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Heartbreak House is a play written by George Bernard Shaw and published in 1919. The play is set in England during World War I and begins with Ellie Dunn, her father, and her fiancé being invited to one of Hesione Hushabye's infamous dinner parties. The party is being held at the house of her eccentric father, Captain Shotover, whose house is built in the shape of the stern of a ship. Captain Stopover is an inventor well into his eighties who is trying to create a sort of "psychic ray" that will destroy dynamite.
The play is a Chekhovian tragicomedy that explores the themes of love, war, and the decline of the British aristocracy. It is divided into three acts, each of which takes place in a different room of the house. The first act takes place in the library, the second act in the drawing-room, and the third act in the captain's cabin.
Throughout the play, Shaw uses the characters to satirize the British upper class and their attitudes towards the war. The characters are all flawed in some way, and their flaws are used to highlight the absurdity of their beliefs. For example, Captain Shotover is an inventor who has spent his life trying to create a weapon that will end all wars. However, he is also a pacifist who believes that war is a necessary evil. His daughter, Hesione, is a free spirit who is married to a wealthy businessman. She is unhappy in her marriage and is having an affair with a young man named Hector Hushabye.
Ellie Dunn is the play's protagonist, and her story is used to explore the theme of love. She is engaged to Boss Mangan, a wealthy industrialist who has helped her father financially. However, she is also in love with a mysterious man named Marcus Darnley, whom she meets at the party. Darnley is actually Hector Hushabye, and he has been using a false name to impress Ellie. When Ellie discovers the truth, she is heartbroken and decides to break off her engagement to Mangan.
The play ends with the characters realizing that they have been living in a "heartbreak house" all along. They have been living in a world that is full of pain and suffering, and they have been unable to escape it. The play is a powerful commentary on the state of the world during World War I, and it remains relevant today.
More: George Bernard Shaw, Heartbreak House, comedy
drama, World War I, Hesione Hushabye
Ellie Dunn, rogues, infamous dinner parties
English stage, heroine, father
fiancé, clever, memorable gallery
00:00:00 Heartbreak House and Horseback Hall
01:23:20 Dramatis Personae
01:23:32 Heartbreak House. Act I
03:03:04 Act II
04:50:40 Act III
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