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DRAWING ROOM

A 'drawing room' is a room in a house where visitors may be entertained. The name is derived from ''with''drawing room. In a large sixteenth, seventeenth or early eighteenth-century English house, a withdrawing room was a room to which the owner of the house, his wife, or a distinguished guest who was occupying one of the main apartments in the house could "withdraw" for more privacy. It was often off the great chamber (or the great chamber's descendant, the salon) and usually led to a formal, or "state" bedroom.
In eighteenth-century London, the royal morning receptions that the French called ''levées'' were called "drawing rooms".
During the American Civil War, in the White House of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia, the drawing room was just off of the parlor where C.S.A. President Jefferson Davis would greet his guests. At the conclusion of these greetings, the men would remain in the parlor to talk politics and the women would withdraw to the drawing room for their own conversation. This was common practice in the affluent circles of the Southern United States.
Until the mid-twentieth century, after a dinner the ladies of a dinner party would withdraw to the drawing room, leaving the gentlemen at table, where the cloth was removed. After an interval of conversation, the gentlemen would rejoin the ladies in the drawing room.
The term ''drawing room'' is not used as widely as it once was, and tends to be used in Britain only by those who also have other reception rooms, such as a 'morning room', a nineteenth-century designation for a sitting-room, often with east-facing exposure, suited for daytime calls, or the middle-class lounge, a late nineteenth-century designation for a room in which to relax; hence the drawing room is the smartest room in the house, usually used by the adults of the family when entertaining. The American equivalent was the parlor. In French usage the social gathering and the room it contained are equally the ''salon''.

Contents
Railroad usage
Drawing-room comedy
External links

Railroad usage


The term has also been applied to passenger trains, supplanting ''parlor car'', to designate some of the most spacious and expensive private accommodations available on board a sleeping car or private railroad car. In North America, it meant a room that slept three or more, with a private washroom. While Amtrak has retired cars built with drawing rooms, they are currently still used by VIA Rail Canada, although the traditional nomenclature is seen as archaic and are officially sold as "triple bedrooms".

Drawing-room comedy


The drawing room, being a room in the house to entertain visitors, gave its name to 'drawing-room comedy', a genre of theatrical productions and motion pictures. Drawing room comedy typically features wit and verbal banter among wealthy, leisured, genteel, upper class characters. Drawing room comedy is also sometimes called the "comedy of manners." Oscar Wilde's ''The Importance of Being Earnest'' and several of the plays of Noel Coward are typical works of the genre. George Bernard Shaw's ''Heartbreak House'' adds an undercurrent of social criticism to the genre. Cary Grant appeared in a number of filmed drawing-room comedies. Ernst Lubitsch was especially known as a director of drawing-room comedies.

External links



Victorian Drawing Room

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