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Eliza Scanlen, Florence Pugh
runtime - 135 M
Greta Gerwig
genres - Drama
2019
When year did Little Women take place. Little women imdb. Little women special edition. When did Little Women win the Caldecott award. Little women new york. What is the mood of Little Women. Table of Contents FROM THE PAGES OF LITTLE WOMEN Title Page Copyright Page LOUISA MAY ALCOTT THE WORLD OF LOUISA MAY Introduction Part One Chapter 1 - Playing Pilgrims Chapter 2 - A Merry Christmas Chapter 3 - The Laurence Boy Chapter 4 - Burdens Chapter 5 - Being Neighborly Chapter 6 - Beth Finds the Palace Beautiful Chapter 7 - Amy’s Valley of Humiliation Chapter 8 - Jo Meets Apollyon Chapter 9 - Meg Goes to Vanity Fair Chapter 10 - The P. C. and P. O. Chapter 11 - Experiments Chapter 12 - Camp Laurence Chapter 13 - Castles in the Air Chapter 14 - Secrets Chapter 15 - A Telegram Chapter 16 - Letters Chapter 17 - Little Faithful Chapter 18 - Dark Days Chapter 19 - Amy’s Will Chapter 20 - Confidential Chapter 21 - Laurie Makes Mischief, and Jo Makes Peace Chapter 22 - Pleasant Meadows Chapter 23 - Aunt March Settles the Question Part Two Chapter 24 - Gossip Chapter 25 - The First Wedding Chapter 26 - Artistic Attempts Chapter 27 - Literary Lessons Chapter 28 - Domestic Experiences Chapter 29 - Calls Chapter 30 - Consequences Chapter 31 - Our Foreign Correspondent Chapter 32 - Tender Troubles Chapter 33 - Jo’s Journal Chapter 34 - A Friend Chapter 35 - Heartache Chapter 36 - Beth’s Secret Chapter 37 - New Impressions Chapter 38 - On the Shelf Chapter 39 - Lazy Laurence Chapter 40 - The Valley of the Shadow Chapter 41 - Learning to Forget Chapter 42 - All Alone Chapter 43 - Surprises Chapter 44 - My Lord and Lady Chapter 45 - Daisy and Demi Chapter 46 - Under the Umbrella Chapter 47 - Harvest Time INSPIRED BY LITTLE WOMEN COMMENTS & QUESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING FROM THE PAGES OF LITTLE WOMEN “Christmas won’t be Christmas without any presents. ” (page 11) “I’m the man of the family now Papa is away, and I shall provide the slippers, for he told me to take special care of Mother while he was gone. ” (page 14) “I’ll try and be what he loves to call me, ‘a little woman, ’ and not be rough and wild, but do my duty here instead of wanting to be somewhere else. ” (page 18) Boys are trying enough to human patience, goodness knows, but girls are infinitely more so. (page 71) “Little girls shouldn’t ask questions. ” (page 76) “Housekeeping ain’t no joke. ” (page 114) “Have regular hours for work and play, make each day both useful and pleasant, and prove that you understand the worth of time by employing it well. Then youth will be delightful, old age will bring few regrets, and life become a beautiful success, in spite of poverty. ” (page 121) “Wouldn’t it be fun if all the castles in the air which we make could come true, and we could live in them? ” (page 143) “People don’t have fortunes left them in that style nowadays, men have to work and women to marry for money. It’s a dreadfully unjust world. ” (page 158) She could not speak, but she did “hold on, ” and the warm grasp of the friendly human hand comforted her sore heart, and seemed to lead her nearer to the Divine arm which alone could uphold her in her trouble. (page 183) “Beth is my conscience, and I can’t give her up. I can‘t! I can’t! ” (page 183) Jo’s face was a study next day, for the secret rather weighed upon her, and she found it hard not to look mysterious and important. Meg observed it, but did not trouble herself to make inquiries, for she had learned that the best way to manage Jo was by the law of contraries, so she felt sure of being told everything if she did not ask. (page 202) It takes people a long time to learn the difference between talent and genius, especially ambitious young men and women. (page 250) Amy sailed away to find the Old World, which is always new and beautiful to young eyes, while her father and friend watched her from the shore, fervently hoping that none but gentle fortunes would befall the happy-hearted girl, who waved her hand to them till they could see nothing but the summer sunshine dazzling on the sea. (page 302) “Girls are so queer you never know what they mean. They say no when they mean yes, and drive a man out of his wits just for the fun of it. ” (pages 351-352) Little they cared what anybody thought, for they were enjoying the happy hour that seldom comes but once in any life, the magical moment which bestows youth on the old, beauty on the plain, wealth on the poor, and gives human hearts a foretaste of heaven. (page 457) Published by Barnes & Noble Books 122 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10011 Little Women, or, Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy, was published in two volumes in October 1868 and April 1869, respectively. They were combined into a single volume in 1880. Published in 2004 with new Introduction, Notes, Biography, Chronology, Inspired By, Comments & Questions, and for Further Reading. Introduction, Notes, and For Further Reading Copyright © 2004 by Camille Cauti. Note on Louisa May Alcott, The World of Louisa May Alcott and Little Women, Inspired by Little Women, and Comments & Questions Copyright © 2004 by Barnes & Noble, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Barnes & Noble Classics and the Barnes & Noble Classics colophon are trademarks of Barnes & Noble, Inc. Little Women ISBN-13: 978-1-59308-108-9 ISBN-10:1-59308-108-1 eISBN: 978-1-411-43257-4 LC Control Number 2003112463 Produced and published in conjunction with: Fine Creative Media, Inc. 322 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10001 Michael J. Fine, President and Publisher Printed in the United States of America QM 7 9 10 8 LOUISA MAY ALCOTT Louisa May Alcott was born on November 29, 1832, in Germantown, Pennsylvania, the second of four daughters of Amos Bronson and Abigail Alcott. Her mother, known in the family as “Abba, ” was from a distinguished Boston family. Her father, a self-educated son of farmers, was an educator and reformer; his controversial and often unpopular teaching philosophies kept him from steady employment and the family (Louisa called it the “Pathetic Family”) continually on the edge of poverty. The Alcotts often relied upon the generosity of family and friends, including American essayist and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson, who frequently provided financial support. When Louisa was two, the family moved to Boston to be near Abba’s family and Emerson. They would move frequently between Boston and Concord for the rest of Louisa’s life. Bronson Alcott became part of a group of writers and philosophers known as the Transcendentalist Club, which included Emerson and writer Henry David Thoreau, both of whom Louisa idolized. Throughout her life Louisa was brash and moody, with a quick tongue that often angered her father. Alcott wrote her first stories at age fifteen, during what she called her “sentimental period. ” As a teenager, she pursued many dramatic and literary endeavors: producing and acting in family theatricals; creating a series of tales for Emerson’s young daughter, Ellen, which she called Flower Fables; and founding a family newspaper, the Olive Leaf. Her first published work was the poem “Sunlight, ” which appeared pseud onymously in Peterson’s Magazine in 1851. Louisa’s father didn’t earn sufficient income to support the family, so Louisa, her mother, and her sisters worked—Abba as one of the nation’s first social workers, the girls at sewing and teaching. Alcott viewed herself as a pillar of financial and emotional support to her female relatives. She was devastated in 1858 when her younger sister, Elizabeth, died of scarlet fever and her elder sister, Anna, announced her engagement. During the American Civil War, Alcott moved briefly to Washington, D. C., to work as a Union Army nurse, until a bout with typhoid cut her service short. While convalescing, she reworked her letters to her family into a series called Hospital Sketches; published in 1863, it brought her favorable notice as a writer. Over the next several years she published a number of children’s collections and anonymously wrote fantastic and gothic tales. In 1867 she was offered the editorship of the children’s magazine Merry’s Museum. The following year, commissioned by the publisher Roberts