The Little Foxes

by Lillian Hellman

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Lillian Hellman examines a wealthy southern family and the greed that tears them apart. Regina's brothers have inherited their father's wealth, while after years of neglect, her dying husband is determined to see she gets nothing. It will take every ounce of her ruthless guile to outwit her relations and assure herself a gilded future.

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9 reviews
A family drama that deserves a place alongside the broken, money bound classics like Raison in the Sun and Long Day's Journey Into Night. There's a business deal, a willful mother, a sick father, and the brothers trying to find a way to win at the immoral game they're playing. It's hard to like anyone.
"Well, there are people who eat the earth and eat all the people on it like in the Bible with the locusts. Then there are people who stand around and watch them eat it. Sometimes I think it ain't right to stand and watch them do it."

The Hubbards are a familiy with ambition. Their greed is all consuming as they struggle to profit from exploiting what is left of the Old South after the Civil War. Ben Hubbard is head of the family with his younger brother Oscar towing the family line as a sheep would obey a sheperd. Regina is their sister, wife to Horace, mother to Alexandra, with a dangerous hunger for profit. The trio hatch a plan for a cotton factory in town, partnering with a Northerner but they need to raise the capital to start show more building. By coincidence Horace has a great number of bonds in a safety deposit box and it seems up to the siblings to pressure him to donate to their future financial happiness. Should their plan fail, Oscar's son Leo just happens works at the bank.

I'm not a great reader of plays so this was a good introduction to post-modern theatre. Hellman has a real understanding of dialogue as the tension rises, the sentences get shorten, the diction more terse. Also, the infighting between siblings is believable and enticing to read. The intrigues of their attempted manipulation of each other reminds me of "The Lion in Winter" with bickering royals.

My complaint is how few and weak the protagonists seem. Horace, Birdie, Oscar's wife and Alexandra are all that stand up to the Hubbards. Horace is an invalid, Bertie has personal problems and Alexandra is a child. They seem unequal to the task of holding on through the play. If Hellman had only created one strong character I would have felt the odds more in their favour.

It's a good play and was even turned into a movie with Bette Davis as Regina. If you're a fan of reading about sibling rivalries this is the book for you.
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A drama of family intrigue set in the South in 1900 with a set of characters who were the harbingers of what became the New South. Hellman's eye is keen, seeing deeply into issues of class, social ties, American regionalism, family and race.

I understand from a friend who has seen this various times that there are a lot of laughs in the play, but the production I saw had few people laughing, not because the performance was bad, but because we no longer laugh in the face of alcoholism, spousal abuse and racial stereotypes (even kindly ones). The play certainly didn't need laughs to keep me interested in the outcome of the members of this family.
Hellman's classic play of a southern family and the lengths they will go to for success. This is not the aristocracy; it's the middle class, and the resentment toward the aristocracy is evident in this family. Southern hospitality and geniality are laced with a strong helping of dishonesty, cruelty, and ruthlessness, as each member tries to figure out how to cheat the other members of the family. In the end, do they all wind up cheating each other? The ambiguous ending leaves you some ability to fill that in on your own.
A Southern woman maneuvers against her brothers and husband in order to get her share of money from a major business deal.

Largely terrible people being terrible to each other but with Southern accents.
A study in the many guises of venality. Upon consulting ABEBooks, I notice that if only my copy had the autographs of Dan Duryea and Tallulah Bankhead , it would be worth $950. Hmmm, I wonder if anyone would know the difference?

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Author Information

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50+ Works 4,363 Members
Playwright Lillian Hellman was born in New Orleans on June 20, in 1905. After studying at New York and Columbia Universities, Hellman worked in publishing and as a book reviewer and play-reader. In 1934, Hellman had her first success as a playwright with The Children's Hour. In the play, Hellman mixed social, political, and moral issues along with show more more personal ones. Among some of Hellman's other successful plays are The Little Foxes, Watch on the Rhine, The Searching Wind, and Toys in the Attic. Hellman was also a screenwriter who wrote many film scripts and adapted the works of other authors for film and the stage. Hellman's memoirs include An Unfinished Woman and Pentimento. For more than 30 years Hellman had a relationship with "hard-boiled" detective writer Dashiell Hammett. She lived with him until his death in 1961, and shared his commitment to radical political causes. Hellman's appearance before Senator Joseph McCarthy's House Committee on Un-American Activities in 1952 resulted in her being blacklisted in Hollywood. Her book, Scoundrel Time, explores her experiences during the McCarthy era. Nearly blind and confined to a wheelchair, Lillian Hellman died of cardiac arrest in 1984. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
812.52Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican drama in English20th Century1900-1945
LCC
PS3515 .E343 .L5Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960
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Members
359
Popularity
87,261
Reviews
9
Rating
(3.80)
Languages
English, Spanish
Media
Paper, Audiobook
ISBNs
9
UPCs
1
ASINs
8