- Drama professor turned theater critic balances his home life and career when he moves to the country with his wife and their four sons.
- Drama critic Larry Mackay, his wife Kate, and their four sons move from their crowded Manhattan apartment to an old house in the country. While homemaker Kate settles into suburban life, Larry continues to enjoy the theater and party scene of New York. Kate soon begins to question Larry's fidelity when he mentions a flirtatious encounter with Broadway star Deborah Vaughn.—Daniel Bubbeo <dbubbeo@cmp.com>
- University drama professor Lawrence Mackay and his wife Kate Mackay prefer the quiet of home life--however quiet theirs can be living in a New York City apartment with four rambunctious adolescent and/or infant sons and a sheepdog--than the high life often associated with the New York theater. That is why they plan to move to the country whenever they can find a suitable house. Their lives have the potential to change when Larry becomes a theater critic for one of the big New York City newspapers, meaning that he, along with his six colleagues at the other big New York papers, control what stays and what goes on Broadway by their critiques. Things do not start off well for Larry in this new job when the first play he is to review is that of his and Kate's best friend, Alfred North, their sons' godfather. Larry, who had always been seen as a fair man, hates the play, and gives it a bad review. Kate begins to believe that Larry is changing because of his new job, seeming now to enjoy the socialite parties he used to abhor, and almost wanting to be able to write a bad review as they contain more quotable witticisms than good reviews and wield more power in terms of fear from producers. He also seems to no longer want to move to the country, but circumstances force them to move anyway. In their run-down country home in Hooton, New York, Kate tries to carve out a new life for their family. But her participation in a local charity theater production, for which she asks Alfred for a new play to mount, threatens not only the Mackays' friendship with Alfred, but also the Mackays' marriage.—Huggo
- Drama professor Lawrence McKay gets caught up in the Manhattan social circle when he takes a job as a theater critic for a New York daily, but his wife Kate wants to move their family of four rowdy sons to the country. She soon finds herself dealing with fixing up their dilapidated country house and competing for her husband's affections with flirtatious Broadway diva Deborah Vaughn.—Daniel Bubbeo <dbubbeo@cmp.com>
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By what name was Please Don't Eat the Daisies (1960) officially released in India in English?
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