Lillian Hellman | Jewish Women's Archive (2024)

June 20, 1905–1984

by Bruce Henderson

Publicity photo of Lillian Hellman from a newspaper, circa 1970s.

In Brief

Lillian Hellman displayed courage not only in writing powerful and controversial plays like The Children’s Hour but also in her public refusal to name colleagues to the House Un-American Activities Committee. Hellman worked for the Boni and Liveright publishing house before moving to Hollywood to become a writer for Sam Goldwyn. In 1934, her first play, The Children’s Hour, was met with both wild success and widespread criticism. She had a relationship with mystery writer Dashiell Hammett, with whom she became involved in left-wing activism. Called before HUAC in 1952, Hellman wrote an eloquent letter declining to testify because she refused to name friends and colleagues to the committee. Hellman was blacklisted for several years but returned to writing in the 1960s.

Contents

1

Early Life and Family

2

Career as a Playwright

3

Personal Life and Political Involvement

5

Legacy

6

Selected Works By Lillian Hellman

7Bibliography

Lillian Hellman’s father once referred to her as the “Jewish nun of Prytania Street,” a description that aptly suggests the complexity of her life and of her relationship to Judaism and Jewish culture. Both as a writer and in her private life, Hellman lived out many contradictory roles, some of which, the historical record and her contemporaries suggest, may well have been self-invented, blurring the lines between biography and art in her own presentation of self. Controversial both during and after her life, Lillian Hellman is one of the leading women of letters of mid-century America and a pioneer in the area of women as playwrights. Some corners of her life will probably always remain clouded and impossible to verify, an irony in a woman for whom questions of ethics and truth-telling were recurrent themes in her plays and memoirs.

Early Life and Family

Lillian Hellman was born on June 20, 1905, in New Orleans, Louisiana. Her parents, Max and Julia (Newhouse) Hellman, were both German-American Jews. Her mother’s family was wealthy and later became the models (though stripped of Jewish identity) for Hellman’s most famous creations, the Hubbards, in her two plays The Little Foxes and Another Part of the Forest. Max Hellman’s sisters Hannah and Jenny were similarly the basis for the central characters in one of Hellman’s last plays, Toys in the Attic.

In 1911, when Max’s shoe business failed, the Hellmans left New Orleans and moved to New York City. From the time Lillian Hellman was eleven until she was sixteen, the family divided its time between New Orleans and New York City, giving the young girl a sense of always belonging to multiple cultures. She attended New York University for a time and in 1924 went to work for the prestigious publishing house Boni and Liveright. The following year, she married the writer Arthur Kober. Five years later, they moved to Hollywood, where Kober was employed as a screenwriter. Hellman also found work in the fledgling sound film industry, working first as a reader and later as a writer for the legendary mogul Sam Goldwyn. The marriage between Kober and Hellman, her only legal marriage, ended in divorce.

Career as a Playwright

During the 1930s, Hellman began to write plays. Her first produced play, The Children’s Hour (1934), would also prove to be her most controversial. In it, Hellman explored the effects of a lie, spread as gossip, in a small New England town. What produced controversy was the nature of the lie: a little girl taking revenge on two teachers at a private school by telling her grandmother that they were lesbians. Though the rumor is groundless, it causes financial ruin for the women and results in one of them, Martha, questioning her own sexuality and killing herself in the last act of the play. Discussion, let alone representation, of hom*osexuality onstage and in film was then close to taboo (indeed, the play was banned in many cities) and was, according to critics of the time, the primary reason the play was denied the Pulitzer Prize for best drama of the year. Interestingly, in 1936, Sam Goldwyn filmed the play as These Three, omitting all references to lesbianism and turning the lie into one suggesting a romantic triangle between the two women and the doctor who is engaged to one of them. While some felt that such an alteration removed the play’s power, others (Hellman included) felt that it maintained the central focus of the play: the power of a lie to destroy lives.

Hellman continued to write and produce plays throughout the next three decades, including some of the greatest critical and popular successes of the Broadway stage. Virtually all of the plays were “well made,” following in the realistic and naturalistic traditions of such dramatists as Henrik Ibsen and Anton Chekhov. Hellman shares with Ibsen a concern for the drama as a representation of social problems and as a keen insight into the psyche and power of women in societies that restrict their political and economic power. With Chekhov, she shares the craft of dramatizing the complex orchestrations of families and small towns. Her most important plays, in addition to The Children’s Hour, include The Little Foxes and Another Part of the Forest, which follow the machinations of the Hubbard family in the antebellum South. In these two plays, she creates her most memorable and lasting character, Regina Hubbard Giddens, a virago descended from such prototypes as Medea and Lady Macbeth, played by such disparate actors as Tallulah Bankhead (who originated the role in Foxes on Broadway), Bette Davis (who transferred the role to film), and Elizabeth Taylor. Of such epic proportions were the Hubbards that The Little Foxes was translated into opera form by Marc Blitzstein, as Regina.

