Lillian Hellman: A 'Difficult,' Vilified Woman (2024)

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Title
A Difficult Woman
Author
Alice Kessler-Harris

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"Difficult" is probably the most tactful word one could use in characterizing Lillian Hellman. If ever there were an author safer to meet through her art rather than in real life, she was the one. Born in New Orleans into a Jewish family, Hellman came of age in the Roaring '20s, liberated by flappers and Freud. Hellman drank like a fish, swore like a sailor and slept around like, well, like most of the men in her literary circle, chief among them Dashiell Hammett, with whom she had an open relationship spanning three decades. She was, recalled one observer, a "tough broad ... the kind of girl who can take the tops off bottles with her teeth."

Hellman acted like one of the boys in other ways, too. She was self-supporting and unapologetic about being paid what she thought she was worth. She even haggled over the use of her plays by high schools and charitable organizations. Hellman threw herself into the tough political battles of her time, actively supporting the Spanish Loyalists, joining the Communist Party (although she was evasive about her membership) and standing up to McCarthyism. Hellman was the most famous American female playwright of the 20th century, a celebrity that was vastly extended when she began publishing her memoirs. She was an icon for women of my generation, coming to feminist consciousness in the 1970s.

These days, though, when I teach Scoundrel Time, Hellman's memoir about her appearance before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, I have to tell my students who Lillian Hellman was. Usually, none of them have ever heard of her.

The eminent historian Alice Kessler-Harris has had that same disconcerting experience; so, she decided to write a biography of Hellman, in part to figure out why the playwright has been so deeply obscured. If Hellman is remembered at all, Kessler-Harris says, she's remembered negatively. Fellow writer Mary McCarthy prematurely and effectively closed the coffin lid on Hellman's legacy when she appeared on the Dick Cavett show in 1979 and famously pronounced about Hellman that: "Every word she writes is a lie, including 'and' and 'the.' "

Kessler-Harris emphasizes to her readers that this biography of Hellman — called A Difficult Woman — is a historical, rather than a literary or psychological excursion. Although she concedes that "Lillian Hellman is a juicy character [whose] life is filled with sex and scandal," Kessler-Harris mostly trains her gaze on the larger arguments over Stalinism and Hellman's art and her truth-telling or lack thereof. Kessler-Harris wants to delve into how Hellman was formed by her time and, perhaps, misremembered by our own.

Alice Kessler-Harris is a professor of American history at Columbia University and the author of Out to Work and In Pursuit of Equity. Eileen Barroso/Courtesy Bloomsbury hide caption

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Eileen Barroso/Courtesy Bloomsbury

Lillian Hellman: A 'Difficult,' Vilified Woman (3)

Alice Kessler-Harris is a professor of American history at Columbia University and the author of Out to Work and In Pursuit of Equity.

Eileen Barroso/Courtesy Bloomsbury

The result is a biography that's substantive, measured and a tad flat. Had Hellman the playwright gotten a preview of this biography, she might have advised Kessler-Harris to punch it up a bit, to not shy away so much from the melodramatic nitty-gritty details of her subject's messy life.

Regardless of whatever audience Kessler-Harris hoped to reach, this is a biography for those who already are caught up in the contradictions of Lillian Hellman; it's unlikely to jump-start interest in the uninitiated, but here's one good reason why young women especially should care about the lessons offered by Hellman's life: Hellman, Kessler-Harris emphasizes, continued to be a bold creature of the 1920s long after Betty Boop became domesticated into June Cleaver.

She paid dearly for that "disorderly conduct." Kessler-Harris does a superb job of showing how gendered — even misogynist — the criticisms of Hellman's art and politics were. William F. Buckley mocked the notion that Hellman was the "greatest woman playwright" saying that that was "the same as talking about 'the downhill champion on the one-legged ski team.' "

Other critics derided her gutsiness as "butch" and made fun of her big nose and raddled skin. All her money and all her celebrity couldn't protect Hellman from being damned for the original sin of being a homely woman who was nonetheless sexual. My students, despite being so obsessed themselves with the concept of "hotness," would probably say things have changed. Hellman, wherever she is, is having a good snort over that one.

