The Birthday Party Summary
Act
I
The
play begins in the living room of a seaside boardinghouse in 1950s England. Petey, the boardinghouse owner, and his wife Meg, both in their sixties, sit at the
living room table and engage in tepid conversation while eating breakfast. Meg
is an inquisitive character who peppers Petey with repeated questions
concerning his food, his job, etc. Petey informs his wife that two gentlemen
will soon arrive to stay at the boardinghouse; he met them the night before.
Meg is flustered by the news at first, but quickly recovers to promise she will
have a room ready for them.
She
then calls out to Stanley Webber,
their boarder who is asleep upstairs. When he doesn’t answer, she goes upstairs
to fetch him, and then returns a bit disheveled but amused. Stanley, a
bespectacled, unkempt, surly man in his thirties, soon follows. Petey and
Stanley speak of mundane topics while Meg prepares cornflakes and fried bread
for Stanley’s breakfast. After Petey leaves for work, the atmosphere changes.
Meg flirts with Stanley, who jokingly calls her “succulent” while criticizing
her housework. When Meg becomes affectionate, he rudely pushes her away and
insults her. Meg then informs him that two gentlemen are coming. The news
unsettles Stanley, who has been the only boarder for years. He accuses Meg of
lying, but she insists that she speaks the truth.
Before
Meg leaves to shop, Lulu, a young girl in her twenties,
arrives with a package. Meg instructs Lulu to keep the package from Stanley,
and then she leaves. Lulu and Stanley chat for a little while, mostly about
Stanley’s lack of enthusiasm and his appearance. Lulu calls him a “wash out”
and then quickly exits. Stanley washes his face in the kitchen, and then leaves
by the kitchen door. In the meantime, Goldberg and McCann enter the
living room. They are the two gentlemen who had requested rooms for the
evening.
It becomes immediately apparent that
Goldberg and McCann have come under mysterious circumstances to “finish a job.”
The job in question seems to be Stanley, though details are scarce. Goldberg
reassures McCann that they are at the right house, and that this job will cause
no more stress than their jobs usually cause them. Goldberg rambles on about
his uncle until Meg arrives, and introductions are made.
Goldberg’s sweet temperament and
suave demeanor soon set Meg at ease. Goldberg asks after Stanley, and Meg tells
him that Stanley was once a successful pianist but had to give it up. Meg also
reveals that it is Stanley’s birthday, and Goldberg suggests they have a party.
Thrilled with the idea, Meg shows the gentlemen to their room. Later, Stanley
returns to the living room as Meg arrives to put the groceries away. She tells
him about the two gentlemen, and Stanley is visibly upset to learn Goldberg’s
name. To cheer him up, Meg suggests he open his birthday present, even though
Stanley insists that it is not his birthday. To humor Meg, he opens the package
and finds a toy drum with drumsticks. He hangs the drum around his neck and
parades around the table beating the drum merrily until his rhythm becomes
erratic and chaotic. He beats the drum possessively and looms over Meg with a crazed
expression on his face.
Act
II
Later that same evening, McCann sits
at the living room table shredding a newspaper into five equal strips. Stanley
arrives, and the two men awkwardly greet one another. McCann, in a calm tone of
voice, congratulates Stanley on his birthday, and says it is an honor to be
invited to his party. Stanley replies that he wants to spend the evening alone
and tries to leave, but McCann will not let him.
Stanley sits at the table and
touches one of the newspaper strips, which upsets McCann. Stanley speaks of his
past, and suggests he has never been one to cause trouble. Stanley insists that
he has met McCann before, and grows upset when McCann denies the connection.
Stanley wants to know why he and Goldberg are at the boardinghouse, and grows
frantic when McCann claims they are there on a short holiday. Desperate,
Stanley grabs McCann’s arm, who violently hits him off. Shocked into
submission, Stanley calms himself and speaks of his love for Ireland, for its
people, its sunsets, and its police. He asks McCann to accompany him to a
nearby pub, but is interrupted when Petey and Goldberg enter the room.