Brothers, she wrote Little Women in six weeks. With the publication of Little Women, Alcott gained immense fame and achieved long-sought financial security for herself and her family. The sequel Little Men: Life at Plumfield with Jo’s Boys was published in 1871. Always active in the suffrage movement, in 1879 Alcott became the first woman to vote in Concord. When her sister May died in childbirth the same year, Alcott adopted the baby, a girl named Lulu. Alcott’s health declined greatly during this period, due to the lingering effects of mercury in the treatment she had received for typhoid fever during the Civil War. Too weak to write extensively, Alcott would publish and republish her children’s story collections until her death. The feminist-leaning Jo’s Boys was also published during this period, in 1886. Louisa May Alcott died March 6, 1888, two days after the death of her father. She is buried with her parents. THE WORLD OF LOUISA MAY ALCOTT AND LITTLE WOMEN 1832 Louisa May Alcott is born in Germantown, Pennsylvania, on November 29, her father’s birthday; she is the second of four children of Abigail “Abba” Alcott and Amos Bronson, a teacher and educational reformer. Also born this year are Horatio Alger and Lewis Carroll; Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who will become one of Alcott’s favorite authors, dies. 1834 Struggling financially and in search of work, Bronson moves his family to Boston, nearer the support of longtime friend Ralph Waldo Emerson and Abba’s family. Bronson opens the Temple School, based on his controversial teaching methods. 1835 5 Abba gives birth to her third child, Elizabeth Sewall Alcott. Samuel Langhorne Clemens, known as Mark Twain, is born. 1836 Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Bronson Alcott, and other philosophical and literary scholars in the area form what becomes known as the Transcendentalist Club. Emerson pub lishes Nature, an essay explaining the philosophy of transcen dentalism, which asserts God’s existence in man and nature, and individual intuition as the highest source of knowledge. 1837 Victoria becomes queen of England. 1838 Charles Dickens’s novels Oliver Twist (1837-1839) and Nicholas Nickleby (1838-1839) attain great popularity. 1840 Forced to close the Temple School—parents alarmed by Bronson’s teaching methods and his admittance of a mulatto child have withdrawn their children—Bronson Alcott moves his family to Concord, Massachusetts, where Emerson and Thoreau live. Louisa attends the Concord Academy, run by Thoreau and his brother. The fourth and final Alcott child, Abigail May (called May), is born. 1841 Emerson publishes Essays. 1843 Bronson cofounds a utopian communal farm, Fruitlands, in the rural town of Harvard, Massachusetts; he and his family live there until the experiment fails in 1844. 1844 Emerson publishes Essays: Second Series. 1845 With an inheritance left to Abba, the family purchases a house in Concord, named Hillside, where Alcott finally has a room of her own. 1847 The novels Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë and Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë are published. 1848 Alcott creates the Flower Fables stories for Emerson’s young daughter Ellen. Later in the year Alcott writes her first adult story, “The Rival Painters: A Tale of Rome. ” The Alcotts move back to Boston, where Abba finds employment as one of the nation’s first social workers. 1849 Alcott creates a family newspaper called the Olive Leaf Pub lication begins of Dickens’s novel David Copperfield. Alcott writes her first novel, The Inheritance, which is not published until 1996. 1850 Emerson’s Representative Men and Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter are published. 1851 Peterson’s Magazine publishes Alcott’s poem “Sunlight” under the pseudonym Flora Fairfield; it is her first published work. To help support their family, Alcott and her sisters find jobs teaching and sewing. Hawthorne’s The House of the Seven Gables and Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick are published. 1852 The Boston periodical the Olive Branch publishes “The Rival Painters: A Tale of Rome. ” Hawthorne purchases Hillside, giv ing the Alcotts some financial security. Alcott and her sister Anna open a school in the parlor of their home in Boston. Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin is published. 1853 Bronson goes on a lecture tour in the Midwest. 1854 Alcott’s Flower Fables, dedicated to Ellen Emerson, is pub lished; her short story “The Rival Prima Donnas” appears in the Saturday Evening Gazette. Thoreau’s Walden; or, Life in the Woods is published. 1855 The family moves to Walpole, New Hampshire, although Alcott remains in Boston, teaching; she attends lectures by the liberal clergyman and reformer Theodore Parker. She spends the summer in Walpole, where she organizes the Wal pole Amateur Dramatic Company. The first edition of Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass appears. 1857 The Alcott family returns to Concord; with money from friends, including Emerson, they purchase Orchard House (where Alcott will later write Little Women). 1858 Elizabeth Alcott dies of scarlet fever. Anna announces her engagement to John Pratt, whom she will marry in 1860. Alcott is greatly unsettled by the loss of her two sisters. 1859 Bronson becomes superintendent of schools in Concord, receiving a salary of $100 per year. Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species is published. 1860 Alcott writes her novel Moods. The Boston Theater Company produces her play Nat Bachelor’s Pleasure Trip. Abraham Lin coln becomes president of the United States. Publication begins of Dickens’s Great Expectations. 1861 Alcott starts work on an autobiographical novel, tentatively titled Success (it will be published in 1873 as Work: A Story of Experience). The American Civil War begins. 1862 Henry David Thoreau dies, and Alcott writes the poem “Thoreau’s Flute” in his honor. At the end of the year she trav els to Washington, D. C., to serve as a Union Army nurse. 1863 Lincoln issues the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1. Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper anonymously serializes Alcott’s story, “Pauline’s Passion and Punishment, ” and awards her a prize of $100. After working as a nurse for only six weeks, Alcott becomes seriously ill with typhoid; she returns to Con cord where she receives treatment with calomel, a medicine containing mercury that permanently damages her health. While convalescing, Alcott reworks her wartime letters to her family into a collection titled Hospital Sketches; it is serialized in the Boston Commonwealth, an abolitionist paper, and pub lished in book form later in the year to great praise. Alcott receives almost $600 from writing this year. Over the next sev eral years she will write many gothic stories, either anony mously or under a pseudonym. 1864 The Rose Family: A Fairy Tale and On Picket Duty, and Other Tales are published in January. In December Moods is pub lished but is not well received. Horatio Alger publishes his first boys’ book, Frank’s Campaign. 1865 Bronson leaves his superintendent post. Anna and John give birth to a child, who will become Alcott’s heir. Alcott travels to Europe as an assistant to an invalid, Anna Weld; there she meets Ladislas Wisniewski, the inspiration for Laurie in Little Women. The Confederates surrender at Appomattox, marking the end of the Civil War. Lincoln is assassinated on April 14. Lewis Carroll publishes Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. 1867 Alcott accepts editorship of the children’s magazine Merry’s Museum for $500 per year. 1868 She moves from Boston to Concord to care for her family while continuing her editorship; she will continue to move back and forth between the two cities until her death. Thomas Niles of the publisher Roberts Brothers commissions Alcott to write a book for girls; she completes the first part of Little Women in six weeks, and it is published to great acclaim. Bolstered by its suc cess, she writes an equally popular second part at the rate of a chapter per day. 1869 The second part of Little Women is published under the title Good Wives. Alcott travels to Canada and Maine to recover her health, compromised by the rapid pace with which she wrote Little Women. She receives $8, 500 in royalties and pays all her family’s debts.
