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Hay Fever | Coward's Comedic Touch
In this essay, Kreger discusses how
Coward’s comedic touch in Hay Fever reveals the
artifice of both social and theatrical conventions,
putting a uniquely humorous spin on the anxiety
over loss of meaning expressed so seriously by
many of his modernist contemporaries.
‘‘None of us ever mean anything.’’ So the character Sorel Bliss describes her family in the second act of Noel Coward’s 1925 comedy of manners Hay Fever. In context, her words explain the Blisses’ endless play-acting, the cause of the work’s humorously chaotic situations. Yet her statement also echoes the cultural anxiety expressed in many other forums during the post-World War I era, a time when many artists articulated concerns about the increasing hollowness and meaninglessness of the modern world....
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