Little Women
(or Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy
) is a novel by American author Louisa May Alcott (1832–1888). Written and set in the Alcott family home, Orchard House, in Concord, Massachusetts, it was published in two parts in 1868 and 1869. The novel follows the lives of four sisters—Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy March—and is loosely based on the author's childhood experiences with her three sisters. The first part of the book was an immediate commercial and critical success and prompted the composition of the book's second part, also a huge success. Both parts were first published as a single volume in 1880. Alcott followed Little Women
with two sequels reprising the March sisters, Little Men
(1871) and Jo's Boys
(1886). Little Women
has been adapted to play, musical, opera, film, and animated feature.
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History, release and sequels
Louisa May Alcott wrote
Little Women
during 1867 and early 1868, writing furiously for two and a half months. She drew heavily on her experiences growing up with her three sisters in
Boston, Massachusetts and
Concord, Massachusetts.
[1] The novel was first published on September 30, 1868, and became an overnight success, selling over 2000 copies. The critical reception was also overwhelmingly positive; critics soon began calling the new novel a classic. Readers clamoured for a second volume that would bring about a marriage between the main character Jo, and her childhood friend, Laurie. Alcott received many letters and even visitors at her Concord home, asking for a sequel.
In response to this demand, Alcott wrote a second part, entitled
Good Wives
, which was published in 1869. The second part picks up three years after the events in the last chapter of the first part ("Aunt March Settles The Question"). Both parts were eventually called
Little Women
or
Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy
. While resisting the popular demand to see Jo and Laurie wed, Alcott did write marriages for three of the March sisters. In 1880, the two parts were combined into one volume, and have been published as such in the United States ever since. Alcott followed
Little Women
at intervals with two novels that reprised the March sisters,
Little Men
(1871) and
Jo's Boys
(1886) which followed the lives of the girls' children.
Plot introduction
Alcott's original work explores the overcoming of character flaws (many of the chapter titles in this first part are allusions to the allegorical concepts and places in
Pilgrim's Progress). When young, the girls played
Pilgrim's Progress by taking an imaginary journey through their home. As young women, they agree to continue the figurative journey, using the "guidebooks" — copies of the New Testament, described as "that beautiful old story of the best life ever lived" (chapter 1, see also chapter 19) — they receive on Christmas morning. Each of the March girls must struggle to overcome a major character flaw: Meg, vanity; Jo, a hot temper; Beth, shyness; and Amy, selfishness. The girls must work out these flaws in order to live up to their mother and father's high expectations as mothers, wives, sisters and citizens.
In the course of the novel, the girls become friends with their next-door neighbor, the teenage boy Laurie, who becomes a particular friend of Jo. As well as the more serious and sadder themes outlined above, the book describes the activities of the sisters and their friend, such as creating a newspaper and picnicking, and the various scrapes that Jo and Laurie (whose given name was "Theodore") get into. The story represents family relationships and explores family life thoroughly. It also reflects issues of feminism, as Jo consistently struggles with the boundaries 19th century society placed on females, including not being able to fight in a war, not being able to attend college and being pressured by her Aunt March to find a suitable husband to take care of her.
Characters
- Josephine "Jo" March:
The chief protagonist of the novel based on Louisa May Alcott herself. Jo is a tomboy and the second eldest sister at fifteen. She is very outspoken and has a passion for writing. Her bold nature often gets her into trouble. She is especially close to her younger sister Beth, who tries to help her become a gentler person. At the beginning of the book, she is employed by her Aunt March as a companion, but when Beth becomes ill, Amy is sent in Jo's place. Jo cuts off her long, chestnut brown hair — "her one beauty", as Amy calls it — and sells it to a wig shop to get money for her mother to visit their father, a sick Civil War chaplain. She refuses the proposal of marriage from family friend Laurie (despite many letters sent to Miss Alcott to have them married), and after Jo moves to New York, later meets and marries Professor Friedrich "Fritz" Bhaer. In other books, Alcott follows Jo and Professor Bhaer and their two sons, Robin, named after Jo's father, and Teddy, named after Laurie.
Alcott later wrote, "Jo should have remained a literary
spinster, but so many enthusiastic young ladies wrote to me clamorously demanding that she should marry Laurie, or somebody, that I didn't dare refuse and out of perversity went and made a funny match for her".
