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  1. Academy Award(r) winner James Stewart (1940 Best Actor, The Philadelphia Story and 1985 Honorary Oscar(r)), Jean Arthur, Academy Award(r) winner Lionel Barrymore (1931 Best Actor, A Free Soul) and Edward Arnold star in this classic screwball comedy. Based on the phenomenally successful Kaufman-Hart play,You Can't Take It With You was directed by Frank Capra and won two Academy Awards(r) (1938 ...

  2. Based on the phenomenally successful Kaufman-Hart play, You Can't Take It With You was directed by Frank Capra and won two Academy Awards® (1938 Best Picture, Best Director) and garnered five more nominations. It was Capra's third Oscar® for directing. Arthur stars as Alice Sycamore, the stable family member of an offbeat clan of free spirits ...

  3. 16 de may. de 2022 · You Can't Take It With You. by. Frank Capra. Publication date. 1938. Usage. Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International. Topics.

  4. When a girl from a family of eccentric freethinkers falls for the son of a conservative banker, the stage is set for a meet-the-in-laws dinner across a social divide. Wrestling, ballet, fireworks and police raids ensue. Adapted from Hart and Kaufman’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Broadway play.

  5. You Can't Take It With You. COMEDY. Sweet-natured Alice Sycamore (Jean Arthur) falls for banker's son Tony Kirby (James Stewart). But when she invites her snooty prospective in-laws to dinner to give their blessing to the marriage, Alice's peculiar extended family -- including philosophical grandfather Martin Vanderhof (Lionel Barrymore ...

  6. You Can’t Take It With You opened on Broadway at the Booth Theatre on December 14, 1936.A smash hit, the show ran for 838 performances and returned to Broadway five times, most recently in 2014. That production, directed by Scott Ellis, earned the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress for Annaleigh Ashford as Essie.

  7. In “You Can’t Take It With You,” Moss Hart (and co-writer George S. Kaufman) employ a variety of literary devices that enrich the play, adding layers of meaning, humor, and depth. Let’s explore the top 10 literary devices used: Irony — The contrast between what is expected to happen and what actually occurs is used frequently for ...