The Cocktail Party, verse drama in three acts by T.S. Eliot, produced at the Edinburgh Festival in August in 1949 and published in 1950. Based on Alcestis by Euripides, it is a morality play presented as a comedy of manners. Eliot’s most commercially successful play, it was more conventional and less poetic than his earlier dramatic works.
The marital problems of Edward and Lavinia Chamberlayne are of special interest to an unidentified guest at their dismal cocktail party. The guest is later identified as Sir Henry Harcourt-Reilly, a prescient psychiatrist who helps heal the Chamberlaynes’ marriage. He also counsels Celia Coplestone, Edward’s mistress and the main moral figure of the piece, to work out her salvation.