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American Masters: Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women (2015) DVD

$24.99 $17.99
Item #: WB0682
Louisa May Alcott was no little woman, and her life was no children's book. Louisa May Alcott's story is as full of incident, surprise, and heroism as any plot she invented. This first film biography of the beloved author of Little Women stars Elizabeth Marvel (House of Cards) in a detailed portrait that replaces the image of a New England ... More
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Louisa May Alcott was no little woman, and her life was no children's book. Louisa May Alcott's story is as full of incident, surprise, and heroism as any plot she invented. This first film biography of the beloved author of Little Women stars Elizabeth Marvel (House of Cards) in a detailed portrait that replaces the image of a New England spinster with a living, breathing, modern woman.

American Masters: Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women

Louisa May Alcott was no little woman, and her life was no children's book; her story is as full of incident, surprise, and heroism as any plot she invented. The daughter of improvident educator Bronson Alcott, Louisa was homeschooled by Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, served as a nurse in the Civil War, fought for women's suffrage, and lived a secret life as the author of lurid pulp fiction until Little Women lifted her and her family from rags to riches and literary celebrity.

Starring Elizabeth Marvel (House of Cards, Lincoln), directed by Nancy Porter (NOVA, AMERICAN EXPERIENCE), written by Harriet Reisen, (Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women, a Wall Street Journal Top Ten Standout Book), featuring actors Daniel Gerroll and Jane Alexander, and with commentary by Pulitzer Prize-winners Geraldine Brooks and John Matteson, this first film biography of Louisa May Alcott replaces the image of a New England spinster with a portrait of a living, breathing, modern woman.

Special Features include…
- Extended interviews with author Geraldine Brooks, Alcott scholars Joel Myerson, Sarah Elbert, and many more
- Q&A with filmmakers Nancy Porter and Harriet Reisen, and with actor Elizabeth Marvel (Louisa May Alcott)
- LOVE, a poem by Louisa May Alcott, read by Elizabeth Marvel

Producer: Nancy Porter, Harriet Reisen, Jennifer Pearce, Julie Sacks, Prudence Glass
Executive Producer: Susan Lacy
Production Company: WNET; Thirteen; Nancy Porter Productions
Production Year: 2008
Copyright Year: 2009
Rating: TV-PG
Actors: Elizabeth Marvel, Jane Alexander, Daniel Gerroll
Writers: Harriet Reisen
Number of Discs: 1
Length: 83 minutes
Subtitled: Y
Subtitle Languages: English
Audio Format: 5.1 Surround
Aspect Ratio: 16x9 Widescreen

