A Raisin in the Sun (1961) - Turner Classic Movies

A Raisin in the Sun


2h 8m 1961
A Raisin in the Sun

Brief Synopsis

A black woman uses her late husband's life insurance to build a better world for her children.

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Release Date
Jan 1961
Premiere Information
New York opening: 29 Mar 1961
Production Company
Paman--Doris Productions
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry (New York, 11 Mar 1959).

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 8m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.85 : 1

Synopsis

The Youngers are a Negro family living in three crowded, sunless rooms on Chicago's South Side. The squalid routine of their lives is suddenly disrupted when Lena Younger receives a $10,000 check from the company that insured her late husband. Lena wants to use the money to buy a house and to help her daughter, Beneatha, finish medical school. Lena's son, Walter Lee, however, wants to invest the money in a liquor store so he can rise above his status of chauffeur for a wealthy white man. Lena disapproves of the idea and makes a down payment of $3,500 on a small house in a white neighborhood. Frustrated and enraged, Walter Lee quarrels with his mother and his wife, Ruth, and storms out of the flat. He stays away from work for 3 days, and Lena finds him in a bar. She offers him the remaining $6,500 ($3,500 of which is to be set aside for Beneatha's education). Once more united and optimistic, the family prepares to move into their new home. Not even a visit from a hypocritical representative of an "improvement association," who offers to buy back the house at a higher price to preserve the community's all-white character, can alter their decision to move. Then their world collapses. Unknown to the rest of the family, Walter Lee invests the entire $6,500 in a liquor store and is swindled. Realizing he has betrayed his mother's trust, threatened his sister's future, and thrown away his father's life savings, Walter Lee desperately decides to accept the "improvement association"'s offer. But under the eyes of his entire family, he sees that such a move is only a step backwards, and he once more rejects the offer. Though it means hard work and years of sacrifice for all, the Youngers make their move.

Photo Collections

A Raisin in the Sun - Movie Poster
A Raisin in the Sun - Movie Poster

Videos

Movie Clip

Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) I Wasn't No Rich White Woman We’ve just met Claudia McNeil, in the role she played on Broadway, as mother Lena, conferring with her daughter-in-law Ruth (Ruby Dee), returning to her Chicago apartment, discussing her grandson, her son, and the $10,000 insurance check she’s expecting following her husband’s death, in A Raisin In The Sun, 1961.
Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) That Check Coming Today? Opening, Daniel Petrie directing from Lorraine Hansberry’s screenplay based on her New York Drama Critics’ Circle Best-Play winner, Sidney Poitier and Ruby Dee as Walter and Ruth, in their Broadway roles, Stephen Perry their son Travis, in A Raisin In The Sun, 1961, also starring Claudia McNeil and Diana Sands.
Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) That Was My Biggest Mistake Having committed to invest in a liquor store, frustrated Chicago chauffeur Walter (Sidney Poitier) returns home, interested only in the insurance check his mother (Claudia McNeil) just received for his father’s death, unaware that his wife (Ruby Dee) is pregnant, and has visited an abortionist, in A Raisin In The Sun, 1961.
Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) Get Married And Shut Up! Scrapping with neighbors over the bathroom, Diana Sands is introduced as Beneatha, sister of frustrated Walter (Sidney Poitier), who’s been fighting with his wife Ruth (Ruby Dee) about the insurance check their mother is about to receive after their father’s death, in playwright Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin In The Sun, 1961.

Trailer

Hosted Intro

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Release Date
Jan 1961
Premiere Information
New York opening: 29 Mar 1961
Production Company
Paman--Doris Productions
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry (New York, 11 Mar 1959).

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 8m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.85 : 1

Articles

A Raisin in the Sun


Motion pictures that spring from successful plays are unique in that they already have a lot of mileage on them before the cameras even start to roll. If key members of the cast also played opposite each other before live audiences, they haven't just been rehearsing the material, they've been actively getting under the skin of their characters. The script's content and the characters' motivations have been scrutinized in a manner that simply isn't possible while making a conventionally produced film.

Daniel Petrie's A Raisin in the Sun (1961), which is based on Lorraine Hansberry's groundbreaking play about a proud African-American family, is a case in point. The very intent of the piece was a matter of great debate while it was being performed on Broadway, and its two leads, Sidney Poitier and Claudia McNeil, were regularly at each other's throats over which approach would work best. The strained mother-son relationship that audiences finally saw on the big screen was the result of considerable tension during the initial phase of the play's successful run. The real-life stand- off between Poitier and McNeil actually grew so heated that, years later, Poitier wrote that he believed the actress "hated" him. Nevertheless, the two managed to convey a devastating amount of love for each other, both on stage and in Petrie's acclaimed film version.

