The original idea for
A Song at Twilight was inspired by
Lord David Cecil's biography of
Max Beerbohm, in which Cecil described
Constance Collier's late-life visit to Beerbohm at his home in Italy. Coward said, "I thought how funny this was. There was Max's old flame coming to visit him, but so much more vital still than him that she totally exhausted him in seconds."
Suite in Three Keys was planned by Coward as his theatrical swan song: "I would like to act once more before I fold my bedraggled wings." Coward's previous play,
Waiting in the Wings (1960), had not been a critical success, but the climate of opinion had changed in the intervening six years, and Coward's works had undergone a period of rediscovery and re-evaluation, which Coward called "Dad's Renaissance". This had begun with a successful revival of
Private Lives at the
Hampstead Theatre and continued with a new production of
Hay Fever at the
National Theatre. The play was revived in 1999 for Coward's centennial in a production at the
Gielgud Theatre directed by
Sheridan Morley. The cast included
Vanessa Redgrave as Carlotta,
Kika Markham as Hilde,
Corin Redgrave as Hugo and
Matthew Bose as Felix. The play then went on a UK tour in 2009 (directed by Nikolai Foster, with
Peter Egan as Hugo,
Belinda Lang as Carlotta,
Kerry Peers as Hilde and Daniel Bayle as Felix) and another in 2019 (directed by
Stephen Unwin, with
Simon Callow as Hugo,
Jane Asher as Carlotta, Jessica Turner as Hilde and Ash Rizi as Felix.) ==Plot==