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Name of sisters in Little Women. Little women csfd. Little women audiobook. Where did the little women grow up. Little women movie showtimes. Little women atlanta. " A book for girls being wanted by a certain publisher, she hastily scribbled a little story describing a few scenes and adventures in the lives of herself and sisters—though boys were more in her line—and with very slight hopes of success sent it out to seek its fortune. Things always went by contraries with Jo. Her first book, labored over for years, and launched full of the high hopes and ambitious dreams of youth, floundered on its voyage, though the wreck continued to float long afterward, to the profit of the publisher at least. The hastily written story, sent away with no thought beyond the few dollars it might bring, sailed with a fair wind and a wise pilot at the helm into public favor, and came home heavily laden with an unexpected cargo of gold and glory. " So Louisa May Alcott vicariously describes the story behind the publication of the book that made her a celebrity overnight with an instant success most authors never dare to dream of. Alcott never intended, however, for Little Women to be her magnum opus; she only needed a little money. Isn't irony wonderful? The novel was published in two volumes in 1868-1869. note Little Women is the story of four sisters, modeled after Alcott and her own, whose once-prosperous New England family has fallen into genteel poverty. Now all young teenagers, the book chronicles their various small attempts to cope with their newly-reduced status, get along with each other, and just generally grow up while their father is away during The American Civil War. The March sisters are: Meg (short for Margaret), the brunette beauty of the family and the responsible first-born who tries to set a good example for her sisters, make Jo behave more like a lady and Amy less like one, and look less poor than she is in front of her rich friends, the Moffat family. Good-hearted and motherly, but also constantly fights against vanity, self-indulgence and discontent, especially given she's the sister who can most clearly remember the family's prosperous past. Jo (a Tomboyish Name for Josephine): Alcott's Author Avatar and, by 19th-century standards, a tomboy—i. e., she likes to stand with her hands in her pockets, whistle, and exclaim "Christopher Columbus! ". Jo generally tends to occupy the opposite end of the Sliding Scale of Idealism vs. Cynicism from her sisters, being plain faced, bold, ambitious, blunt, terribly unladylike, and the unofficial protagonist. Like Alcott, she is a devoted writer. Beth (short for Elizabeth): Shy, quiet, tranquil and gentle, practically perfect in every way except for her utter timidity around everyone and everything but her family. Jo's closest confidante along with Meg, as her real-life counterpart Lizzie was to Alcott (the one counterpart, in fact, whose name wasn't changed). Like the real Beth, she becomes ill with scarlet fever and remains fragile and weak long after recovery. Amy: The yellow-haired, graceful, vain but essentially good-hearted youngest child who grows from a Spoiled Brat into a Naïve Everygirl, and very pointedly Jo's opposite. Her talent—which, she famously laments, isn't exactly genius-level—lies in the visual arts. Ironically, when the real-life May Alcott was later given the opportunity to illustrate her sister's books, the result was panned as woefully amateurish. Their closest friend is their wealthy old neighbor's newly-arrived grandson: handsome, mischievous, half-Italian Theodore "Laurie" Laurence. He quickly befriends Jo, and the others soon after. Women in town wonder to which sister their mother is planning to marry him off, but in fact they are all Just Friends, Like Brother And Sisters —which becomes a significant plot point later. Other characters include: their strong-willed mother Margaret, whom they call "Marmee" (in the 19th-century New England accent, "Marmee" would be pronounced "Mommy"); their father, a gentleman reverend ruined financially through helping a friend (an idealized version of Louisa's father, prominent Transcendentalist Bronson Alcott); their maid and friend, Hannah; Laurie's tutor, John Brooke, who falls in love with Meg; and their nightmare of a meddling relative, Aunt March, for whom Jo and later Amy work as a companion. The book is fraught with Shout Outs and Homages to Pilgrim's Progress and Anvilicious Aesops at a time before that was considered cliche. The first edition of Little Women ended with Meg and John's engagement. With no Fora or wikis to conduct their Ship-to-Ship Combat, the fans were left to bombard Alcott with letters demanding a sequel, mostly to see Jo and Laurie get married, in the earliest case of Shipping as we know it today. Alcott duly wrote the sequel, but with the firm resolve that " I won't marry Jo to Laurie to please anybody. " Thus came Part II, occasionally published separately under the title Good Wives in the UK. Meg and John get married and have their twins, Beth dies, Amy goes to Paris, and Jo turns down Laurie and goes to New York to pursue her career. Laurie, faced with the dilemma of killing himself or going to Europe, opts for the latter, where he falls in love with and marries Amy. Manfully supporting her parents while grieving for her dead little sister, life improves for Jo near the end when she marries her beta reader and best friend, a wise German professor, Friedrich Bhaer, and Aunt March dies and leaves Jo her estate, Plumfield. Adaptations: The book has been adapted to film several times. Two silent versions in 1917 (UK) and 1918 (US). Two sound films in 1933 and 1949. A made-for-TV version in 1978. A feature film adaptation in 1994, featuring Winona Ryder as Jo, Gabriel Byrne as Bhaer, Claire Danes as Beth, Christian Bale as Laurie, and Susan Sarandon as Marmee. A modern-day adaptation in 2018, coinciding with the 150th anniversary of the book. Lea Thompson plays Marmee, Sarah Davenport plays Jo, Allie Jennings plays Beth, Melanie Stone plays Meg, Taylor Murphy plays Amy, Lucas Grabeel plays Laurie, and Bart Johnson plays Mr. March. A film adaptation in 2019, directed by Greta Gerwig and starring Emma Watson as Meg, Saoirse Ronan as Jo, Florence Pugh as Amy, Eliza Scanlen as Beth, Laura Dern as Marmee, Timothée Chalamet as Laurie, and Meryl Streep as Aunt March. It has also spent time in other media: A miniseries adaptation was produced for the BBC in 2017, penned by acclaimed playwright and screenwriter Heidi Thomas. It starred Emily Watson as Marmee, Maya Hawke as Jo, Willa Fitzgerald as Meg, Kathryn Newton as Amy, Annes Elwy as Beth, and Jonah Hauer-King as Laurie. Four anime works (three TV series, including one called Jo's Boys but actually based on Little Men, and a TV special). A musical and an opera. A professional fanfic — Geraldine Brooks' March, telling the story of Mr. March, the mostly-absent father from Little Women — won a Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Pemberley Digital, the YouTube company behind The Lizzie Bennet Diaries, adapted this story into The March Family Letters, video-diary entries which are being sent to Marmee while she's away for a year. A modern graphic-novel retelling, called Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy, was released in February 2019, that relocates the family to modern-day Brooklyn written by author Rey Terciero and illustrator Bre Indigo. Also, despite sharing the same names for the protagonists, this one has absolutely nothing to do with Burst Angel. Note: Little Men and Jo's Boys tropes are NOT LISTED HERE. They can be found and added to this page. Little Women provide examples of: Adaptational Attractiveness: Save for Meg who is always described as being the prettiest of the March girls (and very pretty generally) and the adult Amy who grows to be "attractive and pleasing to the face" though not beautiful, the book makes no attempt to hide the very ordinary looks of some of its protagonists (especially Jo and Professor Bhaer), which obviously isn't going to work onscreen. In the 1994 film, Professor Bhaer, who is described in the novel as overweight and rather grizzled, is played by Gabriel Byrne. In the 1949 version, he's played by the handsome and dashing Italian actor Rossano Brazzi, who was only 32 at the time. The very handsome Ian Bohen plays him in the 2018 adaptation. Louis Garrel, from the 2019 version, is one of the most attractive actors to portray Friedrich in live-action. Likewise Jo, who in the book is described as "tall and brown, with big hands and feet and a flyway look to her" is played by petite, fair-skinned June Allyson in the 1949 