- Margaret "Meg" March:
At sixteen, she is the oldest sister. She is very pretty, proper, and somewhat old fashioned. She is the most responsible and helps run the household in her mother's absence. Meg also guards Amy from Jo when they have fights, just as Jo protects Beth. Due to the family's poverty she must work as a governess for a wealthy family in the town, Kings. After having bad experiences with some rich people (first, the Kings' eldest son is disinherited for bad behavior, and later she visits her friend Annie Moffat and discovers that her family believes Mrs. March is plotting to match her with Laurie only to gain his family's wealth), Meg learns that true worth does not lie with money. She falls in love with Mr. John Brooke, Laurie's tutor. She eventually marries Mr. Brooke and bears twin children, Margaret "Daisy" and John Laurence "Demi" (short for Demi-John). A third child, Josephine (called "Josie"), is born by the time Little Men
begins and all three children are major characters in Jo's Boys
.
- Elizabeth "Beth" March:
The second youngest sister, at about thirteen, is a quiet, kind young woman and an exceptional pianist. She enjoys looking after her dolls and cats. Docile and shy to a fault, she prefers to be homeschooled and avoids most public situations. At the start of the book, Alcott describes her as a sweet girl with a round young face and brown hair, making her appear younger than her years. She is especially close to Jo, despite their very different personalities. Beth loves charity work and helps her mother nurture local impoverished families. While her mother is nursing their father in Washington, she contracts scarlet fever from the youngest child of the Hummels, a poor German family. As Beth dies, she transcends her shyness by opening up to Jo about the spiritual significance of her death. Some critics have suggested that Beth's death signals Alcott's denial of the ability of the traditional, sentimental heroine to survive in an increasingly industrial world.
- Amy Curtis March:
The youngest sister—age twelve when the story begins—and a talented artist, Amy is described as a pretty young girl with curly golden hair and blue eyes. Her nose is rather flat, apparently after Jo dropped her when she was a baby. Amy obsesses over this minor flaw, and in early chapters seeks to "cure" the flaw by wearing a clothespin on her nose while she sleeps. She cares about her family, but is also "cool, reserved and worldly" which sometimes gets her into trouble. Often "petted" because she is the youngest, she can be vain and spoiled and inclined to throw tantrums when things do not go her way. Her relationship with Jo in particular is often strained due to Jo's teasing, particularly when Amy tries to use big words, mispronouncing them or using them incorrectly. As Aunt March's new companion when she is a teenager, she travels abroad with Aunt March. During their travels, she meets up with Laurie in Europe and, shortly after Beth dies, they marry. Later, Amy gives birth to daughter Elizabeth (Bess) who inherits her parents' classic beauty.
- Margaret "Marmee" March:
The girls' mother and head of household while her husband is away. She engages in charitable works and attempts to guide her girls' morals and shape their characters, usually through experiments. She confesses to Jo after her big fight with Amy that she has a temper as bad and volatile as Jo's own, but has learned to control it to avoid hurting herself and her loved ones.
- Robin "Father" March:
Formerly wealthy, it is implied that he helped friends who could not repay a debt, resulting in the family's poverty. A scholar and a minister, he serves as a chaplain for the Union Army.
- Hannah Mullet:
The maid of the March family, an older woman, who is described as kind and loyal to the family.
- Aunt Josephine March:
Mr. March's aunt, a rich widow. She lives alone in her mansion and Jo is employed to keep her company each day. She disapproves of the family's loss of wealth through their charitable work while hoarding her own (except in a few select instances). Amy is sent to stay with Aunt March while Beth is ill. They get along very well, and Aunt March keeps Amy on as her companion and eventually takes her to study art in Europe. She is cantankerous but she is not without compassion.
- Uncle and Aunt Carrol:
Sister and brother-in-law of Mr. March. Amy travels to Europe with them.
- Theodore "Laurie" Laurence:
A charming, playful, and rich young man who lives next door to the March family. He is often misunderstood by his loving but overprotective grandfather, who worries that Laurie will follow in his father's footsteps. His father was a free-spirited young man who eloped with an Italian pianist and was, consequently, disowned. Both died young, and as an orphan, Laurie was sent to live with Mr. Laurence. After Jo refuses to marry Laurie, she flees to New York and he to Europe. While there, he marries Amy, who later gives birth to their daughter Elizabeth (Bess).
- Mr. James Laurence:
A wealthy neighbor to the Marches and Laurie's grandfather. Lonely in his mansion, and often at odds with his high-spirited grandson, he finds comfort in becoming a benefactor to the Marches. He protects the March sisters while their parents are away just as if they were his own. He is an old friend of Mrs March's father, and admires their charitable works. He develops a special friendship with Beth, who reminds him of his dead daughter, and eventually gives Beth his daughter's piano.
