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  1. Sep 28, 2014 · This season's revival of George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart's Pulitzer Prize-winning play YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU opens on Broadway tonight, and in honor of the playwriting pair's long list of ...

  2. George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart in 1937 Kaufman's Broadway debut was September 4, 1918, at the Knickerbocker Theatre , with the premiere of the melodrama Someone in the House . [6] [7] He coauthored the play with Walter C. Percival, based on a magazine story written by Larry Evans. [8]

    • Comedy, political satire
    • June 2, 1961 (aged 71), New York City, US
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Moss_HartMoss Hart - Wikipedia

    George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart in 1937. After working several years as a director of amateur theatrical groups and an entertainment director at summer resorts, he scored his first Broadway hit with Once in a Lifetime (1930), a farce about the arrival of the sound era in Hollywood. The play was written in collaboration with Broadway veteran ...

  4. New York City at the home of Martin Vanderhof, 1936. You Can't Take It with You is a comedic play in three acts by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. The original production of the play premiered at the Chestnut Street Opera House in Philadelphia on November 30, 1936. [1] The production transferred to Broadway 's Booth Theatre on December 14 ...

    • December 14, 1936
    • Booth Theatre, New York City
    • English
  5. Moss Hart and George S. Kaufmans The Man Who Came to Dinner is a brilliantly witty madcap play, which manages to combine the sophistication of great comedic literature, the frenetic energy of the silliest farce, and a genuinely sweet heart into one of the most beloved comedies of the American theatre. Filled with fascinating character roles ...

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  7. Between 1918 and 1945, chiefly in tandem with other writers, including Edna Ferber and Marc Connelly, George S. Kaufman had thirty-five plays and musicals produced on Broadway. Probably his most successful collaborator, the one with whom the public usually associates him, Moss Hart worked on eight. At least once, Kaufman called him his ...

  8. Kaufman and Hart's final collaboration, George Washington Slept Here (1940), was a popular but unambitious tale of the inconveniences of country life. Like Marc Connelly before him, Hart left Kaufman amicably, with great admiration for his partner's work, but, more insistently, with a need to write his own material.

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