Other plays include her World War II dramas Watch on the Rhine (1941) and the less memorable The Searching Wind (1944). The Autumn Garden (1951), which Hellman and many critics believed to be her finest play; and Toys in the Attic (1960), in which she returned to family material. Hellman won the New York Drama Critics Award for both Watch on the Rhine and Toys in the Attic. Hellman also adapted foreign plays as well as novels for the stage.

Personal Life and Political Involvement

Throughout Hellman’s career as a playwright, her “offstage” life was lively and dramatic as well. During the 1920s and 1930s, she took a number of trips to Europe—trips which raised her political awareness. What actually occurred on these trips is the source of much debate. In her memoirs, particularly in the section of Pentimento called “Julia,” Hellman depicted herself as a participant in anti-Nazi work. Recent biographers have called into question the identity of “Julia” (a pseudonym in Hellman’s writings) and Hellman’s actual participation in underground activities. The questions remain unanswered, and perhaps will always remain unanswered as presumably most of the principals involved have died.

Though Hellman never remarried after her divorce from Kober, she sustained a complex, passionate, and tempestuous relationship with the mystery writer Dashiell Hammett from 1930 until his death in 1961. The two of them, individually and together, became important figures in left-wing literary and intellectual circles, with Hellman in particular becoming a noted pro-Stalinist. Indeed, their left-wing activities led to Hellman’s being blacklisted from Hollywood in 1948, during the first years of the witch hunts led by Senator Joseph McCarthy. She was called to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in 1952. In a letter that has now become famous as one of the most articulate and eloquent responses to McCarthyism, Hellman declined to testify, not out of fear for her own safety or her own unwillingness to speak of her beliefs or activities, but because she could not name her friends and coworkers and still keep her self-respect. In an era when many other writers and actors did name “fellow travelers” in order to exculpate themselves, Hellman’s stand was considered a brave one at the time, though it came under considerable revision in later years, particularly after Hellman’s presentation of it in her third memoir, Scoundrel Time. Contemporaries of Hellman’s, such as Diana Trilling, Irving Howe, and Mary McCarthy, questioned what they saw as Hellman’s revision of her actual participation in pro-Stalinist work and of her self-congratulatory stance toward her actions during the HUAC hearings.

Despite such revisionism, Hellman was lionized in later years, particularly after the publication of her memoirs. Her first memoir, An Unfinished Woman (1969), won the National Book Award. She subtitled her later memoir, Maybe (1980), “A Story,” but it seems clearly autobiographical, at least in part.

Judaism in Hellman’s Life

The importance of Judaism and Jewish culture in Hellman’s life is ambiguous. She rarely wrote about Jewish themes in her plays and certainly never from the stance of an observant Jew. To the extent that leftist intellectual liberalism has been marked by a Jewish presence, Hellman fits into that tradition comfortably. In her memoirs, she addresses her Jewish heritage as part of a cultural background. Even here, she notes that the fact of her Jewishness didn’t fully hit her until she was confronted with antisemitism in the national socialism of Germany during a trip there in 1929. Being a woman and being a southerner seemed more important texts of identity for Hellman than being Jewish. In interviews, she remarked that southern Jews tended to downplay their Jewishness. If one only read Hellman’s plays, one would not necessarily guess that she was Jewish. And, while her memoirs do address this part of her identity, it is clear that Jewish life was not central to her sense of self, at least the self that was an artist and the self that she constructed in her memoirs. Indeed, Meyer Levin felt that Hellman was instrumental in blocking the production of his dramatization of Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl because Levin’s play was “too Jewish” in its depiction of Jewish religious practices and in its articulation of Anne Frank’s Zionist sympathies.

Legacy

Lillian Hellman remains a complicated figure in the history of Jewish American women. Her contributions to the arts of drama and memoir are significant and lasting. Her successes as a professional playwright at a time when that arena was dominated almost exclusively by men were considerable. However controversial, her presence in the world of ideas and politics of the times is undeniable. But the degree to which she brought her identity as a Jew to bear on either her art or her life must remain a question open to debate.

Lillian Hellman died on Martha’s Vineyard, on June 30, 1984.

Selected Works By Lillian Hellman

Plays

Another Part of the Forest (1947).

The Autumn Garden (1951).

Candide [adaptation] (1956).

The Children’s Hour (1934).

Days to Come (1936).

The Lark [adaptation] (1956).

The Little Foxes (1939).

Montserrat (1950).

My Mother, My Father, and Me [adaptation] (1963).

The Searching Wind (1944).

Toys in the Attic (1960).

Watch on the Rhine (1941).

Books

The Collected Plays (1972).

