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5.0 out of 5 stars Extremely Wonderful!!!, Feb 5 2002
By 
Joey (Idaho Falls, ID USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: You Can't Take It With You (Paperback)
When I first read this play I absolutely loved it. When our school did the production I played the part of Edward Carmichael. It was one of the greatest experiences for me. I loved doing the show, it was soo much fun. To me the show was about a very loving family who has to overcome obstacles. I would love to do the show again.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Filled with Hilarious Hype!, April 6 2001
By 
A. Pangelinan "ADPang" (California USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: You Can't Take It With You (Paperback)
Reading "You Can't Take It With You" brought back so many memories. This play is full of fireworks, plays, kittens, and everything that comes together to create entertaining chaos! This play can be enjoyed by all ages. High School theatre teachers will smile as their students take pride in portraying characters like Penny, Mr. De Pinna and Essie! This story will stay in your mind as a warm memory.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Just read the other review titles, April 7 2000
This review is from: You Can't Take It With You (Paperback)
As an actor in high school, I played the character of Mr. DePinna, and it was the best theater experience I've ever had. The play has enough mature themes to be taken seriously (unlike many other family life plays of the period), but it is also humorous enough to let the cast enjoy acting in it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Life Changing Theatre, Jan 9 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: You Can't Take It With You (Paperback)
"I laughed, I cried, I made it part of myself." I have no idea who to attribute that quote to, but I do know that it can be applied directly to this comic masterpiece.

It is a play about following your bliss and being true to yourself. It is about setting your priorities straight. But instead of being didactic, it is hysterically funny.

Laugh, cry, make it a part of yourself.

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5.0 out of 5 stars One Great Play, Mar 22 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: You Can't Take It With You (Paperback)
Great Play-comedy. Excellent example of incongruity and shows us the realities of life, the lack of the common touch. Well written. Encourage everybody to read it. Will make you laugh.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The best comic play in the history of American theater., Aug 23 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: You Can't Take It With You (Paperback)
"You Can't Take It with You," by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart, can be quickly described as a comedy about a madcap family. It is, however, beneath its very funny surface, a meditation on the problems of individuality, conformity, and the ways in which one decides to live one's life.

The plot concerns the Vanderhof clan, an extended family who all live in a large house situated somewhere near Columbia University. The house is owned by Grandpa Vanderhof, a man who left his life in commerce some years before and now spends his time collecting snakes, throwing darts, and attending college commencements. His daughter, Penny, writes plays on a typewriter which had been delivered to their home by mistake. Penny's husband is named Paul. Paul manufactures fireworks in the base ment with the help of Mr. DiPinna, a gentlemen who came to deliver something and has stayed on for seven years. Paul and Penny have found time to produce two daughters: Essie, who dances ballet to the xylophone accompaniment of her husband, Ed, and Alice, the sole "normal" member of the family.

Alice has become involved with the boss's son, and most of the plot revolves around the complications that arise from the son (Tony) bringing his parents to dinner at the Vanderhofs' one night before the dinner was actually scheduled.

The plot, however, is only a small part of what makes this comedy (which ran for more than 800 performances on Broadway in a time when 200 performances was considered a hit) an endlessly fascinating, always enjoyable event.

The characters are rich, often loopy, and even eminently sensible. Grandpa Vanderhof is a sage, and lines of his run through my head almost daily as little pieces of wisdom with which I make my way through life. "Life is kind of beautiful," he says, "if you just let it come to you." This, in many ways, sums up the theme.

It's a play that reads well. From the opening description through to the final line of dialogue it is entertainment, pure and simple. The first act is extraordinary, a mixing of exposition and farce which has rarely, if ever, been equalled. The play as a whole is human, humane, and witty, and wise. It has an almost Taoist quality and a peace at its core which I feel makes it unique. It is a great play which should be seen, read, and experienced at every available opportunity. On top of all this (to quote Woody Allen), it makes me laugh.

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You Can't Take It With You
You Can't Take It With You by George S. Kaufman (Paperback - Jun 1995)
CDN$ 8.18
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