7 Reviews
C
Claudia
Verified Buyer
5.0 star rating
05/30/21
Louisa May Alcott on American Masters
Review by Claudia on 05/30/21 review stating Louisa May Alcott on American Masters
I send this program as a gift and I love everything that PBS does on American Masters programs. Great videos and great television series! Thank you PBS. C. Cockerill
S
Shotsie
Anonymous User
2.0 star rating
11/23/20
A little Disappointing
Review by Shotsie on 11/23/20 review stating A little Disappointing
The description about this DVD is that its a bio drama about Louisa May Alcott and list the actors. To me, this leaves the impression its more of a movie about her life not narration, historians and others talking with acting in the background. I havent completed the DVD yet, its that interesting.
G
Garnetta
Anonymous User
4.0 star rating
11/21/20
A Good Overview of L.A.Alcotts life
Review by Garnetta on 11/21/20 review stating A Good Overview of L.A.Alcotts life
I enjoyed this presentation when I first saw it last year, so much so that I recently purchased it. It is not a movie, but more an acted documentary using her words and including interviews about her by noted persons. I saw her as a woman with grit and sensitivity. Would love to see a feature film of this most admirable and remarkable woman.
H
History B.
Anonymous User
4.0 star rating
07/17/20
Louisas very different from Jo March
Review by History B. on 07/17/20 review stating Louisas very different from Jo March
It was interesting to discover things about Louisa May Alcott I didnt know and the role her father, Bronson, played in her life. The program also brought out the part he played in the intellectual life of the Concord Transcendentalists. It also gave much credit to Louisas mother Abigail for her part in Louisas development as well.
P
Peggy
Anonymous User
5.0 star rating
07/17/20
Not a little woman!
Review by Peggy on 07/17/20 review stating Not a little woman!
Woman and girls all over the world have read and loved Alcotts story about sisters growing from girlhood to womanhood. We have suspected that the character of Jo might be Louisa herself, and that is true - but only to an extent. Her creator had many of the same traits - the curiosity, sense of humor, creativity, impatience, and unladylike tendencies, as well as devotion to her parents and sisters. But her life led her away from marriage and into other adventures, including service as a nurse during the Civil War. This program shows Louisa May Alcott as an inspiration woman, not in any sense little.
R
Rev F.
Anonymous User
5.0 star rating
07/17/20
The Life and Times of Louisa May Alcott Revisited
Review by Rev F. on 07/17/20 review stating The Life and Times of Louisa May Alcott Revisited
Much has been learned about the family and literary life of one of the best-loved and most-read of Americas authors of childrens literature since the mid-1950s when I first read Little Women. Louisa May Alcotts total literary output may well continue to augmented by new discoveries; writing under the pseudonym A.M. Barnard among others she published stories and novels on adult themes not congruent with contemporary ideas of material suitable to all readers. Additionally, scholarly attention has been paid to the lives and ideas of Alcotts parents as well as to the educational theories developed by her father, Bronson Alcott, which deeply influenced her writing for children -- in most of which a school and/or a theory of human development is explored. This DVD gives a lively and judicious account of the life and times of Louisa May Alcott, incorporating new biographical material as well as incorporating the rarefied literary climate and context of her most productive years in Concird and Boston.
J
Jam
Anonymous User
4.0 star rating
07/17/20
Loved this had recorded it from PBS when it was shown.
Review by Jam on 07/17/20 review stating Loved this had recorded it from PBS when it was shown.
I recorded this from PBS, and looked at it over and over. My DVR died on me and I lost it. I was delighted to see I could purchase it.

"engrossing" - USA TODAY

"splendid…a revelation" - LA Tiimes

"Best Video of the year" - Booklist

"Notable Video" - American Library Association


Highlighted Customer Reviews


The Life and Times of Louisa May Alcott Revisited
Review by Rev F. review stating The Life and Times of Louisa May Alcott Revisited
Much has been learned about the family and literary life of one of the best-loved and most-read of Americas authors of childrens literature since the mid-1950s when I first read Little Women. Louisa May Alcotts total literary output may well continue to augmented by new discoveries; writing under the pseudonym A.M. Barnard among others she published stories and novels on adult themes not congruent with contemporary ideas of material suitable to all readers. Additionally, scholarly attention has been paid to the lives and ideas of Alcotts parents as well as to the educational theories developed by her father, Bronson Alcott, which deeply influenced her writing for children -- in most of which a school and/or a theory of human development is explored. This DVD gives a lively and judicious account of the life and times of Louisa May Alcott, incorporating new biographical material as well as incorporating the rarefied literary climate and context of her most productive years in Concird and Boston.
Not a little woman!
Review by Peggy review stating Not a little woman!
Woman and girls all over the world have read and loved Alcotts story about sisters growing from girlhood to womanhood. We have suspected that the character of Jo might be Louisa herself, and that is true - but only to an extent. Her creator had many of the same traits - the curiosity, sense of humor, creativity, impatience, and unladylike tendencies, as well as devotion to her parents and sisters. But her life led her away from marriage and into other adventures, including service as a nurse during the Civil War. This program shows Louisa May Alcott as an inspiration woman, not in any sense little.
Louisa May Alcott on American Masters
Review by Claudia review stating Louisa May Alcott on American Masters
I send this program as a gift and I love everything that PBS does on American Masters programs. Great videos and great television series! Thank you PBS. C. Cockerill

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