Born in the Southside of Chicago in 1930, Lorraine Hansberry and
her family moved to a large house in a white neighborhood in 1938.
In order to live there, her father had to fight a civil rights case
in the Supreme Court against segregationists. Her experiences with
racial discrimination fueled her strong commitment to social
justice and inspired her works. In 1959, her first-produced play,
"A Raisin in the Sun," met the enthusiastic praise of Broadway
critics and audiences alike. It was the first and longest running
play by an African-American woman to be produced on Broadway. When
it won the New York Drama Circle Award for the best new drama that
year, Hansberry became the first black woman and the youngest
recipient to earn that honor. She died just a few years later, in
1965, without ever fully realizing her potential. This reference
book is a guide to her career.
The volume begins with a chronology that recounts the major
events in Hansberry's brief but influential life. Entries are then
listed for her plays, including "A Raisin in the Sun"(1959), "The
Sign in Sidney Brustein's WindoW" (1964), "To Be Young, Gifted and
Black" (1969), "Les Blancs" (1970), "The Drinking Gourd" (1972),
"What Use Are Flowers" (1972), and the unfinished "Toussaint"
(1986). Each entry includes a plot summary, critical commentary,
and production information, when available. An annotated
bibliography of works by and about Hansberry, along with a list of
unpublished material and archival sources, complete the volume.
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