Quick Facts

Clifford Odets (born July 18, 1906, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died August 14, 1963, Hollywood, California) was a leading dramatist of the theatre of social protest in the United States during the 1930s. His important affiliation with the celebrated Group Theatre contributed to that company’s considerable influence on the American stage.

From 1923 to 1928 Odets learned his profession as an actor in repertory companies; in 1931 he joined the newly founded Group Theatre as one of its original members. Odets’s Waiting for Lefty (1935), his first great success, used both auditorium and stage for action and was an effective plea for labour unionism; Awake and Sing (1935) is a naturalistic family drama; and Golden Boy (1937; filmed 1939) concerns an Italian youth who rejects his artistic potential to become a boxer. Paradise Lost (1935) deals with the tragic life of a middle-class family. In 1936 Odets married the Austrian actress Luise Rainer.

Odets moved to Hollywood in the late ’30s to write for motion pictures and became a successful director. His later plays include The Big Knife (1949), The Country Girl (1950; U.K. title Winter Journey), and The Flowering Peach (1954).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Quick Facts
Date:
1931 - 1941
Areas Of Involvement:
Stanislavsky system

Group Theatre, company of stage craftsmen founded in 1931 in New York City by a former Theatre Guild member, Harold Clurman, in association with the directors Cheryl Crawford and Lee Strasberg, for the purpose of presenting American plays of social significance. Embracing Konstantin Stanislavsky’s method (an acting technique that stressed the introspective approach to artistic truth), the characteristic trend of the Group’s productions was primarily in the staging of social protest plays with a point of view from the left. After its first trial production of Sergey Tretyakov’s Roar China (1930–31), the Group staged Paul Green’s House of Connelly, a play of the decadent Old South as reflected by the disintegrating gentry class. The play was favourably received by the critics and ran for 91 performances. The Group then followed with two anticapitalist plays, 1931 and Success Story; the former closed after only nine days, but the latter ran for more than 100 performances. Financial and artistic success came two years later with the production of Sidney Kingsley’s Men in White (1933), a melodrama of hospital interns. Directed by Strasberg and with settings by Mordecai Gorelik, the play ran close to a year and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for that season.

(Read Lee Strasberg’s 1959 Britannica essay on Stanislavsky.)

In 1935 the Group staged Waiting for Lefty by one of its actors, Clifford Odets. The play, suggested by a taxicab drivers’ strike of the previous year, used flashback techniques and “plants” in the audience to create the illusion that the strikers’ meeting was occurring spontaneously. The group also staged Odets’ Awake and Sing, a look at Jewish life in the Bronx during the Depression, as well as his Till the Day I Die (1935), Paradise Lost (1935), and Golden Boy (1937). Other productions included Paul Green’s Johnny Johnson, a satirical, anti-war play, partly in blank verse, with music by Kurt Weill; Bury the Dead (1936, by Irwin Shaw); Thunder Rock (1939, by Robert Ardrey); and My Heart’s in the Highlands (1939, by William Saroyan).

The Group exercised a profound influence on the American theatre in three ways: (1) it stimulated the writing talent of such playwrights as Odets, and Saroyan; (2) many of its actors and directors, including Clurman, Elia Kazan, Lee J. Cobb, Stella Adler, and Strasberg, went on to prominent positions in theatre and film after the Group’s dissolution; and (3) its presentations established a unified acting and working method that became virtually standard after the Group disbanded in 1941.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Chelsey Parrott-Sheffer.