Cornerstone (play)

[1] It was highly commended in a 1955 competition from the Playwrights' Advisory Board (the one won by The Torrents and Summer of the Seventeenth Doll).

[3] The Bulletin called it "an efficient, almost photographic account of the everyday tragedy of the daughter who has sacrificed her chances of marriage in order to look after her mother...

The characters are recognisable types, the dialogue fluent, and all the surface-values of the situation are presented in a simple and straightforward manner, so that the final impression is that of a sad story ably told.

Her ex-boyfriend Bryce comes back into her life, a widower, and he proposes.

Catherine accepts but the rest of her family refuses to take their mother.

SMH 18 April 1956