.] Your remarks about the army are extremely complimentary. On behalf of the army I thank you. We fellows are not a bad sort take us all round. DANDY DICK i 13 SHEBA. There a a grand future before you, isn't there ? DARBEY. Well, I suppose there is if I go on as I'm going now. TARVER. [To SALOME.] Thanks, the attack has passed. Now about to-night ; at what time is the house entirely quiet ? SALOME. Poor dear Papa goes round with Blore at half -past nine after that all is rest and peacefulness. TARVER. Then if we're here with the closed carriage at ten ! [They go together into the library. DARBEY. [To SHEBA.] Some of us army men can slave too. Tarver's queer livah has thrown all the arrangements for the Fancy Ball on my shoulders. [SALOME and TARVER re-enter.] Look at him that's when he's en- joying life ! TARVER. [Laughing convulsively.] Ha ! ha ! ha 1 ho ! he 1 he ! Good, eh, Miss Jedd ? SALOME. But suppose dear Papa should hear us crunching down the gravel path 1 1 4 DANDY DICK TARVEB. Oh ! [lie sinks on to the settee with, a vacant state, his arms /tanging helplessly. DARBEY. [To SIIEBA.] There now his career is a burden to him ! SHEBA. Oh I SALOME. Would you like a glass of water, Major Tarver ? TABVEB. [Taking SALOME'S hand.] Thank you, dear Miss Jedd, with the least suggestion of cayenne pepper in it. SHEBA. [Looking out at window.] Oh, Salome ! Papa I Papa! TABVEB. The Dean? DABBET. The Dean ! [They all collect themselves in a fluster. The two girls go to meet their father, who enters at the window with his head bowed and his hands behind his back, in deep thought. THE DEAN is a portly man of about fifty, with a dignified demeanour, a suave voice .] Theer's my cart outside ready to take the scoundrel over to Durns- tone. GEORGIANA. * I should like to see him. NOAH. You can view him passin' out. [He tucks the baking-tin under his arm and goes up to the cell door. GEORGIANA. [To herself.] Oh, Gus, Gus ! NOAH. [Unlocking the door.] I warn yer. 'E's a awful looking creature. GEORGIANA. I can stand it ; I love horrors ! [NOAH goes into the cell dosing the door after him.] Tris ! DANDY DICK 129 SIR TRISTRAM. Georgiana ! GEORGIANA. "What was my brother's motive in bolusing Dandy last night ? SIR TRISTRAM. I can't think. The first thing to do is to get him out of this hole. This good woman has arranged for his escape. GEORGIANA. But we can't trust to Gus rolling out of a flying dog- cart ! Why, it's as much as I could do ! HANNAH. Oh, yes, lady, he'll do it. I've prewided for every- thing. Don't betray him to Noah 1 There's another a awfuller charge hangin' over his reverend 'ead. SIR TRISTRAM. Another charge ! GEORGIANA. Another ! Oh Tris ! To think my own stock should run vicious like this. HANNAH. Hush, lady I [NOAH comes out of the cett with THE DEAN, who is in handcuff's. GEORGIANA