Red Peppers
Described as 'An Interlude with Music', Red Peppers is a one act play, one of the ten plays that make up Tonight at 8:30, a cycle written to be performed across three evenings. It is set in a dressing room in the Palace of Varieties in a small English provincial town.
A faded song and dance, husband and wife double-act, played by Noël Coward and Gertrude Lawrence, go through their nightly routine of make-up and bickering, largely about their act, their place on the bill and the management of the theatre. This cauldron of 'artistic bliss' is sandwiched between two music-hall numbers played front-of-curtain.
The two comic songs, are pastiches penned by Coward, and provide the 'haven't I heard that somewhere before quality' that adds true authenticity to the song and dance sequences. They are well-known pieces and regularly performed in cabaret, compilations and concerts by other performers but are seen at their best in the 'variety stage' context.
Coward's years of experience touring as a young performer provided a full trunk of of anecdotal experiencethat is put to best possible use by the talents of the two main actors.
The play was first presented in 1935 in Manchester, and on tour, and played in London (1936), New York (1936–1937) and Canada (1938). It has enjoyed several major revivals, and has been adapted for film as one of three plays in Meet Me Tonight made in the UK by Anthony Havelock-Allen Productions in 1952, and numerous times for television. At the London première Red Peppers was played on the same evening as Family Album and The Astonished Heart.
The Plot
George and Lily Pepper are a husband-and-wife act in touring music hall. Onstage at a provincial theatre, their act is a mess. In their act, George and Lily are dressed as sailors and sing "Has Anybody Seen our Ship?" In white tie and tails as a pair of flâneurs, they sing "Men About Town". Offstage in their dressing room between the two numbers, the argumentative couple "drink beer, eat steaks, comb their wigs, slang each other mercilessly and then join forces to slang the manager".[2] They also slang the theatre's musical director, which backfires when he later vindictively speeds up at the end of their second number, turning their final exit into a disastrous scramble. (Wikipedia)
Musical Numbers
Has Anybody Seen Our Ship?
Men About Town
Recordings
Red Peppers - Noël Coward and Gertrude Lawrence in a live broadcast on American radio of a version of Red Peppers from Tonight at 8.30 (an mp3 file lasting 11m 42s)
Recordings of Has Anybody Seen Our Ship: Gertrude Lawrence & Noel Coward and orchestra, Jan 1936 and again in Dec 1936.
Lewis Fiander & Patricia Hodge (1986) and Twiggy & Harry Groener (1999).
Cast
The original cast were:
George Pepper – Noël Coward
Lily Pepper – Gertrude Lawrence
Alf – Kenneth Carten
Bert Bentley – Anthony Pelissier
Mr. Edwards – Alan Webb
Mabel Grace – Alison Leggatt (Joyce Carey in New York)