film and Winona Ryder in the 1994 film. Katharine Hepburn probably comes closest to averting this; while Hepburn was certainly striking, in the film she is all coltish limbs and angular face, definitely not a classic beauty like Allyson or Ryder. Saoirse Ronan in the 2019 version is also fair-skinned and pretty, although with her stronger, more angular features, she does stand out as less of a classic beauty than her sisters, much like Hepburn did in 1933. Marmee is described as "greying and not particularly handsome". She's been played by Susan Sarandon and Mary Astor in notable adaptations. Spring Byington in the 1933 version is closer to the book. To a lesser extent, Meg, the novel does describe her as very pretty and the beauty of the family but also as "plump" (though considering the time-period of the book, this doesn't mean "fat" or "overweight" but rather shapely and womanly), which doesn't describe the figures of the actresses that portrayed her. Age Lift: The 1949 film version portrays Amy as a teenager, with Beth being a child several years younger than the other three. note Affectionate Nickname: "Teddy" for Laurie, which he is called by childhood friend Jo. Almost Kiss: Subverted in the 1994 film. Jo and Professor Bhaer are about to kiss at the opera, when a stage hand makes a noise to interrupt them. They share a laugh, before going right on with the kiss. Alpha Bitch: Amy's classmate, Jenny Snow, and, to a lesser degree, her artistic rival, May Chester. Author Appeal: Professor Bhaer, according to some theories. Author Filibuster: Some of the Author Tract pages mentioned below can get a little boring and preachy. Alcott pleads guilty when she writes about Jo's experience writing a novel that might more accurately "have been called an essay or a sermon, so intensely moral was it. " Author Tract: The entire series has whole pages of Alcott's views on life, from respecting old maids to staying true to your faith. Backup Twin: They did this in the 1979 TV-film adaptation; Eve Plumb had the role of Beth, and she was so popular they brought her back as an identical cousin. Be Careful What You Wish For: The old "a week of all play and no work" experiment takes up a chapter of Little Women. The March sisters decide to take the entire week off without doing any chores at all, but they eventually realize that a whole week of doing nothing can get extremely boring, along with the fact that even the most basic household chores need to be done when you're on vacation. In "Jo Meeets Apollyon, " Amy causes all of the trouble by burning Jo's book after Jo refuses to let her go on an outing with the older siblings and adults. This means everyone is angry at Amy, who at first is only apologetic because she feels "unloved". The next day, she whines that "crosspath" Jo isn't taking her skating for the last ice, and Meg gives her permission to go for an opportunity for Jo to forgive her little sister. This "suited" Amy fine, and she goes, only to fall through a rotten patch of ice due to Jo not warning her. Then it means no more outings for Amy for a while as she needs her bedrest. Best Friends-in-Law: Jo and Laurie become this when Laurie marries Amy. Better as Friends: Jo feels this way about Laurie. She says that the two of them are Too Much Alike ever to pursue a romantic relationship successfully. Laurie disagrees until he marries Amy (the sister who is most different from Jo), after which he tells Jo he's happy to love her as his sister. Betty and Veronica: In the 1987 anime series, Laurie and Anthony (an anime-only character) are this to Jo... who doesn't really fancy either one of them. Bookworm: Jo loves literature and is also a devoted writer. Brainy Brunette: Jo has thick chestnut hair and is a wildly intelligent and imaginative girl. Arguably, Meg is this as well, since she does work as a tutor for a rich family. Break the Haughty: Amy's particular besetting sin is vanity, and thus it gets several small tweaks throughout — most notably when she tries to be In with the In Crowd at school by bringing in forbidden pickled limes, is caught and gets humiliated by her Stern Teacher. Meg gets a similar gentle smackdown while trying to play 'fine lady' at the Moffats'. Broken Aesop: Amy dumps Fred Vaughn, deciding it's wrong to marry someone you don't love for their money, only to turn around and fall in love with her wealthy childhood friend Laurie. This is probably more of an author fumble. It's supposed to be taken for granted that Amy is the perfect girl for Laurie (Jo even says he needs a refined girl in her " Like Brother and Sister " speech), and they actually do fall in love over time. Still, the fact that Amy gets true love AND a rich man doesn't help. Laurie himself teases her about this, to Amy's utter mortification, and she hustles to assure him that she'd never, ever, ever marry him unless she loved him. The Caretaker: Jo, towards Beth in the second half of Little Women. Canon Foreigner: David March in the 1987 anime. Caught in the Rain: When Jo shares an umbrella with Mr. Bhaer, a proposal soon follows. Childhood Marriage Promise: The 1994 film plays with this; Laurie promises Amy that he'll kiss her one day, when she worries about dying of scarlet fever without being kissed. They end up marrying. Note that there is no such exchange in the novel. Collateral Angst: It's painful for Beth to die young; it's more painful for Jo to live without her dead little sister. As Louisa knew firsthand. Cool Old Lady: Marmee is a kind and doting mother to her daughters, dishing out sound life advice and encouraging them to follow their dreams. Averted with Aunt March, to the point that it's Lampshaded: "Some old people keep young at heart in spite of wrinkles and grey hair, can sympathize with children's little cares and joys, make them feel at home, and can hide wise lessons under pleasant plays, giving and receiving friendship in the sweetest way. But Aunt March had not this gift. " Cross-Cast Role: An In-Universe example in the 2019 film, with Meg in such a role for the play she and her sisters are performing. Deadpan Snarker: From a nineteenth-century perspective, Jo and Laurie, the latter especially. Did Not Get the Girl: Laurie because said girl didn't even want him in the first place, and made it very clear when he spoke to her. Disproportionate Retribution: Amy burns Jo's manuscript of the book she'd labored over for years in order to make her sister "pay" for the not-exactly-heinous crime of not allowing her to accompany the adults to the theatre. It's even worse since Jo promised to take her on another outing, as well as pointing out Hannah was going to take her and Beth to see the play the next week. The next day, with none of this resolved, Jo and Laurie go skating. Amy, once again snubbed by Jo, follows them anyway. She skates on a dangerous part of the ice, but she doesn't know this. Jo does, but doesn't warn her. Amy almost drowns as a result, and Jo suffers a serious My God, What Have I Done?. Distracted from Death: A few adaptations handle Beth's death this way. In the 1994 film, Jo gets up from Beth's deathbed when the wind opens some shutters. When she returns to the bedside, Beth has died. In the 2019 film, Jo wakes up to find Beth's bed empty, her body having already been removed. In Mark Adamo's 1998 opera, Beth falls asleep after her last conversation with Jo, and then Jo dozes off too. When she wakes up, she finds that Beth has died in her sleep. Easily Forgiven: Subverted. This is how every good person should be in this time period, but Jo cannot forgive Amy for burning her manuscript. She only forgives Amy when the latter nearly dies from drowning in a pond, and when her temper led to her not warning Amy of the danger. Embarrassing First Name: Laurie is not too fond of being a Theodore because he objects to the schoolboy nickname Dora; he insists upon being called Laurie... a feminine name to modern readers. This is referenced in an episode of Friends where Joey reads the book. He first assumes that Laurie is a girl, and that Jo must be a boy. Lampshaded as well in the 1994 movie when Jo mentions Laurie to Professor Bhaer... and he thinks she's talking about one of her sisters. Executive Meddling In-Universe: Jo meets several publishers who won't publish her work unless she piles up the tragedy and gore and cuts the aesops because "Morals don't sell. " Falling into His Arms: Done for laughs in the in the Winona Ryder film. Meg, Jo, Laurie and John Brooke return from an evening at the theater, and as they exit the carriage, Jo raves about the lead actress being "a wonderful swooner. " Jo: If only I were the swooning type! [ dramatically falling from the carriage] Laurie: [ sardonically, watching