Information AboutDubose Heyward |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT DUBOSE HEYWARD | |
| american novelists | |
| heyward, dubose | |
| south carolina writers | |
| 1885 births | |
| 1940 deaths | |
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Langston Hughes called Heyward one who saw "with his white eyes, wonderful, poetic qualities in the inhabitants of Catfish Row that makes them come alive." Biographer James M. Hutchisson characterizes ''Porgy'' as "the first major southern novel to portray blacks without condescension" and states that the libretto to ''Porgy and Bess'' was largely Heyward's work. Others, however, have noted that the characters in ''Porgy'', though viewed sympathetically, are still viewed for the most part as stereotypes. Many critics over time felt that Heyward was very accurate in his portrayal of the Southern black. Heyward and his wife Dorothy spent many years in Charleston scrutinizing the blacks of that area. In Charleston Heyward found a majority of the inspiration for his book, including what would become the setting (Catfish Row) and the main character (a cripple named Porgy). Critics in the literary world cast Heyward as an authority on Southern literature. They also would later say, "Heyward's attention to detail and reality of the Southern black's lifestyle was not only sympathetic but something that no one had ever seen done before." During his time in Charleston, DuBose taught at the Porter Military Academy . The non-musical play "Porgy" opened on Broadway in 1927, eight years before the opera '' Porgy And Bess '', and was a considerable success—more so at the time than the Gershwin opera. It was the play, not the novel, that was used as the opera's libretto. The novel differs greatly from the play, especially the ending, and the plotline of the opera follows the play almost literally. Large chunks of the dialogue in the play were set to music for the Recitative s in the opera. Stephen Sondheim , in his introduction to the section on DuBose Heyward in the book ''Invisible Giants: Fifty Americans Who Shaped the Nation But Missed the History Books'', wrote:
The novel ''Porgy'' became a Bestseller in 1926, and Heyward continued to explore his love for writing with another novel set in Catfish Row, '' Mamba's Daughters '' (1929), which he and Dorothy again adapted as a play. He also wrote the screenplay for the adaptation of Eugene O'Neill 's '' The Emperor Jones '' (1933) and a children's book, '' The Country Bunny And The Little Gold Shoes '' (1939). EXTERNAL LINKS
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