Poitier plays Walter Lee Younger, a young black man who stumbles upon an opportunity to improve his standing in a society that's determined to hold him back because of the color of his skin. Walter's strong, dignified mother, Lena (McNeil) has received a $10,000 insurance check after the accidental death of her husband. Intent on taking care of her family in the best way she can, Lena decides to buy a new home in a better neighborhood. But Walter, who has a wife (Ruby Dee) and young son, thinks the money would be best spent on opening a liquor store. Walter's sister, Beneatha (Diana Sands), on the other hand, hopes that the money will be used to help her pay for medical school. This quandary will open up a painful dialogue among the Younger family, which will eventually lead to an unexpected, hard-won form of redemption.

In his recent Oprah Winfrey endorsed autobiography, The Measure of a Man, Poitier discusses his take on acting in general, and Walter Lee Younger in particular. Even after all these years, he seems utterly convinced that he was right when he insisted that A Raisin in the Sun should focus on Walter's plight, rather than Lena's. This didn't sit well with McNeil...especially since she was supported in her belief by Hansberry, the play's author (Hansberry also adapted her work for the screen).

"Claudia McNeil, a fine performer, was in complete dominance over most of the other members of the cast," he writes. "Naturally enough, she perceived the play as being best when it unfolded from the mother's point of view. I perceived the play as being best when it unfolded from the son's point of view, however, and I argued that position. In fact, we argued constantly."

"In my opinion," he says, "it was the son who carried the theatrical obligation as the force between the audience and the play. The eyes of those watching were on the son to see if the tragedy would destroy him, would blow him apart beyond recovery. And it was also my opinion that there was no such feeling between the audience and the mother. The audience witnessed the sadness that was visited on her. They saw that her family was in disarray, but also saw her as a force beyond that kind of vulnerability. If they were to vote, they would say, 'Oh, but she's going to be okay."

By the time Petrie made A Raisin in the Sun, it would seem that Poitier either won the argument by virtue of his dynamic stage interpretation, or because of his standing as one of the more prominent African-American actors in motion pictures. Certainly, the movie's emotional focus leans a great deal more toward Walter Lee Younger's plight than anything his mother experiences. McNeil's performance is remarkable in its sensitivity; it's both big-spirited and heart-breaking. But you leave the film with Poitier's desperate gaze seared into your memory.
br> Poitier seems to feel that this sort of turmoil is something you have to deal with when you're fully committed to your craft. "You simply can't 'fake' your way through good work," Poitier writes. "But even the purest devotion to an art or craft doesn't take place in a vacuum. We work with others, with people often very close to our hearts, so convictions that are firmly held can cost a pretty penny indeed."

Producer: David Susskind, Philip Rose
Director: Daniel Petrie
Screenplay: Lorraine Hansberry (based on her play)
Cinematography: Charles Lawton, Jr.
Editing: William A. Lyon, Paul Weatherwax
Music: Laurence Rosenthal
Art Design: Carl Anderson
Set Design: Louis Diage
Makeup: Ben Lane
Principal Cast: Sidney Poitier (Walter Lee Younger), Claudia McNeil (Lena Younger), Ruby Dee (Ruth Younger), Diana Sands (Beneatha Younger), Ivan Dixon (Asagai), John Fiedler (Mark Lindner), Louis Gossett (George Murchison), Stephen Perry (Travis Younger), Joel Fluellen (Bobo), Roy Glenn (Willie Harris).
BW-128m. Letterboxed.

