From the 1920s through the 1950s Maxwell Anderson was one of the
most important playwrights in America. His thirty-three produced
plays make him a leader among these playwrights of America's most
creative era in the theater, and a number of his plays have shown a
lasting vitality and importance.
What Price Glory (1924)
dramatized the disillusionment and horror of World War I . With
Elizabeth the Queen (1929),
Winterset (1935), and
High Tor (1936), Anderson revived poetic drama in the modern
theater. His versatility as a playwright was further reflected in
the satire
Both Your Houses (1933), the historical parable
Joan of Lorraine (1946), and the musical play
Lost in the
Stars (1949).
This edition of Anderson's letters spans his adult life -- from
1912, shortly after he graduated from the University of North
Dakota, to 1958, just before his death. Arranged chronologically,
the letters reveal in full and intimate detail the development of
his career, his methods of work, his relationships with theater
people, his conceptions of himself as a playwright and of the
nature of the theater, and his ideas about his plays, all of which
focused on an inner moral struggle. Every aspect of his work and
personality emerges in these letters, which serve as an
autobiography in the rough. Each letter is fully annotated,
permitting the reader to become a party to the correspondence. The
editor has provided an informative introduction to the letters and
also a substantial chronology of Anderson's life that incorporates
the first complete bibliography of his plays, poems, essays,
fiction, and screenplays. An appendix includes Anderson's
previously unpublished statements about his life and his plays.
Dramatist in America, the first edition of letters by a
major American playwright, takes on added importance for its
representative quality. It reveals the cultural and theatrical
conditions under which a vital generation of playwrights created
this country's finest period in the drama.