Written by:
Samuel Taylor
Opening: May 13, 1988
Closing: May 22, 1988
Number of performances: 7
Time:Late Summer of 1953
Setting:
The Larrabee Estate on the North Shore of Long Island.
Synopsis:
It is set on Long Island in the 1950s, and deals with the involvement of a very rich family named Larrabee with Sabrina Fairchild, the daughter of their family chauffeur. She is bright, well-educated, and has just returned from five years in Paris, where she has done a brilliant job as an executive in a U.S. government overseas office. She has come home to find out if she is still in love with the younger Larrabee son, David. The elder son, Linus, a cynical, good-humored tycoon who has taken control of the family fortune, detects Sabrina's feeling for his brother, and for his own amusement lays a trap to bring them together. It works: David falls in love with Sabrina and wants to marry her. At the same time, a rich young Frenchman who has known Sabrina in Paris turns up and asks her to marry him. Faced with this dilemma, Sabrina discovers it is really Linus she wants. After an amusing scene in which Sabrina's father, the chauffeur, makes a rather amazing revelation, Sabrina breaks down Linus' resistance and gets her man. An unusual number of fine character parts for actors: the beautiful mother of wit and perception; the father, whose one passion is attending funerals; the chauffeur who has been dabbling in the stock market and likes his job because it gives him time to read; the smart magazine editor who, as a house guest, is the interested observer.
Performers
| Maude Larrabee | Audrey Cimino | |
| Julia Ward McKinlock | Irma Hamilton | |
| Linus Larrabee, Jr. | Rik Schlierer | |
| Linus Larrabee | Joseph Cimino | |
| Margaret | Kitty Taylor | |
| David Larrabee | Martin Dodd | |
| Gretchen | Suzane Talarico | |
| Sabrina Fairchild | Cristine Henry Sendra | |
| Fairchild | Curt Collier | |
| A Young Woman | Concetta Lomanto | |
| A Young Man | Matthew Thornton | |
| A Second Young Woman | Shelia Morris | |
| A Second Young Man | Greg Borucki | |
| Paul D'Argenson | Glenn W. Bull |
Production Staff
| Director | Ted Rucinski | |
| Producer | Mardy Moore | |
| Producer | Shirley Zimmermann | |
| Stage Manager | Bob Cheesman | |
| Set Design | Charlie Hepburn | |
| Set Construction | Charlie Hepburn | |
| Lighting Design | Greg Rucinski | |
| Costumes | Mardy Moore | |
| Costumes | Shirley Zimmermann | |
| Make-up | Pat Timm | |
| Sound | Ira Rebowski | |
| Properties | Georgia Little | |
| Hair | Diane Galante | |
| Prompter | Kitty Taylor | |
| Casting | Melissa Putterman | |
| Casting | Ted Peck | |
| Casting | Mardy Moore | |
| Casting | Shirley Zimmermann | |
| Costumes | Concetta Lomanto | |
| Costumes | Diane Moore | |
| Make-up | Colleen B. Macaulay | |
| After Show Party | Pat Timm | |
| Properties | Mardy Moore | |
| Properties | Shirley Zimmermann | |
| Set Construction | Frank LaRosa | |
| Set Construction | Glenn W. Bull | |
| Set Construction | Al Lewis | |
| Set Construction | Dusty LaPlante |
Notes on production:
Revival - first produced at The Playhouse in October 1955.
