Lillian Hellman - Works

Works

  • The Children's Hour (1934 play)
  • The Dark Angel (1935 screenplay)
  • These Three (1936 screenplay)
  • Days To Come (1936)
  • Dead End (1937)
  • The North Star (1943 screenplay)
  • The Little Foxes (1939 play)
  • Watch on the Rhine (1941 play)
  • The Little Foxes (1941 screenplay)
  • The Searching Wind (1944 play)
  • Another Part of the Forest (1946 play)
  • The Searching Wind (1946 screenplay)
  • Montserrat (1949 play)
  • The Autumn Garden (1951 play)
  • Candide (operetta) (1957)
  • Toys in the Attic (1960 play)
  • My Mother, My Father and Me (play 1963)
  • Preface to The Big Knockover, a collection of Hammett's stories (1963)
  • An Unfinished Woman: A Memoir (1969 memoir)
  • Pentimento: A Book of Portraits (1973 memoir)
  • Scoundrel Time (1976 memoir)
  • Maybe: A Story (1980 novel)
  • Eating Together: Recipes and Recollections, with Peter Feibleman (1984 memoir with recipes)

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Famous quotes containing the word works:

    The slightest living thing answers a deeper need than all the works of man because it is transitory. It has an evanescence of life, or growth, or change: it passes, as we do, from one stage to the another, from darkness to darkness, into a distance where we, too, vanish out of sight. A work of art is static; and its value and its weakness lie in being so: but the tuft of grass and the clouds above it belong to our own travelling brotherhood.
    Freya Stark (b. 1893–1993)

    Any balance we achieve between adult and parental identities, between children’s and our own needs, works only for a time—because, as one father says, “It’s a new ball game just about every week.” So we are always in the process of learning to be parents.
    Joan Sheingold Ditzion, Dennie, and Palmer Wolf. Ourselves and Our Children, by Boston Women’s Health Book Collective, ch. 2 (1978)

    In doing good, we are generally cold, and languid, and sluggish; and of all things afraid of being too much in the right. But the works of malice and injustice are quite in another style. They are finished with a bold, masterly hand; touched as they are with the spirit of those vehement passions that call forth all our energies, whenever we oppress and persecute..
    Edmund Burke (1729–97)