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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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30s
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30little
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1992-09-25
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34 lines
Little Women
(November 27, 1933)
A scene in which four adolescent girls dressed in too many
petticoats cluster around their mother and tearfully promise to
obey their absent father's admonition to behave like little
women does not sound like one which would excite a contemporary
U.S. cinema audience. Neither does one in which the same four
are to be seen squeaking and yapping near their Christmas
breakfast and yapping near their Christmas breakfast table, out
of enthusiasm for the idea of presenting their sausages to the
poor family down the road. The charm that surrounds such
episodes in this picture springs from the delicate and
understanding humor with which Director George Cukor translated
Louisa May Alcott's 65-year-old semi-classic Little Women into
the cinema, a humor that becomes richer and sadder as the four
heroines grow up. They and the snug New England town in which
they live, touched by the sentimental melancholy which surrounds
things that happened long ago, have become as real as people and
places in the cinema can ever be.
That Little Women attains so perfectly, without seeming
either affected or superior, the courtesy and rueful wisdom of
its original is due to expert adaptation by Sarah Y. Mason and
Victor Heerman, to Cukor's direction and to superb acting by
Katharine Hepburn. An actress of so much vitality that she can
wear balloon skirts and address her mother as "Marmee" without
suggesting quaintness, she makes Jo March one of the most
memorable heroines of the year, a girl at once eager and
puzzled, troubled changing and secure.