''An American Tragedy'' is a 1925 novel by American writer
Theodore Dreiser. He began the manuscript in the summer of 1920, but a year later abandoned most of that text. It was based on the notorious
murder of Grace Brown
Grace Mae Brown (March 20, 1886 – July 11, 1906) was an American woman who was murdered by her boyfriend, Chester Gillette, on Big Moose Lake, New York, after she told him she was pregnant. The murder, and the subsequent trial of the suspect, ...
in 1906 and the trial of her lover, Chester Gillette. In 1923 Dreiser returned to the project, and with the help of his future wife Helen and two editor-secretaries, Louise Campbell and Sally Kusell, he completed the massive novel in 1925. The book entered the
public domain in the United States on January 1, 2021.
Plot
Clyde Griffiths is raised by poor and devoutly religious parents to help in their street
missionary work. As a young man, Clyde must, to help support his family, take menial jobs as a
soda jerk, then a bellhop at a prestigious
Kansas City
The Kansas City metropolitan area is a bi-state metropolitan area anchored by Kansas City, Missouri. Its 14 counties straddle the border between the U.S. states of Missouri (9 counties) and Kansas (5 counties). With and a population of more ...
hotel. There, his more sophisticated colleagues introduce him to bouts of social drinking and sex with prostitutes.
Enjoying his new lifestyle, Clyde becomes infatuated with manipulative Hortense Briggs, who manipulates him into buying her expensive gifts. When Clyde learns Hortense goes out with other men, he becomes jealous. Nevertheless, he would rather spend money on her than to help his sister, who had eloped, only to end up pregnant and abandoned by her lover.
Clyde's life changes dramatically when his friend Sparser, driving Clyde, Hortense, and other friends back from a secluded rendezvous in the country in his boss's car, used without permission, hits a little girl and kills her. Fleeing from the police at high speed, Sparser crashes the car. Everyone but Sparser and his partner flee the scene of the crime. Clyde leaves Kansas City, fearing prosecution as an accessory to Sparser's crimes.
While working as a bellboy at an exclusive club in
Chicago, he meets his wealthy uncle Samuel Griffiths, the owner of a shirt-collar factory in the fictional city of Lycurgus, New York. Samuel, feeling guilt for neglecting his poor relations, offers Clyde a menial job at the factory. After that, he promotes Clyde to a minor supervisory role.
Samuel Griffiths's son Gilbert, Clyde's immediate supervisor, warns Clyde that as a manager, he should not consort with women working under his supervision. At the same time the Griffithses pay Clyde little attention socially. As Clyde has no close friends in Lycurgus, he becomes lonely. Emotionally vulnerable, Clyde is drawn to Roberta Alden, a poor and innocent farm girl working in his shop, who falls in love with him. Clyde secretly courts Roberta, ultimately getting her pregnant.
At the same time, elegant young socialite Sondra Finchley, daughter of another Lycurgus factory owner, takes an interest in Clyde despite his cousin Gilbert's efforts to keep them apart. Clyde's engaging manner makes him popular among the young smart set of Lycurgus; he and Sondra become close, and he courts her while neglecting Roberta. Roberta expects Clyde to marry her to avert the shame of an unwed pregnancy, but Clyde now dreams instead of marrying Sondra.
Having failed to procure an abortion for Roberta, Clyde gives her no more than desultory help with living expenses while his relationship with Sondra matures. When Roberta threatens to reveal her relationship with Clyde unless he marries her, he plans to murder her by drowning while they go boating. He had read a local newspaper report of a boating accident.
Clyde takes Roberta out in a canoe on the fictional Big Bittern Lake (modeled on
Big Moose Lake, New York) in the
Adirondacks, and rows to a secluded bay. He freezes. Sensing something wrong, Roberta moves toward him, and he unintentionally strikes her in the face with a camera, stunning her and accidentally capsizing the boat. Roberta, unable to swim, drowns, while Clyde, unwilling to save her, swims to shore. The narrative implies that the blow was accidental, but the trail of circumstantial evidence left by the panicky and guilt-ridden Clyde points to murder.
The local authorities are eager to convict Clyde, to the point of manufacturing additional evidence against him, and he repeatedly incriminates himself with his confused and contradictory testimony. Despite a vigorous (and untruthful) defense by two lawyers hired by his uncle, Clyde is convicted, sentenced to death, and after an appeal is denied, he is
executed by
electric chair.
Influences and characteristics
Dreiser based the book on a notorious criminal case. On July 11, 1906, resort owners found an overturned boat and the body of
Grace Brown at
Big Moose Lake in the
Adirondack Mountains of
Upstate New York.