by Paul Tatara
A Raisin In The Sun

A Raisin in the Sun

Motion pictures that spring from successful plays are unique in that they already have a lot of mileage on them before the cameras even start to roll. If key members of the cast also played opposite each other before live audiences, they haven't just been rehearsing the material, they've been actively getting under the skin of their characters. The script's content and the characters' motivations have been scrutinized in a manner that simply isn't possible while making a conventionally produced film. Daniel Petrie's A Raisin in the Sun (1961), which is based on Lorraine Hansberry's groundbreaking play about a proud African-American family, is a case in point. The very intent of the piece was a matter of great debate while it was being performed on Broadway, and its two leads, Sidney Poitier and Claudia McNeil, were regularly at each other's throats over which approach would work best. The strained mother-son relationship that audiences finally saw on the big screen was the result of considerable tension during the initial phase of the play's successful run. The real-life stand- off between Poitier and McNeil actually grew so heated that, years later, Poitier wrote that he believed the actress "hated" him. Nevertheless, the two managed to convey a devastating amount of love for each other, both on stage and in Petrie's acclaimed film version. Poitier plays Walter Lee Younger, a young black man who stumbles upon an opportunity to improve his standing in a society that's determined to hold him back because of the color of his skin. Walter's strong, dignified mother, Lena (McNeil) has received a $10,000 insurance check after the accidental death of her husband. Intent on taking care of her family in the best way she can, Lena decides to buy a new home in a better neighborhood. But Walter, who has a wife (Ruby Dee) and young son, thinks the money would be best spent on opening a liquor store. Walter's sister, Beneatha (Diana Sands), on the other hand, hopes that the money will be used to help her pay for medical school. This quandary will open up a painful dialogue among the Younger family, which will eventually lead to an unexpected, hard-won form of redemption. In his recent Oprah Winfrey endorsed autobiography, The Measure of a Man, Poitier discusses his take on acting in general, and Walter Lee Younger in particular. Even after all these years, he seems utterly convinced that he was right when he insisted that A Raisin in the Sun should focus on Walter's plight, rather than Lena's. This didn't sit well with McNeil...especially since she was supported in her belief by Hansberry, the play's author (Hansberry also adapted her work for the screen). "Claudia McNeil, a fine performer, was in complete dominance over most of the other members of the cast," he writes. "Naturally enough, she perceived the play as being best when it unfolded from the mother's point of view. I perceived the play as being best when it unfolded from the son's point of view, however, and I argued that position. In fact, we argued constantly." "In my opinion," he says, "it was the son who carried the theatrical obligation as the force between the audience and the play. The eyes of those watching were on the son to see if the tragedy would destroy him, would blow him apart beyond recovery. And it was also my opinion that there was no such feeling between the audience and the mother. The audience witnessed the sadness that was visited on her. They saw that her family was in disarray, but also saw her as a force beyond that kind of vulnerability. If they were to vote, they would say, 'Oh, but she's going to be okay." By the time Petrie made A Raisin in the Sun, it would seem that Poitier either won the argument by virtue of his dynamic stage interpretation, or because of his standing as one of the more prominent African-American actors in motion pictures. Certainly, the movie's emotional focus leans a great deal more toward Walter Lee Younger's plight than anything his mother experiences. McNeil's performance is remarkable in its sensitivity; it's both big-spirited and heart-breaking. But you leave the film with Poitier's desperate gaze seared into your memory.br> Poitier seems to feel that this sort of turmoil is something you have to deal with when you're fully committed to your craft. "You simply can't 'fake' your way through good work," Poitier writes. "But even the purest devotion to an art or craft doesn't take place in a vacuum. We work with others, with people often very close to our hearts, so convictions that are firmly held can cost a pretty penny indeed." Producer: David Susskind, Philip Rose Director: Daniel Petrie Screenplay: Lorraine Hansberry (based on her play) Cinematography: Charles Lawton, Jr. Editing: William A. Lyon, Paul Weatherwax Music: Laurence Rosenthal Art Design: Carl Anderson Set Design: Louis Diage Makeup: Ben Lane Principal Cast: Sidney Poitier (Walter Lee Younger), Claudia McNeil (Lena Younger), Ruby Dee (Ruth Younger), Diana Sands (Beneatha Younger), Ivan Dixon (Asagai), John Fiedler (Mark Lindner), Louis Gossett (George Murchison), Stephen Perry (Travis Younger), Joel Fluellen (Bobo), Roy Glenn (Willie Harris). BW-128m. Letterboxed. by Paul Tatara

Quotes

Trivia

The title comes from the Langston Hughes poem, "Harlem (What Happens To A Dream Deferred?)".

Notes

Location scenes filmed in Chicago.

Miscellaneous Notes

Voted Best Supporting Actress (Dee) by the 1961 National Board of Review

Voted One of the Year's Ten Best Films by the 1961 New York Times Film Critics.

Winner of the Gary Cooper Award for Human Values at the 1961 Cannes Film Festival.

Released in United States Spring April 1961

Released in United States March 1999

Shown at Cleveland International Film Festival (Special Event) March 18-28, 1999.

Louis Gossett Jr makes his screen debut.

Released in United States Spring April 1961

Released in United States March 1999 (Shown at Cleveland International Film Festival (Special Event) March 18-28, 1999.)