Dictionary Definition
misalliance n : an unsuitable alliance
(especially with regard to marriage)
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- An unsuitable alliance, especially an unsuitable marriage
Extensive Definition
Misalliance is a play written in 1909–1910 by
George
Bernard Shaw.
Misalliance takes place entirely on a single
Saturday afternoon in the conservatory of a large country house in
Hindhead,
Surrey in
Victorian
era England. It is a
continuation of some of the ideas on marriage that he expressed in
1908 in his play, Getting Married. It was also a continuation of
some of his other ideas on Socialism,
physical
fitness, the Life Force,
and "The New Woman":
i.e. women intent on escaping Victorian standards of helplessness,
passivity, stuffy propriety, and non-involvement in politics or
general affairs.
Shaw subtitled his play A Debate in One Sitting,
and in the program of its first presentation in 1910 inserting this
program note: "The debate takes place at the house of John Tarleton
of Hindhead, Surrey, on 31 May, 1909. As the debate is
a long one, the curtain will be lowered twice. The audience is
requested to excuse these interruptions, which are made solely for
its convenience."
Plot
Misalliance is an ironic examination of the mating instincts of a varied group of
people gathered at a wealthy man's country home on a summer
weekend. Most of the romantic interest centers on the host's
daughter, Hypatia Tarleton, a typical Shaw heroine who
exemplifies his life-long theory that in courtship, women are the
relentless pursuers and men the apprehensively pursued.
Hypatia is the daughter of newly-wealthy John
Tarleton who made his fortune in the unglamorous but lucrative
underwear business. She is fed up with the stuffy conventions that
surround her and with the hyperactive talk of the men in her life.
Hypatia is engaged to Bentley Summerhays, an intellectually bright
but physically and emotionally underdeveloped aristocrat.
Hypatia is restless with her engagement as the
play starts, even as it is revealed she has also had a proposal of
engagement from her betroved's father, Lord Summerhays. She has no
desire to be a nurse to
the elderly and is in no
hurry to be made a widow.
She longs for some adventure to drop out of the sky, and it
does.
At the beginning of Act II, it is revealed that
the aircraft brings two unexpected guests. The pilot, Joey
Percival, is a handsome young man who immediately arouses Hypatia's
hunting instinct. The passenger, Lina Szczepanowska, is a female
dare-devil of a circus
acrobat whose
vitality and directness inflame all the other men at the
house-party.
An additional uninvited guest arrives in the form
of Gunner. He is a cashier who is very unhappy with
his lot in life. He blames the wealthy class in particular for the
plight of the ordinary worker, and he blames John Tarleton in
particular for a romantic dalliance that he once had with Gunner's
mother. Gunner arrives with intent to kill Tarleton but hides
inside a piece of furniture. From this position, he becomes wise to
Hypatia's pursuit of Percival. His character comes to introduce the
themes of socialism to the play, as well as serving to question the
conventional views on marriage and social order.
All together there are eight marriage proposals offered for
consideration in the course of one summer afternoon. The question
of whether any one of these combinations of marriage might be an
auspicious alliance, or a misalliance, prompts one of the
prospective husbands to utter the famous Shavian speculation:
- "If marriages were made by putting all the men's names into one sack and the women's names into another, and having them taken out by a blind-folded child like lottery numbers, there would be just as high a percentage of happy marriages as we have now."
Current, recent, or upcoming performances
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Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
a world-without-end bargain, abnormality, alliance, anomaly, bed, bond of matrimony, bridebed, cohabitation, conjugal
bond, conjugal knot, coverture, holy matrimony,
holy wedlock, husbandhood, ill-assorted
marriage, impropriety, inadmissibility,
inapplicability,
inappositeness,
inappropriateness,
inaptitude, inaptness, infelicity, intermarriage, interracial
marriage, invalid linking, irrelevance, irrelevancy, maladjustment, marriage, marriage bed,
marriage sacrament, match,
matrimonial union, matrimony, mesalliance, misapplicability,
misapplication,
miscegenation,
misconnection,
misjoinder, misjoining, mismatch, misreference, misrelation, mixed marriage,
nuptial bond, sacrament of matrimony, spousehood, uncongeniality, unfitness, union, unsuitability, wedded
bliss, wedded state, weddedness, wedding knot,
wedlock, wifehood