her fall] If only I were the catching type. Fashion Hurts: But oh, my, we must be elegant or die! Felony Misdemeanor: To the contemporary audience: Amy's teacher hits her for bringing in pickled limes. This was considered perfectly reasonable at the time, but Marmee doesn't approve of it and pulls her out of school in response. The 2019 version changes the reason for the punishment to Amy drawing a caricature of her teacher. While it keeps the Disproportionate Retribution effect intact, it makes it clearer to modern audiences to see how a teacher might see that as a punishable infraction while still being able to sympathize with Marmee pulling Amy out of school, and also foreshadowing Amy's artistic talents. Fiery Redhead: Jo's hair is chestnut brown, which at least has a hint of red in it. She is, however, almost always a redhead in The Musical, as that is how she was initially played by Sutton Foster. One of the anime adaptations portrays her as a freckled blonde. She's also played by redhead Saoirse Ronan in the 2019 film. The Film of the Book: Many, including 1933, with Katharine Hepburn as Jo and Joan Bennett as Amy. 1949, with June Allyson as Jo, Peter Lawford as Laurie, and Elizabeth Taylor as Amy. 1978, a Made-for-TV Movie with Susan Dey as Jo, Meredith Baxter Birney as Meg, Eve Plumb as Beth, Greer Garson as Aunt March, and William Shatner as Friedrich Bhaer. 1994, with Winona Ryder as Jo, Susan Sarandon as Marmee, Claire Danes as Beth, Kirsten Dunst and Samantha Mathis as Amy, Gabriel Byrne as Fritz, and Christian Bale as Laurie. 2018 saw a modern adaptation released; Sarah Davenport plays Jo, Lea Thompson plays Marmee, Lucas Grabeel plays Laurie, Bart Johnson plays Mr. March, and Ian Bohen features as Professor Bhear. 2019, with Saoirse Ronan as Jo, Emma Watson as Meg, Laura Dern as Marmee and Meryl Streep as Aunt March. First-Name Basis: In the middle of their Relationship Upgrade, Jo slips and calls Professor Bhaer "Fritz, " which is what she's always called him in her head. Flower Motifs: While Laurie and Amy are taking a walk through a rose garden, Laurie gets pricked by a red rose he tried to pick while thinking of Jo, whom he last saw when she turned down his marriage proposal. Amy then gives him a thorn-free white rose. Laurie instantly thinks of the color symbolism - red roses are for romance, white roses are for funerals, and he wonders if this is either a sign about his changing feelings for the two sisters or an omen of death. He chides himself for being so superstitious and laughs it off, but since eventually he and Amy fall in love and Beth dies, it doesn't sound so funny. Foreshadowing: When introducing Beth, the narrator makes a remark about how her type of quiet kindness and cheerfulness is never fully appreciated until it is gone forever; the tone is such that there might as well be an arrow pointing to Beth with "DOOMED" written on it in letters of fire. Four-Girl Ensemble: The original! : Meg, the oldest, is the lecturer and mature example-setter who wants a husband and family; Jo is the tomboy who wants a career, fame, and fortune; Beth is the shy, gentle and musical one who wants to stay with her family; Amy is the vain and spoiled but later artistic and flirty young lady who wants to marry someone with money. Four-Temperament Ensemble: Meg is phlegmatic, Jo is choleric, Beth is melancholic and Amy is sanguine. Forbidden Fruit: Meg is poised and ready to reject John Brooke's marriage proposal out of fear, until Aunt March shows up and, unaware of her decision, orders her not to accept him. A literal example are the pickled limes Amy brings to school despite being forbidden to do so by the stern teacher Mr. Davis. Full-Name Ultimatum: When Aunt March calls Jo "Josephine. " Gag Haircut: Jo accidentally burns a bit of Meg's hair off while trying to curl it before Belle Gardiner's coming out ball. Thankfully she's able to hide it with a bow. Gentle Giant: Professor Bhaer is as tall as he's kind. Get a Hold of Yourself, Man! : Laurie gets this treatment from Amy after Jo rejects him. It works very well. The Glasses Gotta Go: In the 1994 film, John Brooke stops wearing his spectacles as he begins courting Meg. The Glorious War of Sisterly Rivalry: Amy and Jo are often shown to be at loggerheads, both being of stubborn and fiery temperaments and often holding wildly different views on social norms and issues. They mellow out as they get older, with Beth's death bringing them closer together. Averted with Jo and Meg, who are actually very close despite how different they are. The closest to "fights" that they have consist of Meg telling Jo off for Saying Too Much or things like that. Jo even shows jealousy of Meg's boyfriend and later husband John Brooke. Not out of malice, but because she's scared of losing Meg's emotional support. Also averted with Meg and Amy, the latter being Meg's "pet, " although she does sometimes tell her off too, and even further averted with Beth, who adores and is adored by all her sisters, especially Jo. Gossipy Hens: The old ladies that wonder if Meg and Jo are Gold Diggers in training under Marmee's direction, and unknowingly drive Meg to an Heroic BSoD when she hears them. They also appear in the 40's movie adaptations, and are overheard by the hidden Beth and Amy instead. Grief Song: "Days of Plenty" from the musical, sung by Marmee after Beth's death. More of a Grief Score, but "Valley of The Shadow" by Thomas Newman from the 1994 movie. Happily Married: Parents Margaret and Robert, Amy and Laurie, Meg and John, Jo and Fritz. Happy Rain: It starts to rain in the 1994 film when Jo accepts Professor Bhaer's proposal. Have a Gay Old Time From the beginning of part two of Little Women: I can only say with Mrs. March, "What can you expect when you have four gay girls in the house? " The chapter All Alone contains this doozy: Jo: Mothers are the best lovers in the world, but I don't mind whispering to Marmee that I'd like to try all kinds. It's very curious, but the more I try to satisfy myself with all sorts of natural affections, the more I seem to want. From Jo's Boys: Uncle Laurie was never happier than when rowing, riding, playing, or lounging with two gay girls beside him. Jo submits her story to a newspaper called, ahem, The Spread Eagle. Held Gaze: In the 1994 adaptation starring Winona Ryder and Christian Bale, Jo and Laurie share one before Laurie's Anguished Declaration of Love and their Big Damn Kiss. It's actually kind of funny because on Jo's side, it seems more like she's frozen in fear. The 1994 adaptation also includes another Held Gaze between Jo and Prof. Bhaer at the end before she hugs him, ecstatic that he's not leaving. Heroes Want Redheads: Laurie wants chestnut-haired Jo, but doesn't get her in the end since she never wanted him back. Hidden Heart of Gold: Laurie's grandfather turns out to be quite a softie, especially towards Beth. High Class Gloves: Meg and Jo are invited to a New Year's party. Meg is aghast that Jo has ruined her white gloves with lemonade, and thus can't dance. Buying new gloves isn't an option with the March family's current state of near-poverty, so Jo's only solution is for each girl to wear one of Meg's nice gloves and carry one of the bad gloves in their other hand so nobody can see that its ruined. Meg isn't enthusiastic (Jo's larger hands will ruin her nice glove), but has no alternative. Ironically Jo doesn't even dance with anyone except Laurie, and they did that out in the hall where nobody would've noticed her lack of gloves. Hopeless Suitor: Laurie for Jo, forcing him to Settle for Sibling after being rejected. Hot-Blooded: Jo is very loud, a Motor Mouth at times and prone to saying the wrong thing. Hot Drink Cure: In the 1994 film, when Amy is sulking because she has a cold and can't attend a play with her two oldest sisters, Beth promises to make her ginger tea. Ill Girl: In keeping with the tragedy of her real-life counterpart Lizzie, Beth has always been delicate, but after she contracts scarlet fever as a little girl her health continuously decays until her death as a young adult. Truth in Television, as scarlet fever was a much more serious illness then; one of the frequent complications was rheumatic heart disease, ie. serious damage to the major valves—wholly untreatable back then. In the last chapter, Amy and Laurie's little daughter, named after Beth, is frail and sickly like her namesake, and her mother worries that she'll die young too. Although the sequels reveal that her health eventually improves and she lives to adulthood after all. Important Haircut: Jo decides to sell her hair to pay for Marmee's train ticket to help their wounded father. Impoverished Patrician: The Marches were once