Lillian Hellman: A 'Difficult,' Vilified Woman (2024)

FAQs

Lillian Hellman: A 'Difficult,' Vilified Woman? ›

In A Difficult Woman, Kessler-Harris sets out to explore why Hellman became such a vilified figure. Her theory is that the name-calling transpired and persists because Hellman embodied the defining political and social tensions of her lifetime in a way that did not lay those tensions to rest but inflamed them.

What are some interesting facts about Lillian Hellman? ›

Hellman grew up comfortably in a Jewish household. For the majority of Hellman's childhood, she would spend half a year in New Orleans and the other half in New York City. After high school, Hellman attended New York University for two years, and by 1925 she married the playwright Arthur Kober.

When was Lillian Hellman accused? ›

After Hellman refused to provide names of Communist Party-affiliated actors before the committee in 1952, she was blacklisted in Hollywood. Over the next two decades, she would focus her work largely on Broadway.

How many plays did Lillian Hellman write? ›

Lillian Hellman has written 13 shows including The Children's Hour (Playwright), Days to Come (Playwright), The Little Foxes (Playwright), Watch on the Rhine (Playwright), The Searching Wind (Playwright), Another Part of the Forest (Playwright), Montserrat (Playwright), Regina (Source Material), The Autumn Garden ( ...

Did Lillian Hellman get married? ›

Hellman attended New York public schools and New York University and Columbia University. Her marriage (1925–32) to the playwright Arthur Kober ended in divorce. She had already begun an intimate friendship with the novelist Dashiell Hammett that would continue until his death in 1961.

What was Lillian Smith famous for? ›

The author Lillian Smith, a longtime resident of Clayton, is best known for her novel Strange Fruit, published in 1944, and her nonfiction treatise Killers of the Dream, first published in 1949 and reissued in 1961. Both works are strong denunciations of racism and segregation in the South.

On what grounds did Hellman invoke the Fifth Amendment? ›

Hellman invoked the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination. Her decision landed her on the Hollywood “blacklist” and film companies refused to hire her. In the following letter to HUAC's chairman, Hellman offered to testify as to her own activities if she would not be forced to inform on others.

What Mary McCarthy said about Lillian Hellman? ›

Their long, highly public feud culminated on the Dick Cavett Show, or as Hellman's lawyer later put it, “on a televised program in which Miss McCarthy appeared to tout her most recent unsuccessful novel,” when McCarthy famously said of Hellman: “Every word she writes is a lie—including 'and' and 'the.

What inspired Lillian Hellman to write The Children's Hour? ›

The play was Hellman's first, inspired by an historical incident that her novelist paramour Dashiell Hammett passed on when she was a young writer struggling to find her voice and métier.

What is a Hellman? ›

hellman (plural hellmen) (surfing, slang) A daredevil. Evil man; devil.

Who wrote the most amount of plays? ›

Lope de Vega's claim is rarely disputed: he wrote about 2,000 full-length plays, of which several hundred have come down to us. A few dozen remain classics, frequently revived today. The count includes revisions of his earlier works, sometimes revised more than once for the count.

How many plays has Annie Baker written? ›

How many shows has Annie Baker written? Annie Baker has written 6 shows including Circle Mirror Transformation (Playwright), The Aliens (Playwright), The Flick (Playwright), John (Playwright), The Antipodes (Playwright), Infinite Life (Playwright).

How many plays did Daphne du Maurier write? ›

In addition to multiple non-fiction books, Daphne Du Maurier also wrote three plays (including an adaptation of "Rebecca"). She died on April 19, 1989, in Par in her beloved Cornwall, five weeks shy of her 82nd birthday.

How many plays did Aphra Behn write? ›

With at least eighteen plays to her name, Aphra Behn was England's first professional female playwright. Almost all of her works were produced during her lifetime, while two premiered posthumously.

How many plays did Eulalie Spence write? ›

Spence was among the pioneer playwrights during the Harlem Renaissance and wrote fourteen plays, five of which were published, including Episode, Fool's Errand, Her, The Hunch, and Undertow. She wrote only one three-act play, "The Whipping", which was optioned by Paramount Studios, but never made into a film.

What did Lillian Hellman do? ›

Lillian Florence Hellman (June 20, 1905 – June 30, 1984) was an American playwright, prose writer, memoirist and screenwriter known for her success on Broadway, as well as her communist sympathies and political activism.

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