Four Couples, One Table - FULL-LENGTH - comedic get together
by Tom Erb
"Four Couples, One Table" is a contemporary comedy about friendship, change, and the families we choose, set against a New Year's Eve party in a Florida manufactured home community.
The story centers on three retired couples—the Mchedys, Taybors, and Ellermans—who call themselves "The Rounders" after surviving three hurricanes together. Their tight-knit group faces disruption when Mary Taybor attempts to...
"Four Couples, One Table" is a contemporary comedy about friendship, change, and the families we choose, set against a New Year's Eve party in a Florida manufactured home community.
The story centers on three retired couples—the Mchedys, Taybors, and Ellermans—who call themselves "The Rounders" after surviving three hurricanes together. Their tight-knit group faces disruption when Mary Taybor attempts to integrate her best friend from Kansas City, Ladonna Wagner, and her husband Herb into their circle.
At the heart of the conflict is a clash between Mary's rigid Chamber of Commerce planning and Joanne Mchedy's more relaxed hosting style. This clash comes to a head when Mary presumes to dictate guest arrival times at Joanne's New Year's Eve party. The tension is punctuated by Thomas Mchedy's notorious experimental cocktails (made from suspiciously cheap liquor) and his inability to go five minutes without mentioning his "twenty years of real estate" experience.
The play's humor builds through running gags, including Thomas's increasingly dangerous drink creations, Mary's obsession with her Chamber of Commerce handbook, Tom Ellerman's penchant for dramatic Shakespeare quotes, and Rex Taybor's attempts to survive both Thomas's cocktails and his wife Mary's social engineering.
When the Wagner’s arrive early—defying Mary's schedule—the evening descends into chaos. Ladonna's attempts to tell a story about stolen flamingos are repeatedly interrupted by Thomas's drink offerings, Mary's scheduling protests, and Tom's theatrical outbursts. These interruptions and interactions show the group's deep bonds and gradual acceptance of new members.
The play explores themes of friendship, adaptation to change, and the conflict between order and chaos. It's ultimately a story about how the families we choose are strengthened not by rigid protocols but by shared experiences, inside jokes, and the ability to laugh together – even when someone's experimental cocktail is glowing suspiciously.
"Four Couples, One Table" reminds us that sometimes the best moments in life are the unscheduled ones. True friendship means accepting each other's quirks, whether they're an obsession with property values, a need to control social gatherings, or a dangerous enthusiasm for discount liquor.
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