Chester Gillette was put on trial, and convicted of killing Brown, though he claimed that her death was a suicide. Gillette was executed by electric chair on March 30, 1908. The murder trial drew international attention when Brown's love letters to Gillette were read in court. Dreiser saved newspaper clippings about the case for several years before writing his novel, during which he studied the case closely. He based Clyde Griffiths on Chester Gillette, deliberately giving him the same initials.
The historical location of most of the central events was
Cortland, New York, a city situated in
Cortland County in a region replete with place names resonant of
Greco-Roman
The Greco-Roman civilization (; also Greco-Roman culture; spelled Graeco-Roman in the Commonwealth), as understood by modern scholars and writers, includes the geographical regions and countries that culturally—and so historically—were di ...
history. Townships include Homer, Solon, Virgil, Marathon, and Cincinnatus.
Lycurgus, the pseudonym given to Cortland, was the legendary law-giver of ancient
Sparta. Grace Brown, a farm girl from the small town of South
Otselic in adjacent
Chenango County, was the factory girl who was Gillette's lover. The place where Grace was killed, Big Moose Lake, an actual place in the Adirondacks, was called Big Bittern Lake in Dreiser's novel.
A strikingly similar murder took place in
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in 1934, when Robert Edwards clubbed Freda McKechnie, one of his two lovers, and placed her body in a lake. The cases were so similar that the press at the time dubbed the Edwards/McKechnie murder "The American Tragedy". Edwards was eventually found guilty, and also executed by electric chair.
The novel is a
tragedy, Clyde's destruction being the consequence of his
innate weaknesses: moral and physical cowardice, lack of scruples and self-discipline, muddled intellect, and unfocused ambition; additionally, the effect of his ingratiating (Dreiser uses the word "soft") social manner places temptation in his way which he cannot resist.
This novel is full of symbolism, ranging from Clyde's grotesque description of the high gloomy walls of the factory as an opportunity for success, symbolizing how it is all a mirage, to the description of girls as "electrifying" to foreshadow Clyde's destination to the electric chair; Dreiser transforms everyday mundane objects to symbols.
Dreiser sustains readers' interest in the lengthy novel (over 800 pages) by the accumulation of detail, and by continually varying the "emotional distance" of his writing from Clyde and other characters, from detailed examination of their thoughts and motivations to dispassionate reportage.
Adaptations
The novel has been adapted several times into other forms, and the storyline has been used, not always attributed, as the basis for other works:
* A first stage adaptation written by
Patrick Kearney for
Broadway premiered at the
Longacre Theatre in New York on October 11, 1926. In the cast was actress
Miriam Hopkins, who had not yet started her film career.
*
Sergei Eisenstein prepared a screenplay in the late 1920s which he hoped to have produced by Paramount or by
Charlie Chaplin
Sir Charles Spencer Chaplin Jr. (16 April 188925 December 1977) was an English comic actor, filmmaker, and composer who rose to fame in the era of silent film. He became a worldwide icon through his screen persona, the Tramp, and is consider ...
during Eisenstein's stay in Hollywood in 1930. ''
Foolish Wives'' and ''
Greed'' director
Erich von Stroheim
Erich Oswald Hans Carl Maria von Stroheim (born Erich Oswald Stroheim; September 22, 1885 – May 12, 1957) was an Austrian-American director, actor and producer, most noted as a film star and avant-garde, visionary director of the silent era. H ...
briefly considered directing a film version in the 1920s. Dreiser strongly disapproved of the
1931 film version directed by
Josef von Sternberg
Josef von Sternberg (; born Jonas Sternberg; May 29, 1894 – December 22, 1969) was an Austrian-American filmmaker whose career successfully spanned the transition from the silent to the sound era, during which he worked with most of the major ...
.
* In April 1929, Dreiser agreed that German director
Erwin Piscator should produce a stage version of ''An American Tragedy''. Piscator's stage adaptation premiered in
Vienna in April 1932, and made its US debut in April 1935 at the
Hedgerow Theatre,
Rose Valley. The play was produced as well by
Lee Strasberg at the
Group Theatre in March 1936. A revival was produced by the Hedgerow Theatre in September 2010.
* In the 1940s, the novel inspired an episode of the award-winning
old-time radio
The Golden Age of Radio, also known as the old-time radio (OTR) era, was an era of radio in the United States where it was the dominant electronic home entertainment medium. It began with the birth of commercial radio broadcasting in the early ...
comedy ''
Our Miss Brooks'', an episode known as "Weekend at Crystal Lake", or "An American Tragedy". The episode revolved around the characters' misinterpreting the intentions of biology teacher Philip Boyton (played by
Jeff Chandler), Connie Brooks's (
Eve Arden) high school colleague and love interest. The characters fear that Boynton plans to kill Miss Brooks during a leisurely weekend at their boss's lakeside retreat. The episode was broadcast twice, on September 19, 1948, and on August 21, 1949. The episode was also repeated in 1955, when the show was a hit on both radio and
television.
