Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Lillian Hellman Essays - Hollywood Blacklist, English-language Films
  Lillian Hellman    Lillian Hellman was one of the most influential and successful playwrights of  her time. Throughout her professional life she has expanded her writing into  different genres, as well as being a playwright she was a screenwriter during a  popular time in Hollywood and later in her life she wrote many popular memoirs  reviewing her life. Hellman was gripped with many obstacles in her career and  personal life, including a torrid love affair with writer Dashiell Hammett,  having to testify in front of the house on un-American activities and being a  female in a male dominated profession. Julia Newhouse and Max Bernard Hellman  had only one child, Lillian Florence Hellman, born June 20th 1905 in New    Orleans. Growing up she would spend her time between New York where her parents  lived in New Orleans. Lillian stayed with her two aunts in a bed and breakfast  they owned in the French Quarter. As a child Lillian would romp through the  dangerous city of new Orleans by herself proving she was very independent at an  early age. Six months out of the year she would attend school in New Orleans,  the rest was spent in New York where she also attended school. She decided to go  to college in the east, attending both New York University and Columbia    University. In 1925 Lillian Hellman left college and read scripts for a living.    On December 31st she married her husband Arthur Kober, who also became a  successful playwright. Through these years Hellman traveled to Paris and    Germany. Kober and Hellman moved to Hollywood in 1930, where Kober worked as a  screenwriter and Lillian Hellman read manuscripts for MGM. In Hollywood she met    Dashiell Hammett. Shortly after she moved to New York and lived with Hammett,  she divorced Arthur Kober. In New York Hammet wrote The Thin Man modeling his  character Nora Charles after Lillian. After little luck in New York Hellman  moved back to California as a screenwriter. While in Hollywood her mother died.    The Children's Hour an early and controversial play written by Hellman opened  in London. The play deals with a child's accusation that ruins two school  teachers lives. The taboo subject matter of same sex relationships that the play  deals with led to praise by her peers and boycotting by conservatives. The    Little Foxes is the next Hellman play to be performed, it is her most popular  play yet, staying open for 410 performances. In The Little Foxes material greed  for power create tragic conflicts in a southern family. Hellman bought a 130  acre farm in upstate new York with the money her plays had brought her. Watch on  the Rhine opens in 1941, with the success of this play Hellman had established  her endurance and talent throughout the literary and theatrical world. In Watch  on the Rhine, the destructive evil of the nazi disrupts the sheltered lives of a  suburban family in Washington ,DC. She went on to write the Autumn garden (1951)  and Toys in the Attic( 1960). In 1952 Lillian Hellman was supposed to appear  before the house un-American activities committee for her slight affiliations  with the communist party in Hollywood when she was a script writer. Hammet was  also harassed by Charles Mcarthy and the committee, leading to his arrest.    Hellman refused to discuss her friends political views as many Hollywood  employees were forced to do. this was what she thought on the subject; "I'm  pleased with what I did in front of the house UN American committee because it  had good results and it let other people take the same position, which was the  first time anybody had ever taken it." (Bryer dust cover) Dashiell Hammett  died in 1961. In the 1970's Hellman gained recognition for her  autobiographical writings. She was the author of three memoirs, An Unfinished    Woman, Pentimento, and Scoundrel Times. Throughout these books she recalled her  relationships with many people during her life. From her childhood best friend,    Julia, who was killed during World War II, to her maid on her farm. All three  memoirs gained critical acclaim and consumer recognition. An Unfinished Woman  was the winner of the National Book Award and Pentimento was made into a movie  starring Jane Fonda. Scoundrel Time, her last published work touches on the  hardships she suffered during the Mcarthy era. "Hellman combined tightly woven  plots with insight into psychological weakness and deep concern with the social  issues of her time," one critic said about her work. She was thought of as a  strong woman in hard times, "I don't have to tell you    
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