Conversations with Lillian Hellman. Edited by Jackson R. Bryer (1986).

Eating Together, with Peter Feibleman (1984).

Maybe: A Story (1980).

Pentimento (1973).

Scoundrel Time (1976).

An Unfinished Woman (1969).

Bibliography

Adams, Timothy Dow. Telling Lies in Modern American Autobiography (1990).

AJYB 86:440.

Bills, Steven. Lillian Hellman: An Annotated Bibliography (1979).

Chinoy, Helen Kritch, and Linda Walsh Jenkins, eds. Women in American Theatre. Rev. ed. (1987).

EJ; Estrin, Mark W., ed. Critical Essays on Lillian Hellman (1989).

Falk, Doris V. Lillian Hellman (1978).

Feibleman, Peter S. Lilly: Reminiscences of Lillian Hellman (1988).

Gillin, Edward. “‘Julia’ and Julia’s Son.” Modern Language Studies 19, no. 2 (1989): 3–11.

Graver, Lawrence. An Obsession with Anne Frank: Meyer Levin and the Diary (1995).

Grossman, Anita Susan. “Art Versus Truth in Autobiography: The Case of Lillian Hellman.” CLIO 14 (1985): 289–308.

Henderson, Bruce. “Lillian Hellman.” In Jewish American Women Writers, edited by Ann R. Shapiro (1994).

Lederer, Katherine. Lillian Hellman (1979).

Lyons, Bonnie. “Lillian Hellman: ‘The First Jewish Nun of Prytania Street.’” In From Hester Street to Hollywood: The Jewish-American Stage and Screen, edited by Sarah Blacher Cohen (1983).

Riordan, Mary Marguerite. Lillian Hellman: A Bibliography, 1926–1978 (1980).

Rollyson, Carl E. Lillian Hellman: Her Legend and Her Legacy (1988).

UJE; Wright, William. Lillian Hellman: The Image, the Woman (1986).

WWIAJ (1938).

WWWIA 8.

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Lillian Hellman | Jewish Women's Archive (2024)

FAQs

Why is Lillian Hellman important? ›

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.

Why was the children's hour controversial? ›

In the 1930s however, hom*osexuality was an extreme taboo and hom*osexuality was seen as the main theme of the play. “The Children's Hour” was banned in Chicago, Boston, and London for its 'objectionable' content, even though the accusations of lesbianism were not the main theme of the play (5).

Did Lillian Hellman win a Pulitzer Prize? ›

Lillian Hellman | Pulitzer Prize-Winning Playwright | Britannica.

Did Lillian Hellman have kids? ›

Answer and Explanation: While her partner, Dashiell Hammett, famed detective novelist, had two children, neither of them were with her, nor did she act as a mother to either of them, since they lived with their own mother.

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 is the best biography of Lillian Hellman? ›

She forbade her friends to talk to inquiring writers and destroyed many of her personal letters. Nonetheless, a half-dozen biographies have been published since her death. The best of them is Carl Rollyson's “Lillian Hellman: Her Legend and Her Legacy” (1988), a critical but astute portrait.

Why was Lillian Hellman accused? ›

What was Lillian Hellman accused of? While she was only loosely affiliated with the formal Communist Party, mainly through her relationship with Hammett, she was accused of being a member and part of the plot to plant Communist and Social propaganda in films.

Was the children's hour banned? ›

Calling it "indecent," Mayor Frederick Mansfield banned Lillian Hellman's first play, The Children's Hour, from being staged in Boston, in a decree issued on December 14, 1935.

What is the true story behind the children's hour? ›

Hellman's play The Children's Hour was inspired by the 1810 true story of two Edinburgh school teachers, Miss Marianne Woods and Miss Jane Pirie, whose lives were destroyed when one of their students accused them of engaging in a sexual relationship, but in the Scottish case, they eventually won their suit, although ...

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 ( ...

Who has won both Nobel and Pulitzer? ›

JM Coetzee and William Golding have won the Booker and the Nobel Prize and Toni Morrison, John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner and Saul Bellow have won the Pulitzer and the Nobel Prize.

Has anyone won a Pulitzer and an Oscar? ›

Kaufman won the 1937 Pulitzer Prize in drama for this romantic comedy, adapted for film the following year by Frank Capra. Capra also won the Best Director Oscar for the movie — his third such award at the time.

What are some fun 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.

What is a Hellman? ›

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

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.

Why was Lillian Smith important? ›

Renowned for her controversial books exploring segregation, white supremacy, and other social mores, author Lillian Smith was an advocate of racial reform in the South.

When did Lillian Hellman write The Children's Hour? ›

The Children's Hour, drama in three acts about the tragic repercussions of a schoolgirl's malicious gossip by Lillian Hellman, performed and published in 1934.

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