ABSTRACT

This study is the first general critical introduction to the writing of Horton Foote, recipient of two Academy Awards and the Pulitzer Prize. These original essays survey Foote's career, his work for theater, television, and film, with analysis of Foote's major themes and characteristic style in all three media. The casebook concludes with a list of Foote's produced work, as well as a selective annotated bibliography of primary criticism on the playwright. This book demonstrates the influence of personal biography and Southern literature on Foote's career. The essayists also investigate the writer's contribution to American dramatic realism and independent filmmaking, emphasizing his experimentation with musical structure, dedramatization, and complex subtexts. Foote's disarmingly simple stories, with their radically understated language, are explained in many articles as the product of the subtle influence of the psychological and religious views of the author.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter |13 pages

Horton Foote's TV Women

The Richest Part of a Golden Age

chapter |17 pages

Southern Accents

chapter |21 pages

More Real Than, Realism

Horton Foote's Impressionism

chapter |20 pages

“To Be Quiet and Listen”

The Orphans' Home Cycle and the Music of Charles Ives

chapter |21 pages

Subtext' as Text'

Language and Culture in Horton Foote's Texas Cycle

chapter |5 pages

Performing The Death of Papa

A Review

chapter |12 pages

Singing in the Face of Devastation

Texture in Horton Foote's Talking Pictures

chapter |13 pages

Squeezing the Drama out of Melodrama

Plot and Counterplot in Laura Dennis