Selected Product: | The Women. Paperback Edition: Newly Revised Author: Clare Boothe Luce Publisher: Dramatists Play Service Inc Release Date: 1998-01 ISBN-10: 0822212706 ISBN-13: 9780822212706 List Price: $7.50 Average Customer Rating: | | Stage Door. ISBN-10: 082221069X ISBN-13: 9780822210696 List Price:$7.50 The Children's Hour (Kessinger Publishing's Rare Reprints) ISBN-10: 1419123920 ISBN-13: 9781419123924 List Price:$20.95 Machinal (Royal National Theatre) ISBN-10: 1854592114 ISBN-13: 9781854592118 List Price:$18.95 Under The Gaslight: A Totally Original And Picturesque Drama Of Life And Love In These Times, In Five Acts (1867) ISBN-10: 0548615497 ISBN-13: 9780548615492 List Price:$15.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Women. by Clare Boothe Luce (ISBN-10: 0822212706, ISBN-13: 9780822212706). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Women. by Clare Boothe Luce (ISBN-10: 0822212706, ISBN-13: 9780822212706). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Feminine Muscles | Customer Rating: | | This photographic essay on the beauty of muscular women also includes the women's stories. Many of the photographs are suggestive in nature. | An Acid-Etched Classic Of Its Kind | Customer Rating: | Although she had a significant literary and later political career, in theatrical circles Clare Boothe Luce is best recalled for THE WOMEN, a play that opened in New York in 1936 with an all-female cast. Critics were not enthusiastic, but the show was a huge hit with audiences, racking up over six hundred performances in its initial run and going on to a wildly successful tour--something almost unheard of for a non-musical. Directed by George Cukor and starring Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, and Rosalind Russell, the 1939 film version was a legendary smash, and the play has been twice revived on Broadway and performed numerous times in regional, academic, and community theatre.
The play concerns Mary Haines, a wealthy and happily married socialite who is friends with Sylvia Fowler--a poisonous gossip who discovers that Mary's husband is having a torrid affair with sexy shop girl Crystal Allen. Mary takes her mother's advice and ignores the affair, hoping it will blow over; Sylvia, however, explodes it into a front-page scandal, and divorce is the result. Along the way we receive portraits of the women of the era: wealthy women, titled women, clerks, secretaries, models, maids, cooks, and, of course, wives, some happy, some unhappy. One divorce follows another; one scandal errupts after another.
THE WOMEN was written in a era in which it was assumed that a woman's only real satisfaction was marriage to a successful man, and it reflects the attitude of the day. Unlike the celebrated film, which focused on acid comedy, the play is as much drama as comedy, moving at a fast clip and taking pot shots at virtually every female stereotype imaginable. It is wickedly funny, yes, but it is also a surprisingly effective argument for feminism in its portrait of a distinctly anti-feministic society.
At some point in the 1960s Luce updated the play slightly, removing many distinctly 1930s references and replacing them with then-contemporary ones. This was a mistake, for the play works best as a period piece, a sharp gaze into what it was like to be a woman in the United States of the late 1930s. Fun to read but best seen in performance, it is a classic of its kind. Recommended.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer | The Women | Customer Rating: | | I thought I was getting a novel-like book; instead this was a script. It was interesting to read this format as it gives a lot of details about how the author wants from the characters, etc. |
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