- John Brooke:
While a tutor to Laurie, he falls in love with Meg. When Laurie leaves for college, he works for Mr. Laurence as an assistant and accompanies Mrs. March to Washington when her husband becomes dangerously ill. Later in the book, Aunt March catches Meg rejecting John's declaration of love. She implies that Brooke was only interested in Meg's future inheritance and threatens Meg with disinheritance. When Meg sticks up for John, he overhears her and realizes she was in love all along, and together they defy Aunt March (who eventually blessed the marriage) and become engaged. He serves in the Union Army for a year and, after receiving a wound, is sent home. John marries Meg a few years later when the war has ended and she has turned twenty. He dies of an unnamed illness towards the end of Little Men
.
- The Hummels:
A poverty stricken German immigrant family consisting of a widowed mother and seven children. Marmee and the girls help them by taking food, firewood, blankets and other comforts they can spare. Three of the children die of scarlet fever and Beth contracts it while caring for them.
- The Kings:
The rich family that employs Meg as a governess.
- The Gardiners:
Wealthy friends of Meg's. Before the Marches lost their wealth, the two families were social equals. The Gardiners are portrayed as goodhearted but vapid, believing in marriage for money and position. Meg's friend Sallie Gardiner eventually marries her friend Ned Moffat, but is unable to have children and becomes unhappy in her shallow marriage.
- Mrs. Kirke:
A friend of Mrs March's who runs a boarding house in New York. She employs Jo as governess to her two girls, Kitty and Minnie, for a time.
- Professor Friedrich "Fritz" Bhaer:
A poor German immigrant who used to be a well-known professor in Berlin but now lives in Mrs. Kirke's boarding house and tutors her children. He and Jo become friends and he critiques Jo's work, encouraging her to become a serious writer instead of writing "sensation" stories for weekly tabloids. The two eventually marry, raise Fritz's two orphaned nephews, Franz and Emil, and their own sons, Robin and Teddy.
- Franz and Emil:
Mr. Bhaer's two nephews whom he looks after following the death of his sister.
- Tina:
The small daughter of Mrs. Kirke's French washerwoman: she is a favorite of Professor Bhaer's. She clings to him as sloths cling to trees!
- Miss Norton:
A worldly tenant living in Mrs. Kirke's boarding house. She occasionally takes Jo under her wing and entertains her.
Autobiographical context
While many plot elements of Little Women run parallel to the story of Louisa May Alcott's own life, there are some major differences which include:
- Unlike Jo, Louisa never married. However, there has been speculation that Ralph W. Emerson was the inspiration for Friedrich's character. Louisa was Emerson's children's governess, and Emerson was a colleague of Bronson Alcott.
- Unlike Jo's father, who served as a chaplain in the Union Army, Louisa's father was a pacifist. It was she herself who served as a nurse for wounded soldiers.
Notable adaptations
Play
A
play in four acts, adapted by
Marian De Forest from the story by Louisa May Alcott, opened on
Broadway at the
Playhouse Theatre, on October 14, 1912. The production was directed by
Jessie Bonstelle and
Bertram Harrison. The cast included
Marie Pavey,
Alice Brady,
Gladys Hulette and
Beverly West. It ran for 184 performances and was later revived on December 18, 1916 at the
Park Theatre for 24 performances; another revival opened on December 7, 1931 at the Playhouse Theatre in a production directed by
William A. Brady, Jr. with
Jessie Royce Landis as Jo,
Lee Patrick as Meg,
Marie Curtis, and
Jane Corcoran running for 17 performances.
A three-act, one set adaptation was written by John David Ravold, and is frequently performed. It was originally copyrighted in 1934.
In 1995, an adaptation entitled "Louisa's Little Women" by Beth Lynch and Scott Lynch-Giddings premiered in a production by the Wisdom Bridge Theatre Company at the
Harold Washington Library Center in
Chicago. The play covers the events of Part One of Alcott's novel, interspersed with scenes depicting complementary aspects of her own life, including the influence of her father
Bronson Alcott and her acquaintance with
Henry David Thoreau,
Julia Ward Howe, and
Frank Leslie.
An adaptation by Emma Reeves was performed at GSA in Guildford, Surrey, England, and made its American debut at the
Whidbey Island Center for the Arts, north of
Seattle, Washington.
Literature
In 2005,
Geraldine Brooks published
March
, a novel exploring the gaps in
Little Women
, telling the story of Mr. March during the Civil War. It won the
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.
