"I Went to a Marvellous Party" (sometimes known as "I've Been to a Marvellous Party") is a song with words and music by Noël Coward, written in 1938 and included in his Broadway revue, Set to Music, in which it was performed by Beatrice Lillie in January 1939. Lillie introduced the song to London audiences in June of that year in cabaret at the Café de Paris. It was later included in the revues All Clear (1939), Cowardy Custard (1972) and Oh, Coward! (1972). Both Lillie and Coward made recordings of the song, which is among his most popular.
The lyric of I Went to a Marvellous Party is a first-person description of five parties attended by the singer on the French Riviera. The character of the song is humorous and giddy. It has been suggested that the activities described in the lyrics were typical of the "frantic, addleheaded search for amusement" of the Train bleu society, which flocked to the Riviera each summer in the 1920s and '30s.[1]
In 1953 Coward described the background to the writing of the song:Coward added, "This whole glittering episode was my original inspiration for 'I went to a Marvellous Party'. Beattie eventually sang the song in Set to Music wearing slacks, a fisherman's shirt, several ropes of pearls, a large sun-hat and dark glasses".[2]
Although Coward wrote a melody for the song, the text is most often recited over a piano accompaniment.[3] Out of Coward's approximately 300 songs, this is one of his most popular, ranking among the top 30 in royalty payments.[3]
Coward wrote the song with Lillie in mind, and included it in his revue Set to Music which opened at the Music Box Theatre in New York on 18 January 1939.[4] The show was a much revised version of his 1932 West End show Words and Music.[5]
Lillie introduced the song to London audiences in June 1939 in cabaret at the Café de Paris,[6] and later in the year it was included in the revue All Clear at the Queen's Theatre.[5] At the midnight gala at the Phoenix Theatre on 5 December 1969, marking Coward's seventieth birthday, Danny La Rue performed the song.[7] Both the British and American retrospective Coward revues in 1972 included the number, performed by Patricia Routledge in Cowardy Custard and Roderick Cook in Oh, Coward!.[8] The New York Times commented on the former that Routledge "incredible as it may seem, actually tops Beatrice Lillie's memorable performance".[9]
The song is published separately as sheet music or in a number of collections, including the following: