The door will not open, and at last the prima donna declares that her husband, with whom she has had a quarrel, must have locked himself in the bathroom and done away with himself. Enter then a servant who discloses the fact that the door is not locked at all, and the bathroom is empty. The door will not open and at last the prima donna declares that her husband with whom she has had a quarrel must have locked himself in the bathroom and done away with himself.
This parody has them jockeying for position to get into the shared bath. The door is locked and guest speculate as to who is in the bath, waiting in the hall. Lots of doors opening, closing, comings and goings.
There's a little romance between the Prima Donna and young man. Humorous, well written. The play is about 25 minutes long, 24 pages.
Find similar plays and compare the best place to buy The Bathroom Door by Gertrude E Jennings. The bathroom door: a farce in one act by Jennings, Gertrude E Publication date 1943 Topics Drama texts, plays, One-act plays Publisher New York: S. French Collection internetarchivebooks; printdisabled Contributor Internet Archive Language English Item Size 42.7M Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2014-08-21 16:28:18.049082 Bookplateleaf.
World Premiere of virtual play "A Conversation Through the Bathroom Door" by Amy Dellagiarino. Recorded live performance with post-show Q&A 11/7/20. Present.
Recommended by Toby Malone: A Conversation Through the Bathroom Door by Amy Dellagiarino " An agonizing, human, devastating piece of theatre that deals with the human fallout after one of the least understood or emphathized. Two doors onstage represent various types of doors in life: bedroom doors, closet doors, apartment doors, dorm room doors even the metaphorical doors we face every time we make a decision. Twelve individual scenes and monologues take us through these doors, offering a breadth of tones that reflect upon life, choices, moments, and self.