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Carson McCullers
Carson McCullers,
1917-1967
Carson McCullers was born in Columbus, Georgia, as Lula Carson Smith
on February 19, 1917, the first born of Lamar and Marguerite Waters
Smith. Though she moved from the South in 1934 and only returned
for visits, most of her writing was inspired by her southern heritage.
Her mother felt she had given birth to a genius from the time Carson
was very young and always remained her staunchest supporter and
strongest ally.
When nine years of age, Lula began studying piano and practiced
six to eight hours daily, planning a career as a concert pianist.
In 1930 she changed her name to Carson, and began studying piano
with Mary Tucker. Carson graduated from Columbus High School in
1933, and after her piano teacher moved away in the spring of 1934,
Carson moved to New York City to study at the Juilliard School of
Music.
Shortly after her arrival she lost most of the money her parents
had given her, and to support herself worked at various jobs and
attended night classes in creative writing at Columbia and New York
University. She focused on short stories at first, portraying adolescent
anguish and unrequited love. Carson returned to Columbus in mid
1935 where she met Reeves McCullers, a soldier, whom she married
in 1937. They were divorced in 1941 but remarried in 1945. Shortly
after she left him in 1953 he committed suicide.
Carson experienced success early with the publication of The Heart
Is a Lonely Hunter in 1940 when she was only twenty-three. Its themes
foreshadowed nearly everything else she wrote thereafter, namely
spiritual isolation as the human condition in modern times, and
her identification with, and compassion for, the underdogs and outcasts
of society. Reflections in a Golden Eye (1941) was greeted by mixed
reviews and was generally considered not as successful as her first
novel. Carson suffered the first of several strokes in 1941, believed
to be the result of a misdiagnosed case of rheumatic fever which
had damaged her heart when she was fifteen.
After receiving a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1942 and a $1000 grant
from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1943, McCullers
was able to work on her next novel, The Member of the Wedding (1946),
which again won high critical acclaim. She adapted the novel for
the stage where it became a Broadway hit in 1950, running fourteen
and a half months and winning the New York Drama Critics' Circle
Award and the Donaldson Award. McCullers was awarded a Gold Medal
by the Theatre Club, Inc. as the best playwright of the year. In
1952 the play was turned into a succcessful motion picture. The
Ballad of the Sad Cafe, often considered her finest work, was published
as a novella in 1951. It was adapted by Edward Albee for the Broadway
stage in the 1963-1964 season but had only limited success.
Carson's next project, The Square Root of Wonderful, was her first
attempt to write a play from its inception. The play went through
numerous revisions and finally opened on Broadway on October 30,
1957, but received poor reviews and closed after forty-five performances.
The play was published in 1958. Because of her despondency over
her paralyzing strokes and the play's failure, McCullers began seeing
psychiatrist Dr. Mary Mercer who had a very positive effect on her,
inspiring her to continue writing, and who became a lifelong friend.
Clock without Hands, her final novel, appeared in 1961. Though it
made the best-seller lists for five months, it received mixed reviews
in the United States and is the only one of her novels not adapted
for the screen.
In addition to her five novels and two plays, McCullers wrote twenty
short stories, over two dozen articles and essays, and some poetry
and verse. She received numerous awards for her work throughout
the years including the Prize of the Younger Generation in 1965,
and the Henry Bellamann Award in 1966 in recognition of her "outstanding
contribution to literature." On August 15, 1967 she suffered
a stroke and remained in a coma until her death on September 29.
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Sources:
Carr, Virginia Spencer. The Lonely Hunter: A Biography of Carson
McCullers (New York: Doubleday, 1975).
Dictionary of Literary Biography, v. 173 (Detroit, Michigan: Gale
Research Co., 1996).
Evans, Oliver. Carson McCullers: Her Life and Work (London: Peter
Owen, 1965).
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