Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Brewster's Millions

 
American Theater Guide: Brewster's Millions
 

Brewster's Millions (1906), a play by Winchell Smith and Byron Ongley. [ New Amsterdam Theatre, 163 perf.] Montgomery Brewster (Edward Abeles) is left one million dollars in the will of his grandfather, who died remorseful over neglecting his daughter, Brewster's mother. Monty's joy at his inheritance is at once compounded and confounded when he learns his uncle has also died and left him seven million dollars. But his uncle's will contains a hitch. The uncle hated his father (Monty's grandfather) and demands that Monty spend all of the grandfather's money at once, without revealing why and without giving any money to charity. Monty enlists a group of his friends to help on the spending spree, but complications arise because of the secrecy clause. In this raucous farce, which was based on George Barr McCutcheon's story, Smith introduced a mysterious performer named George Spelvin, who later reappeared in many of his plays whenever the real identity of a figure had to be kept secret. The name became something of a Smith trademark and is still used today.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Wikipedia: Brewster's Millions
Top
Brewster's Millions  
First edition cover
First edition cover
Author George Barr McCutcheon
Country  United States
Language English
Genre(s) Comedy novel
Publisher Grosset & Dunlap
Publication date 1902
Media type print (hardback & paperback)
ISBN NA
OCLC 288834

Brewster's Millions is a novel written by George Barr McCutcheon in 1902, originally under the pseudonym of Richard Greaves. It was adapted into a play in 1906, which opened at the Globe Theatre (now called the Gielgud Theatre), and the novel or play has been made into a movie nine times (including twice in India). The 1985 version starring Richard Pryor and John Candy is perhaps the best known.[citation needed]

Contents

Plot introduction

The novel's story revolves around Montgomery Brewster, a young man who inherits a million dollars from his rich grandfather. Shortly after, a rich and eccentric uncle who hated his grandfather also passes away. The uncle's will leaves Brewster with seven million dollars, but only under the condition that he keeps none of the grandfather's money. To inherit the seven million dollars, Brewster is required to spend every penny of his grandfather's million within one year, and end up with no assets or goods gained by his grandfather's wealth at that time. Should he make the deadline, he will earn the full seven million; should he fail, he remains penniless.

Plot summary

Monty Brewster finds that spending so much money within the course of a year is incredibly difficult, especially with the strict conditions imposed by the executor of his uncle's will. Brewster is required to demonstrate business sense by obtaining good value for the money he spends, limiting his donations to charity, his losses to gambling, and the value of his tips to waiters and cab drivers. Moreover, Brewster is sworn to secrecy, and cannot tell anyone why he is living to excess. Working against him are his well-meaning friends, who try repeatedly to limit his losses and extravagance even as they share in his luxurious lifestyle.

Brewster's challenge is compounded by the fact that his attempts to lose money through stock speculation and roulette prove to increase his funds rather than decrease them. Lampooned by the press as a spendthrift, he throws large parties and balls and charters a cruise lasting several months to Europe and Egypt for his large circle of friends and employees. Nonetheless, despite his loose pursestrings, Monty repeatedly demonstrates a strong moral character. At one point, he uses his funds to bail out a bank to save his landlady's account, despite risking his eligibility for the will. At another, he jumps overboard to save a drowning sailor from his cruise even as his rich friends choose not to.

Monty's would-be wife Drew turns down his marriage proposal early in the year, believing him to be financially irresponsible and bound to a life of poverty, and his attempts to win her back repeatedly fail as Monty's attention is entirely absorbed by the requirement to spend so much money. At the conclusion of the year, Monty succeeds in spending the last of his funds, which he has meticulously documented, and confesses his love to another woman, Peggy Gray, who has been sympathetic to his lifestyle despite knowing nothing about his challenge. Tragedy strikes the night before Monty's deadline, as his lawyers inform him that the executor of his uncle's will has vanished after liquidating all of the assets. Monty convinces himself that he is doomed to poverty, but marries Peggy Gray, who accepts him despite the lack of wealth. Shortly after the wedding, the executor of his uncle's will arrives to inform him that he has successfully met the challenge and that he had simply come to deliver the money to Monty in person.

Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

Play adaptation

The novel was adapted into a Broadway play by Winchell Smith and Byron Ongley. The play débuted at the New Amsterdam Theatre December 31, 1906.

Movie versions

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Brewster's Millions" Read more

 

Mentioned in