Film
thumb,
1933
Little Women
has seen several cinematic adaptations. One of the first film adaptations was the 1918
Harley Knoles-directed version, starring
Dorothy Bernard,
Kate Lester and
Conrad Nagel. One of the most famous (
the 1933 version) starred
Katharine Hepburn as Jo and
Spring Byington as Marmee. The film was followed by a
1949 version featuring
Elizabeth Taylor as Amy,
June Allyson as Jo,
Janet Leigh as Meg,
Margaret O'Brien as Beth,
Mary Astor as Marmee,
Peter Lawford as Laurie, and
C. Aubrey Smith as the elderly Mr. Lawrence. A
1978 version starred
Meredith Baxter as Meg,
Susan Dey as Jo,
Eve Plumb as Beth,
William Shatner as Friedrich Bhaer,
Greer Garson as Aunt March, and
Robert Young as Grandpa James Lawrence. A celebrated
1994 version starred
Susan Sarandon as Marmee,
Winona Ryder as Jo,
Kirsten Dunst as the younger Amy,
Samantha Mathis as the older Amy,
Christian Bale as Laurie,
Claire Danes as Beth and
Trini Alvarado as Meg. Other film versions of the novel appeared in 1917, 1918, 1946, 1948, 1950, 1958, 1970, 1979, and 2001.
Opera and musical
The novel has seen musical adaptation. In 1998
the book was adapted as an opera by composer
Mark Adamo, and, on January 23, 2005, a
Broadway musical adaptation of
the same name opened at the
Virginia Theatre in
New York City with a book by
Allan Knee, music by
Jason Howland, and lyrics by
Mindi Dickstein. The musical starred
Sutton Foster as Jo March and pop singer
Maureen McGovern as Marmee. The mixed-reviewed production ran through June 2005, garnering a Tony nomination for Sutton. While it had a disappointingly short life in New York, it had a very successful first national tour; Again starring Maureen McGovern, the tour began August 30 of that year, touring to 30 cities over 49 weeks. A second national tour was planned for the 2007–2008 season. The musical's UK premiere was performed by "Imagine Productions" at the Lowther Pavilion in December 2006.
Anime
Owing to the strong popularity of
Little Women
in
Japan, the story has been adapted into
anime on at least four occasions and referenced in several others. The first anime adaptation of
Little Women
was as an episode of the TV series
Manga Sekai Mukashi Banashi
("Manga World's Classic Tales"), aired in October 1977. In 1980, director
Yugo Serikawa (
Mazinger Z
) adapted the novel into a
Toei Animation TV special titled
Wakakusa Monogatari
(The Story of Young Grass). The success of Serikawa's TV special was parlayed into
Wakakusa no Yon Shimai
("Four Sisters of Young Grass"), a 26-episode TV series directed by
Kazuya Miyazaki for the
Kokusai Eigasha studio which aired on
Fuji TV in
1981.
The most well-known and highly regarded anime version of the story is
Ai no Wakakusa Monogatari
(The Story of Love's Young Grass), a
1987 TV series that was part of
Nippon Animation and Fuji TV's
World Masterpiece Theater, which featured character designs by the late
Yoshifumi Kondo. This series also featured several episodes of original stories from screenwriter
Akira Miyazaki as a way of acquainting the Japanese viewing audience with the characters and with the American Civil War. Nippon Animation also adapted the sequel
Little Men
into a World Masterpiece Theater TV series,
Wakakusa Monogatari Nan to Jou Sensei
("The Story of Young Grass: Nan and Teacher Jo), in 1993.
The 1980 TV special and the 1981 and 1987 TV series were all released, at least in part, in the United States in
English-dubbed form during the 1980s (with the Nippon Animation series broadcast by
HBO in the late 1980s under the title
Tales of Little Women
), and both TV series were broadcast widely in Europe and Latin America as well.
References to the story
A number of other anime and manga series include references to
Little Women
, including
Graduation M
where the main characters (who are male), are forced to play the lead roles in the play "Little Women," for their school ceremony;
Glass no Kamen
, in which a production of
Little Women
where protagonist, Maya plays the role of Beth is an important story arc; and
Burst Angel
, in which three of the main characters are named Jo, Meg (short for Megumi), and Amy.
A nod to the characters can be seen in the English release of the Nintendo 64 game,
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
. In the Forest Temple, the player must solve four puzzles hosted by ghosts by the names of Amy, Beth, Joelle and Meg to progress through the game. The ghosts appear again briefly in the game's sequel,
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask, but only in an optional mini game. In this game, the name "Joelle" was corrected to "Jo," since Jo's full name is Josephine and not Joelle.
In addition to the anime created, a Korean artist and writer, Kim Hee Eun, created a
manhwa called
Dear My Girls
. The manhwa had the characters Amy, Beth, Jo, and Meg; many others as well. Though the story is a bit different, it was based on ideas from
Little Women
. The manhwa is serialized in a Korean magazine,
mink
.
See also
- The Wayside, where Alcott and her sisters lived many of the scenes that later appeared in Little Women
- Orchard House, where Alcott lived whilst writing Little Women
References
- Little Women, Louisa May Alcott: About the Author