{{#ifexist:Category:Articles needing additional references from March 2009
The Little Foxes
is a 1939 play by Lillian Hellman. Its title comes from Chapter 2, Verse 15 in the Song of Solomon in the King James version of the Bible, which reads, "Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the vines: for our vines have tender grapes."
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THE LITTLE FOXES TICKETS
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Plot synopsis
The focus is on
Southern aristocrat Regina Hubbard Giddens, who struggles for wealth and freedom within the confines of an early 20th century society where a father considered only sons as legal heirs. As a result, her
avaricious brothers Benjamin and Oscar are independently wealthy, while she must rely upon her sickly husband Horace for financial support.
Having married his much-maligned, alcoholic wife Birdie solely to acquire her family's
plantation and its cotton fields, Oscar now wants to join forces with Benjamin to construct a
cotton mill. They approach their sister with their need for an additional $75,000 to invest in the project. Oscar initially proposes marriage between his son Leo and Regina's daughter Alexandra - first cousins - as a means of getting Horace's money, but Horace and Alexandra are repulsed by the suggestion. When Regina asks Horace outright for the money, he refuses, so Leo, bank teller, is pressured into stealing Horace's
railroad bonds from the bank's safety deposit box. Horace, discovering this after a trip to the bank, tells Regina he is going to change his will in favor of their daughter, and also will claim he gave Leo the bonds as a loan, thereby cutting Regina out of the deal completely. When he suffers a heart attack during this chat, she makes no effort to help him, and he dies within hours, having tried to climb the stairs for his 'emergency' medicine, without anyone knowing his plan, without a will change. Regina makes use of this in blackmailing her brothers: to acquire a larger investment percentage in the mill, Regina reveals to her brothers that her husband intended to report the theft to the police, and that she will when he dies, if they don't.....The price she ultimately pays for her evil is the loss of Alexandra's love and respect. What is more, Benjamin suggests that he could, in turn, blackmail Regina, commenting that he found it odd that her husband had died on the stairs.
Production notes
Lillian Hellman's characters were thinly-disguised versions of her
Demopolis, Alabama relatives; Regina was based on her grandmother Sophie and Birdie was inspired by her mother Julia.
The playwright and star
Tallulah Bankhead were at odds during the first
Broadway run of the play. Bankhead accused Hellman of being a
Communist due to her support of
Russia against
Finland during the
Winter War, and Hellman was dismayed by Bankhead's unprofessional tantrums. After closing night, they did not speak to each other for thirty years. In 1975, Hellman said of Bankhead, "She turned out at first as I've written many times: very, very, very good. And later on in the run of the play, not very good." In her
autobiography, Bankhead wrote, "Great as is my admiration for Lillian Hellman as a playwright, I could never again rejoice in her company."
[1]
Original Broadway production
The play premiered on February 15, 1939 at the
National Theatre and ran for 410 performances. In addition to Bankhead as Regina Giddens, the opening night cast included
Carl Benton Reid as Oscar,
Charles Dingle as Benjamin,
Frank Conroy as Horace,
Patricia Collinge as Birdie,
Dan Duryea as Leo, and Florence Williams as Alexandra. The production was produced and directed by Herman Shumlin.
Eugenia Rawls replaced Williams later in the run.
Revivals
Mike Nichols directed a production that opened on October 26, 1967 at the
Vivian Beaumont Theatre in
Lincoln Center, then transferred to the
Ethel Barrymore Theatre. It ran a total of 100 performances. The cast included
Anne Bancroft as Regina,
Richard A. Dysart as Horace.
Margaret Leighton as Birdie,
E.G. Marshall as Oscar,
George C. Scott as Benjamin, and
Austin Pendleton as Leo. Costume design was by
Patricia Zipprodt.
Time
said, "An admirable revival of Lillian Hellman's 1939 play in Lincoln Center demonstrates how securely bricks of character can be sealed together with the mortar of plot. Anne Bancroft, George C. Scott, Richard Dysart and Margaret Leighton are expertly guided by Director Mike Nichols through gilt-edged performances."
[2]
Austin Pendleton directed a production that ran at the Parker Playhouse in
Fort Lauderdale for three weeks and the
Kennedy Center in
Washington, D.C. for six weeks before opening on Broadway, after eight previews, on May 7, 1981 at the
Martin Beck Theatre. It ran for 123 performances. The cast included
Elizabeth Taylor as Regina,
Tom Aldredge as Horace,
Dennis Christopher as Leo,
Maureen Stapleton as Birdie, and
Anthony Zerbe as Benjamin. Costume design was by
Florence Klotz. In a pre-Broadway opening article in
Time
,
Gerald Clarke reported nearly $1 million worth of tickets had been sold during the week following the first
New York Times
ad announcing Taylor's appearance
[3]. She was nominated for both the
Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play and the
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play. Tony nominations also went to Pendleton for
Best Direction of a Play, Aldredge for
Best Featured Actor in a Play, Stapleton for
Best Featured Actress in a Play, and the play itself for
Best Reproduction.
A 1997 revival, again at the Vivian Beaumont, ran for 27 previews and 57 performances between April 3 and June 15. Directed by
Jack O'Brien, the cast included
Stockard Channing as Regina,
Kenneth Welsh as Horace,
Brian Kerwin as Oscar,
Brian Murray as Benjamin, and
Frances Conroy as Birdie. Murray was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Play and won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play, and John Lee Beatty was nominated for the
Tony Award for Best Scenic Design.
The production was revived at The
Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, June 3—28, 2009, with
Venida Evans, Ron Brice, Deanne Lorette, Brian Dykstra, Fisher Neal, Kathryn Meisle, Einar Gunn, Philip Goodwin, Lindsey Wochley, Bradford Cover, and directed by Matthew Arbour.
Adaptations
Lillian Hellman wrote the
screenplay for a
1941 film version starring
Bette Davis. In 1949, the play was adapted for an opera entitled
Regina
by
Marc Blitzstein.
In 1946, Hellman wrote
Another Part of the Forest
, a
prequel chronicling the roots of the Hubbard family.
References
- ''The Little Foxes'' at HellmanWyler.com
- 1967 ''Time'' review
- 1981 ''Time'' article