very well-to-do. Amy acts like they still are. Incorruptible Pure Pureness: Beth. Out of all the sisters, she's the most pure and innocent, and does nothing but try to please others. In Medias Res: The Musical adaptation. I Should Write a Book About This: It's popular in film adaptations to have Jo finally achieve literary success when she writes a book about her sisters. In the novel, Jo writes a well-received short story after Beth's death which is wildly successful, but it's never stated what the story is about. She does write a book about her sisters in Jo's Boys, though, and even though she only wrote it for money, it's a massive success. It's for a Book: Jo actually does research poisons for her horror stories. Kill the Cutie: Beth. Especially in the 1949 film where she's the youngest and cutest sister. Killed Offscreen: Most of the screen adaptations avoid actually showing Beth's death, as does the Broadway musical. Of the best-known versions, only the 1994 film, the 1998 opera, and the 2017 miniseries give her an onscreen/onstage death scene. Kind Hearted Cat Lover: Beth loves taking care of her pet cats. Lampshade Hanging: It's Laurie himself who points out the Broken Aesop of Amy marrying him after she decided against marrying Fred Vaughn for his money. Amy responds she would still love him if he was poor and he believes her. Laser-Guided Karma: The whole debacle of "Jo Meets Apollyon" happens becuase Amy wants to go on an outing and Jo tells her no, while promising to take her another time. Amy the next day calls Jo a "crosspatch" for not taking her skating, even though Jo went to cool her temper about Amy burning her book, and the younger sister happily tags along when Meg suggests using the opportunity to make amends. After Amy falls through the ice, due to Jo not warning her in a fit of spite, she has to spend the next few days if not weeks in bed, which means she won't be going on outings for a while. Lethal Chef: Jo in Chapter 11 of Little Women, Experiments. Averted in the next chapter, Camp Laurence, which takes place the following month: when John Brooke asks who can make good coffee, Meg nominates Jo - who had spent the time between the two chapters taking cookery lessons. Meg herself experiences some of this during the fateful jam incident in her first year of marriage. Like Brother and Sister: Jo and Laurie end up like this. Limited Wardrobe: The entire March family, and pretty much the whole cast, in the Nippon Animation adaptation, even after Aunt March buys the girls each a new wardrobe. Their outfits do change slightly during the series, and they do wear outfits appropriate for the weather, at least. Literalist Snarking: "I wonder if you will ever grow up, Laurie, " said Meg in a matronly tone. "I'm doing my best, ma'am, but can't get much higher, I'm afraid, as six feet is about all men can do in these degenerate days, " responded the young gentleman, whose head was about level with the little chandelier. Lonely Rich Kid: Laurie, which is why the March sisters let him join in on their games. Long Hair Is Feminine: Everyone admires Jo when she sells her hair to get money for her family as it's her "only beauty". Love Epiphany: Laurie has one of these while recovering from Jo's rejection. Love Hurts: Poor Laurie. In the book and in the 1994 version he even wells up with Manly Tears when Jo rejects his proposal. Love Letter Lunacy: A prank by Laurie. The victims — Meg and John. The one in charge of smoothing things over — Jo. Love Potion: The sisters perform a play with a villain who purchases a love potion from a witch, along with poison to kill his romantic rival (probably to avoid that "power of true love" loophole). The witch, however, double-crosses him, stops the princess from drinking the potion, and slips the villain his own poison. Makeup Is Evil: Meg penitently confesses to having worn makeup among other sins at a party, and her mother says that she was wrong to let Meg stay with these people without knowing them better. However, it's less the makeup itself and more the general vanity and shallowness of the people she's with, and the fact that she was attempting to act like someone she's not. Malaproper: Amy... oh, Amy. "I know what I mean, and you needn't be 'statirical' about it! It's proper to use good words and improve your 'vocabilary. '" Mr. Imagination: Beth's "little world was peopled with imaginary friends, " and she cares for her sisters' cast-off dolls as if they were invalids in a hospital. Most Writers Are Writers: The protagonist Jo is a writer and is pretty much an Author Avatar for Louisa May Alcott. Mrs. Hypothetical: Jo realizes she is in danger of, as she sees it, losing Meg when she finds out Meg has been scribbling "Mrs. John Brooke. " The Musical: Premiered on Broadway in 2005 and has been a staple of community theatre and high schools ever since. Neat Freak: Aunt March. New England No Antagonist: As it's a Coming-of-Age Story the main conflicts come from the Civil War keeping the father away, scarlet fever keeping Beth ill, sexism of the time preventing Jo from selling a story, and a few arguments between the sisters. Of Corset Hurts: In the 1994 film, Marmee is prone to rants about how corsets are responsible for womankind's reputation as weak and ill ( taking her cue from her creator, who did the same in a number of her stories), and when Meg gives in to pressure from her stylish friends, there is the obligatory scene where she is painfully laced into a corset by a strong-armed maid. Old Maid: Near the end of Part II, Jo is almost 25 and worries about never marrying and becoming an old maid. The One Guy: Laurie. He's pretty much the only major male character in a series mainly about women. One Steve Limit: Inverted. Almost every main character is related to someone else with the same name; but they all have different nicknames. Elizabeth March = Beth. Elizabeth Laurence = Bess. John Brooke = John. John Brooke Jr. = Demi (short for "Demijohn") Josephine March I = Aunt March. Josephine March = Jo. Josephine Brooke = Josie. Margaret Curtis March = Marmee. Margaret March = Meg. Margaret Brooke = Daisy Robert March =? (We only know him as Father/Papa/Mr. March). Robert Bhaer = Rob Theodore Laurence = Laurie (Jo calls him Teddy). Theodore Bhaer = Teddy or Ted. Only Known by Their Nickname: Three of the four March sisters are routinely identified by shortened forms of their lengthy first names. Although the real names are given in the introductory chapter, they are rarely otherwise used in the novel and readers grow quite used to thinking of them as Meg, Jo, and Beth. (This creates a bit of confusion for some readers when Jo occasionally uses alternative nicknames for her sisters, like "Peggy" for Meg and "Betty" for Beth, both being common, old-fashioned nicknames for "Margaret" and "Elizabeth. ") Also Marmee, whose real name is never actually stated; it's understood that her name is Margaret (and Meg, and later Daisy, are named after her), but no character ever addresses her by her name. In the 1994 film adaptation, her name is changed to 'Abigail', the name of Alcott's real-life mother (albeit Abigail Alcott was most often known as 'Abba'). The same applies to Mr. March: we don't find out his real name until the final chapter introduces Jo's elder son, Rob, who is named after him. Who is himself usually called "Rob, " "Robby, " or "Robin, " while Teddy, like his mother, occasionally mixes it up, calling him "Bob" or "Bobby. " Paper Destruction of Anger: Amy burns Jo's manuscript in anger to punish her for not wanting to take her to see a play. Jo is enraged and attacks Amy, then runs upstairs and cries. Jo worked on her stories for years and she has just copied them and destroyed her old drafts. Parental Marriage Veto: Aunt March tries to impose one on Meg by virtue of her wealth, and fails. Platonic Life-Partners: Jo and Laurie are this in the first part of Little Women. Later, they become more Like Brother and Sister. Plucky Girl: All the sisters, but particularly Jo. Preacher's Kid: All the sisters, but they don't really fit under either type since they are fairly developed as characters, except Beth, who most fits under the Angelic type Princess for a Day: In "Vanity Fair", Meg attends a high class party... only to be humbled by ladies whispering behind her back about her and her family's poverty, and speculating that her mother intended to marry her to Laurie for his money. That and those dancing slippers really hurt. Proper Lady: Meg in the first novel and Amy once she grows up in the second novel. "If Amy was to go to court without any rehearsal, she'd know exactly what to do. " Race Lift: In the 2019 graphic novel modernization, Robert and Meg are fully