* The 1951
Paramount Pictures
Paramount Pictures Corporation is an American film and television production company, production and Distribution (marketing), distribution company and the main namesake division of Paramount Global (formerly ViacomCBS). It is the fifth-oldes ...
film ''
A Place in the Sun'', directed by
George Stevens and starring
Montgomery Clift,
Elizabeth Taylor
Dame Elizabeth Rosemond Taylor (February 27, 1932 – March 23, 2011) was a British-American actress. She began her career as a child actress in the early 1940s and was one of the most popular stars of classical Hollywood cinema in the 1950s. ...
, and
Shelley Winters, is based on the novel.
* Further television or film adaptations of ''An American Tragedy'' have been produced in Brazil (''Um Lugar ao Sol'', TV series, 1959, director: Dionísio Azevedo), Italy (''"
:it:Una tragedia americana"'', Rai 1, 1962, regista: Anton Giulio Majano), Czechoslovakia (''Americká tragédia'', TV series, 1976, director:
Stanislav Párnický
Stanislav Párnický (11 April 1945 – 31 March 2023) was a Slovak film and theatre director, scriptwriter, actor and pedagogue.
Párnický was born on 11 April 1945 in Piešťany. In 1967 he graduated from the Academy of Performing Arts in B ...
), Philippines (''Nakaw na pag-ibig'', film, 1980, director:
Lino Brocka), USSR (''Американская трагедия'', 4 parts, Lithuanian Film Studio, 1981, director: Marijonas Giedrys), and Japan (''Hi no ataru basho'', TV series, 1982, director: Masami Ryuji).
* Composer
Tobias Picker adapted the material as an
opera of the same name, with a libretto by Gene Scheer. It premiered at the
Metropolitan Opera starring
Nathan Gunn
Nathan T. Gunn (born November 26, 1970, in South Bend, Indiana) is an American operatic baritone who performs regularly around the world. He is an alumnus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he is currently a professor of vo ...
in New York on December 2, 2005.
* Critics and commentators have compared elements of
Woody Allen's film, ''
Match Point'' (2005), to the central plot of the novel.
* The novel was adapted as a musical of the same title by three-time
Tony Award-winning composer and lyricist
Charles Strouse. It premiered at
Muhlenberg College, located in
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Allentown (Pennsylvania Dutch language, Pennsylvania Dutch: ''Allenschteddel'', ''Allenschtadt'', or ''Ellsdaun'') is a city in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. The city has a population of 125,845 as of the 2020 United ...
, on March 24, 2010.
* In Cuba, the novel has been adapted and broadcast by Radio Progreso national broadcasting twice: in 1977 and 2001. The first of the versions starred such renowned actors as Raul Selis (as Clyde), Martha del Rio (Roberta), Miriam Mier (Sondra), Julio Alberto Casanova (Gilbert), and Maggie Castro (Bertine).
*
Jennifer Donnelly's 2003 young adult novel, ''
A Northern Light
''A Northern Light'', or ''A Gathering Light'' in the U.K., is an American historical novel for young adults, written by Jennifer Donnelly and published by Harcourt in 2003. Set in northern Herkimer County, New York in 1906, it is based on th ...
'', recounts the events from the narrative viewpoint of a young woman working at the local camp.
* In 2021, the classic crime novel was re-imagined in the form of a fictional investigative docuseries in ''The Anatomy of Desire'' by L. R. Dorn, the pen name of screenwriting team Matt Dorff and Suzanne Dunn.
Reception
Awards
In 2005, the book was placed in ''
Time'' magazine's
list of the top 100 novels written in English since 1924.
[ Lev Grossman and Richard Lacayo (October 16, 2005)]
"Time Specials: All Time 100 Novels"
'' Time''. Retrieved October 23, 2011.
Controversy
In 1927, the book was banned in Boston, Massachusetts due to sexual content, abortion, and murder.
In 1933, it was burned by Nazis in Germany because it "deals with low love affairs".
References
Further reading
''An American Tragedy'': A Study GuideTheodore Dreiser: ''An American Tragedy'' The Library of America. Accessed on October 28, 2005.
"Double Exposure" an article about differences between the two film versions of ''An American Tragedy'', in ''
Opera News
''Opera News'' is an American classical music magazine. It has been published since 1936 by the Metropolitan Opera Guild, a non-profit organization located at Lincoln Center which was founded to engender the appreciation of opera and also support ...
'', December 2005, pp. 24–31.
External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:American Tragedy, An
1925 American novels
American novels adapted into films
Boni & Liveright books
Novels by Theodore Dreiser
Novels set in Kansas
Novels set in New York (state)
Novels adapted into operas
Roman à clef novels