Petey introduces Stanley to
Goldberg, and then leaves. The situation in the room grows tense, as Goldberg
yammers on about his past. Despite Goldberg’s soothing words, Stanley remains
on edge and refuses to sit down when McCann asks him to. It is not McCann's
threats that convince him to sit, but rather Goldberg's quiet insistence.
After Stanley submits, Goldberg and
McCann interrogate him about his past - they accuse him of betraying their
“organization,” of killing his wife, of leaving his bride at the altar, of
being a waste of space, and more. Stanley answers at first, but is soon struck
dumb by the sheer number of questions being thrown at him. The questions grow
progressively more ridiculous and nonsensical. Finally, Stanley hits Goldberg
in the stomach. McCann and Stanley threaten each other with chairs, but are
cooed back into civility when Meg arrives, beating Stanley’s toy drum. She is
dressed for his birthday party. Goldberg compliments her, and the tense
atmosphere quickly dissipates as Meg makes a moving tribute to Stanley in a
toast while McCann flashes a torch in Stanley’s face like a spotlight. Lulu
arrives, and Goldberg gives a second toast which includes more reminiscing.
The party begins in earnest. Lulu
and Goldberg flirt, while Meg and McCann speak of Ireland. Stanley sits alone
at the table until Meg suggests they all play blind man’s buff. During
Stanley’s turn, he is blindfolded by McCann, who breaks his glasses and puts
the toy drum in his path so that Stanley’s foot smashes through it. When
Stanley reaches Meg, he begins to strangle her. Goldberg and McCann pull him
off, but then the lights suddenly go out. In the darkness, the two gentlemen
cannot find Lulu, who has screamed and fainted. McCann shines his flashlight on
the table to discover Stanley standing over Lulu as though about to sexually
assault her. He giggles manically as the men slowly approach him and the curtain
closes.
Act
III
The next morning, Petey sits at the
living room table reading a newspaper, while Meg frets about having no
breakfast food left. Her memory is hazy from the night before, and she forgets
that Petey was not there as she tries to remember what happened. When she
leaves to shop, she sees Goldberg's car in the driveway, and grows frightened.
Petey calms her down.
As Meg prepares to leave again,
Goldberg enters the room and sits at the table. Meg asks him about the car, but
he ignores her. She finally leaves. Petey asks Goldberg about Stanley, and
Goldberg explains that Stanley suffered a nervous breakdown, and needs to be
taken to a doctor whom Goldberg knows. Petey wants to see Stanley when he
wakes, despite Goldberg's insistence that he should simply leave for work.
McCann enters with two suitcases,
and tells Goldberg that Stanley is trying to fit his broken glasses into his
eyes. When Petey suggests a way to fix the glasses and offers to fetch a doctor,
Goldberg dismisses him. Petey departs to tend to his peas, insisting he be told
when Stanley wakes, and Goldberg sits slumped over the table.
McCann demands they expedite the
job, but Goldberg ignores him. Angry, McCann shakes Goldberg's chair and calls him
"Simey," which causes the latter to attack him. McCann pacifies
Goldberg, who then admits he feels poorly and is confused by the feeling. He
tells McCann about his father and about his own principles on family, and
finally makes a strange request by asking McCann to blow into his mouth twice.
McCann does so without question, and Goldberg is calmed.
Lulu enters, and McCann leaves them
alone. Lulu accuses Goldberg of having taken sexual advantage of her the night
before. They argue over blame until McCann reenters and tells Lulu to confess
her sins. Startled by this bizarre turn of events, Lulu flees. McCann then
leaves to fetch Stanley, who enters cleanly shaven and nicely dressed. The two
men seem to take pity on Stanley, and Goldberg promises to buy him new glasses.
In a reprise of the interrogation from Act II, they pepper Stanley with gentler
questions and comments. Goldberg asks Stanley if he wants to leave with them,
but Stanley can only muster gurgling sounds. They begin to exit with Stanley,
but Petey arrives and tells them to stop. Menacingly, they ask Petey if he
wants to accompany them. Petey allows the two men to take Stanley away, but
before they leave, he cries out “Stan, don’t let them tell you what to do!”
Afterward, Petey returns to the living
room table and picks up his newspaper. Meg arrives and asks if Stanley has come
down to breakfast yet. Petey lies and tells her Stanley is still sleeping.
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