African-American, and Beth and Amy are mixed race. Meg and Jo (who is white) are stepsisters in this version, while Beth and Amy are their half-sisters. Red Oni, Blue Oni: Jo and Amy to Meg and Beth. Jo and Amy are both fiery Red, Meg and Beth are the calm Blue. Relative Error: The 1994 film has a variation; Fritz calls at the March house and hears something about "Mr and Mrs Lawrence". Jo has to hurriedly run down the street to explain that it's her sister who is "Mrs Lawrence". Replacement Goldfish: Beth is this, to an extent, for Laurie's grandfather - as it happens, she has a personality very similar to that of his deceased granddaughter, whom he adored. The 1980 anime adaptation takes it a bit too literally and has Beth look exactly like the granddaughter, which freaks them both out. Sadist Teacher: Mr. Davis, Amy's schoolteacher, is a borderline example that probably closer to a Stern Teacher. He does whip Amy's hands, a common punishment at the time and have Amy stand in front of the class until recess (15 minutes), but the narration states the swats "weren't many or hard", as well as stating that if Amy had not acted so prideful, Mr. Davis would have let her off with a warning since she is one of his favorite students, and when Jo was sent to get Amy's things, he feels completely awful about the whole ordeal. His punishment varies depending on the adaptation, the 1933 and 1949 films have him make Amy stand on a platform with a slate reading "I am ashamed of myself, " (for drawing on her slate during class instead of bringing pickled limes to school) while other adaptations (including both anime series) have him whip her hands. He is about to whip her in the 1949 version, but has a change of heart and dismissed her right before he could. The 1978 miniseries has him actually whip her hands for drawing boarders on her slate, and made her stand in front of the class for at least several hours. In the 1994 film, not only is he a terrible teacher (if Jo's concerns about Amy's poor schoolwork is anything to go by), but also Amy says he believes that educating girls as is useless as bathing a cat. The 2017 miniseries plays the trope straightest (that we see), since he unnecessarily pulls Amy up by her hair before he whips her hands hard enough they bleed, as well as feeling no guilt whatsoever until Jo gets Amy's things and scares him. The 2019 film has Amy struck on the hand hard enough to make it bleed, after she drew a (actually rather nice) picture of Mr. Davis on her slate instead of paying attention. Setting Update: The 2018 film and 2019 graphic novel move the setting to The Present Day. Settle for Sibling: Laurie's marriage to Amy, in a way. Though he actually became interested in Amy after Jo turned him down twice and likes Amy for herself, and never tried to shape her into a Jo replacement. Shipper on Deck: Jo is a Meg/Laurie shipper in Part I and a Beth/Laurie ditto in Part II. Ship Sinking: "I won't marry Jo to Laurie to please anybody! " Shout-Out: Contains many reference to The Pilgrim's Progress, as many of the chapter titles suggest ("Vanity Fair, " "Jo Meets Apollyon, " etc. ). The girls act out the story as children and often use Christian's struggles as analogies for their own problems. Shrinking Violet: Beth, who is The Quiet One and prefers imaginary friends to real ones. She finds it very difficult, even painful, to talk to people outside her immediate family, and stops going to school out of shyness. A Simple Plan: Jo's dinner party in Little Women; Amy's party in Little Women Part II Snooping Little Kid: In the 1949 movie, Beth (Margaret O'Brien) and Amy ( Elizabeth Taylor) fullfil the role in the Christmas party. Then they overhear some Gossipy Hens... Spirited Young Lady: Jo, given her outspoken, tomboy nature and her intellectual gifts. Though she starts off as more of a Tomboy, she gradually conforms a bit more to society's standards as she ages: witness her very domestic mending of Professor Bhaer's clothes as an adult. Meg plays the Proper Lady in contrast. Spoiled Brat: Amy, as a child, is prone to behave in a vain and self-centered way, especially if she doesn't get what she wants. Stealth Pun: In the last chapter, Jo's students call her "Mother Bhaer". One of her sons is named "Teddy" Bhaer, but that's coincidence: the stuffed toy didn't exist for another 35 years. Stock Foreign Name: Friedrich, for Professor Bhaer. Jo calls him "Fritz, " which is another example of the trope. Sweet and Sour Grapes: Laurie himself is the first to point out that Amy married him after learning her lesson not to marry Fred Vaughn for his money, although he is mostly teasing her. Textile Work Is Feminine: Jo takes up her sewing when Professor Bhaer arrives at her parents'. "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Amy gives one to Laurie in Nice for how he's handling his heartbreak over being rejected by Jo. He eventually agrees with Amy's belief that he has changed for the worse by becoming Idle Rich. Although it comes from a place of love, Amy gives him a fairly brutal lecture about being lazy, overspending, smoking and not doing anything useful with himself. Title Drop: In the first chapter, Mr. March's letter ends with his hopes that the improvements the girls will make to their characters by the time he sees them again will make him "fonder and prouder than ever of my little women. " Tomboy and Girly Girl: Jo (Tomboy) and Amy ( Girly Girl). Jo is a headstrong Spirited Young Lady with a fiery temper who rejects female values and convention and finds sentimentality utterly repellent (except in books). Amy is a vain, spoiled artistic beauty, obsessed with her appearance, who aspires to be the perfect Proper Lady and marry a rich man. Too Good for This Sinful Earth: Beth is "a dear, and nothing more" and "the pet of the family, " virtuous and selfless. She's the only one who doesn't have extravagant ambitions in the chapter "Castles in the Air. " In the end, of course, she dies. Triumphant Reprise: Jo accepting Professor Bhaer's proposal in the 1994 film is followed by a swelling reprise of "Orchard House", the music that played over the opening credits. Trying Not to Cry: Jo promises herself (and Laurie) she won't cry at Meg's wedding. Umbrella of Togetherness: Jo and Professor Bhaer during his proposal at the end. Underdressed for the Occasion: Meg doesn't have a silk ball dress to wear when visiting Sallie Moffat, so she wears an old tarlatan instead. She actually makes a better impression in her simple and worn out clothing than she does when her friends dress her in borrowed splendor. Uncle Pennybags: Aunt March is not, and the narration snarkily points this out, when talking about how someone (not to hint Aunt March) should do something to help Beth's study of music. Old Mr. Laurence, on the other hand, sends over flowers and ice cream for the girls when he hears about how they gave away their Christmas breakfast to the Hummels, and Beth saw him respond to a woman asking a fishmonger to let her work in exchange for fish (and being denied) by grabbing the nearest fish and buying it for her. Unto Us a Son and Daughter Are Born: Meg's twins, Demi ("Demi-John") and Daisy ("Margaret") Unusual Euphemism: Jo's favorite exclamation of "Christopher Columbus! " counts as this, since it's generally understood to be her version of swearing. In the musical, Aunt March interrupts Bhaer's marriage proposal and he says it. Unwitting Instigator of Doom: the Hummels' children get scarlet fever, which is then passed to Beth. [[spoiler: She survives, but it "weakens her heart forever, " and she later dies. Victorious Childhood Friend: Little Women itself plays with the trope, as Laurie ultimately marries a girl he's known since childhood (Amy) but not the one he's harbored romantic feelings for since then (Jo). So Laurie was both unlucky and victorious. Vitriolic Best Buds: Jo and Laurie. This is exactly why she turns him down when he proposes to her. Wham Line What the Hell, Hero? : The whole family calls out Amy for burning Jo's manuscript, since it was Jo's only copy; even Meg is hurt on Jo's behalf. Once Amy starts to realize that what she did was Disproportionate Retribution, she tries to apologize but Jo is still fuming and refuses to forgive her sister. Jo then receives criticism in turn for not forgiving Amy in due course. When She Smiles: Roger Ebert had this to say of Ryder in his review of the 1994 film: Ebert:.. in the film, when she tells Friedrich that, yes, it's all right for him to love her, Ryder's face lights up with a smile so joyful it illuminates the theater. Widow's Weeds: Amy's black hair ribbon and jet-colored jewelry are mentioned. She wears them in mourning for her sister Beth.
