Clare Boothe Luce: A Research and Production Sourcebook
By (Author) Mark Fearnow
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
22nd February 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: plays and playwrights
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Bibliographies, catalogues
822
Hardback
208
Among the most commercially successful female playwrights of all times, Clare Boothe Luce (1903-1987) is best remembered as the author of The Women (1936), a biting social comedy. Beginning in 1942, she spent less of her time writing plays and turned instead to the wider stage of politics and world affairs. She was the editor of Vanity Fair magazine, a congresswoman, and an ambassador to Italy during the Eisenhower administration. This book traces her transition from playwright to politician to Catholic apologist. It uncovers for the first time plays, both early and late, that dramatize her spiritual and artistic journey. A comprehensive survey of her plays and the world's reception to them, the book provides a thorough treatment of Luce's published and unpublished work. For each play, the volume includes a plot summary, critical commentary, and production information. The book also includes an exhaustive and generously-annotated bibliography of both popular reviews and scholarly criticism.
MARK FEARNOW is Professor of Theatre at the Hanover College where he teaches theatre history and playwriting. His articles have appeared in Dramatists Guild Quarterly, Journal of American Drama and Theatre, and Theatre Survey. Books by author include Clare Boothe Luce (1995).