Summary
In 'Plastered - A Comedy Interlude,' we are introduced to a farcical social predicament unfolding in the refined, yet ultimately vulnerable, drawing-room of Mrs. Agatha Primrose (Marie Stanley). Her meticulously planned tea party, intended to impress the eccentric art connoisseur Mr. Fitzwilliam (Cliff Lancaster), quickly devolves into delightful chaos. The catalyst for this unraveling is a potent, unannounced substitution of the punch bowl by Mrs. Primrose's mischievous nephew, Bertie (Bud Duncan), and the well-intentioned but disastrous efforts of the new maid, Daisy (Georgia O'Dell), to manage a precarious plaster bust. As the guests become increasingly inebriated and the prized sculpture meets an unfortunate end, the escalating sequence of mishaps is hilariously misconstrued by the 'plastered' attendees, culminating in Mr. Fitzwilliam's unexpected endorsement of the entire debacle as a stroke of avant-garde brilliance. The film thus explores the delicate balance between social decorum and sheer absurdity, all through the lens of unintended consequence and a potent, boozy beverage.