Who is the tomboy in the movie Little women. Little women clip. Little women dvd 2018. What actors and actresses appeared in Little Women - 1958. Little black dresses women. Little women atlanta season torrent. Did Tonya from little women LA adopt her daughter. Critics Consensus With a stellar cast and a smart, sensitive retelling of its classic source material, Greta Gerwig's Little Women proves some stories truly are timeless. 95% TOMATOMETER Total Count: 380 92% Audience Score Verified Ratings: 18, 176 Little Women Ratings & Reviews Explanation Tickets & Showtimes The movie doesn't seem to be playing near you. Go back Enter your location to see showtimes near you. Little Women Videos Photos Movie Info Writer-director Greta Gerwig (Lady Bird) has crafted a Little Women that draws on both the classic novel and the writings of Louisa May Alcott, and unfolds as the author's alter ego, Jo March, reflects back and forth on her fictional life. In Gerwig's take, the beloved story of the March sisters - four young women each determined to live life on her own terms -- is both timeless and timely. Portraying Jo, Meg, Amy, and Beth March, the film stars Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh, Eliza Scanlen, with Timothée Chalamet as their neighbor Laurie, Laura Dern as Marmee, and Meryl Streep as Aunt March. Rating: PG (for thematic elements and brief smoking) Genre: Directed By: Written By: In Theaters: Dec 25, 2019 wide Studio: Sony Pictures Cast News & Interviews for Little Women Critic Reviews for Little Women Audience Reviews for Little Women Little Women Quotes Movie & TV guides.
What is the opening line in Little Women
Little women's business. 1 win & 7 nominations. See more awards » Videos Learn more More Like This Drama | Romance 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7. 3 / 10 X The social and class divisions in early 20th century England through the intersection of three families - the wealthy Wilcoxes, the gentle and idealistic Schlegels and the lower-middle class Basts. Stars: Matthew Macfadyen, Hayley Atwell, Philippa Coulthard An adaptation of the 1848 novel by William Makepeace Thackeray. Michael Palin, Olivia Cooke, Tom Bateman Mystery 7 / 10 A young woman moves to 17th century Amsterdam and hires a mysterious local miniaturist to furnish the dollhouse she received from her merchant husband as present, but the lifelike miniatures somehow start eerily foreshadowing her fate. Anya Taylor-Joy, Romola Garai, Hayley Squires 8 / 10 Jo March reflects back and forth on her life, telling the beloved story of the March sisters - four young women each determined to live life on their own terms. Director: Greta Gerwig Saoirse Ronan, Emma Watson, Florence Pugh Widow Dashwood and her three unmarried daughters, Elinor, Marianne and Margaret, inherit only a tiny allowance. So they move out of their grand Sussex home to a more modest cottage in... See full summary » Dominic Cooper, Charity Wakefield, Hattie Morahan History 7. 8 / 10 Television adaptation of Victor Hugo's classic novel, which follows Jean Valjean as he evades capture by the unyielding Inspector Javert. Set against a backdrop of post-Napoleonic France as unrest begins to grip the city of Paris once more. Dominic West, David Oyelowo, Adeel Akhtar 8. 2 / 10 This mini-series tells the story of Amy Dorrit, who spends her days earning money for the family and looking after her proud father, who is a long term inmate of Marshalsea debtors' prison... See full summary » Claire Foy, Tom Courtenay 7. 7 / 10 About Charlotte Heywood, a spirited and impulsive woman who moves from her rural home to Sanditon, a fishing village attempting to reinvent itself as a seaside resort. Crystal Clarke, Charlotte Spencer, Kate Ashfield Comedy 8. 1 / 10 Emma Woodhouse (Romola Garai) seems to be perfectly content, to have a loving father for whom she cares, friends, and a home. But Emma has a terrible habit, matchmaking. She cannot resist... See full summary » Michael Gambon, Jonny Lee Miller 8. 6 / 10 North and South is a four part adaptation of Elizabeth Gaskell's love story of Margaret Hale, a middle class southerner who is forced to move to the northern town of Milton. Daniela Denby-Ashe, Richard Armitage, Tim Pigott-Smith Biography 7. 4 / 10 A grieving widow discovers that her seemingly ideal husband lived many secret lives. Ruth Wilson, Iain Glen, Calam Lynch Thriller 6. 7 / 10 A bold new adaptation of Wilkie Collins' classic gothic novel. Jessie Buckley, Olivia Vinall, Dougray Scott Edit Cast Series cast summary: Maya Hawke... Jo March 3 episodes, 2017 Kathryn Newton... Amy March Dylan Baker... Mr. March Willa Fitzgerald... Meg March Annes Elwy... Beth March Emily Watson... Marmee March Julian Morris... John Brooke Jonah Hauer-King... Laurie Laurence Eleanor Methven... Hannah Michael Gambon... Mr. Laurence Angela Lansbury... Aunt March Nelly Henrion... Estelle 2 episodes, 2017 Storyline Dramatization of Louisa May Alcott's novel about the lives of the four March sisters during the American Civil War as they learn to navigate love, loss, and the trials of growing up. Plot Summary Add Synopsis Taglines: Based on the Beloved American Novel by Louisa May Alcott Details Release Date: 13 May 2018 (USA) See more » Also Known As: Little Women Company Credits Technical Specs Runtime: 176 min (entire series) See full technical specs » Did You Know? Connections Version of Little Women (2019) See more ».
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Little women movie essay. Little women audible. Little women laurie and amy. Предложить материал Если вы хотите предложить нам материал для публикации или сотрудничество, напишите нам письмо, и, если оно покажется нам важным, мы ответим вам течение одного-двух дней. Если ваш вопрос нельзя решить по почте, в редакцию можно позвонить. Адрес для писем: Телефон редакции: 8 (495) 229-62-00. In the book Little Women who are demi and Demeteri. Little boots for women. Little hats for women. Women in little bikinis. Little mermaid dress women. Who does Jo marry in Little Women. Little women fight.
Little women atlanta 2019. This movie is horrible compared to the original. The acting is empty and it's basically a repeat of the lines from the one with Winona Ryder. It's ridiculous that all they're doing nowadays is redoing literally EVERYTHING instead of growing some talent and imagination. This movie sucks hard. I hate it.
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