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- Abe Lincoln in Illinois
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-
- (October 24, 1938)
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- Lincoln is the most living and appealing figure in U.S.
- history because he expresses with the greatest glow the national
- dream of democracy and freedom. He is therefore, in addition to
- being a warm, sturdy, exciting human being, a permanent symbol
- who serves U.S. drama as the house of Atreus served the Greek,
- or as Faust and Don Juan serve the writers of the world.
- Lincoln's story is well-known, well-loved, an advantage for the
- playwright greater than the most smashing plot would be; for an
- audience bringing with it a quivering mass of associations is
- ready beforehand to participate in the playwright's particular
- interpretation of Lincoln's life.
-
- Playwright Robert E. Sherwood's interpretation in Abe Lincoln
- in Illinois is the child of the hour. Psychologically his
- Lincoln beautifully played by Canadian-born Actor Raymond
- Massey, is familiar enough, a salty, sinewy smalltown fellow
- cursed with a submerged streak of loneliness and bitterness,
- plagued by an unsympathetic wife and haunted by an unshakable
- sense of doom. But Sherwood's chief interest in Lincoln is
- spiritual, not psychological: it consists of vividly, though not
- altogether convincingly, tracing Lincoln's growth from an
- indolent, unambitious "artful dodger" who wanted to be left
- alone. To a suddenly aroused and embattled champion of human
- rights. And Sherwood is interested in that Lincoln for what he
- can symbolize to the world today.
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