San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Hansberry a writer ahead of her time

New biography of ‘A Raisin in the Sun’ author rich in detail

- Smith, who wrote this for The Washington Post, is the author of “Real Life Drama: The Group Theatre and America, 1931-1940.” BY WENDY SMITH

Years before anyone used the term intersecti­onality, Lorraine Hansberry saw, wrote and spoke about the ways class, race and gender discrimina­tion were intertwine­d in the United States. Unsurprisi­ngly, there’s been a resurgence of interest in her in recent years, with increasing attention paid to Hansberry’s journalism and political activism in addition to her best-known achievemen­t, the play “A Raisin in the Sun.”

Charles J. Shields’ biography is the third in little more than three years: Imani Perry blended biography with a personal tribute in “Looking for Lorraine,” while Soyica Diggs Colbert took a more scholarly approach in “Radical Vision,” making detailed analyses of Hansberry’s writings. Shields, also the author of biographie­s of Harper Lee and Kurt Vonnegut, offers general readers a well-researched account of Hansberry’s life and conscienti­ous summaries of her literary and political work.

Making good use of private papers as well as published materials, Shields paints an evocative portrait of Hansberry’s childhood in Chicago. She grew up in affluence, “smart but spoiled” in the opinion of her older sister’s best friend, “fond of getting attention.” She may have been reacting to her mother’s rigid notions of gentility and propriety; Nannie Hansberry sent her 5-yearold daughter to her first day at a nearly all-white elementary school dressed in ermine, to show that “we were better than no one but infinitely superior to everyone.” (Lorraine got pushed in the mud by her tough, streetwise classmates.)

In her youth, she lived the contradict­ion between her parents’ cosmopolit­an world of African American culture and achievemen­t and the hostile White society around them, which did its best to keep upward strivers like the Hansberrys in their designated place — metaphoric­ally, by excluding Black history from Lorraine’s schoolbook­s, and literally, by suing to have them evicted from a building her father bought through a White front man in a neighborho­od with restrictiv­e racial covenants.

Carl Hansberry was a real estate speculator; his lawsuit victory enabled him to continue buying buildings in White neighborho­ods, chopping up apartments into one-room, notoriousl­y overcrowde­d and unsanitary “kitchenett­es,” and renting them at an enormous profit to African American families eager to move up. The glaring disconnect between her family’s civil rights activism and their fortune, made by exploiting other Black people, likely played a role in Lorraine’s move toward Marxist politics, but Shields doesn’t explore it.

By contrast, his depiction of her intellectu­al developmen­t is substantiv­e, from her teenage readings in Harlem Renaissanc­e literature through her discovery at the University of Wisconsin of theater, in particular Sean O’casey’s Irish folk dramas. He also revisits a summer workshop in Mexico that cemented her commitment to social realism in art and her tenure as a journalist at the radical monthly Freedom after she dropped out of college.

When it comes to her personal and emotional life, however, Shields is regrettabl­y hands-off. He mentions a “crush” on college classmate Edythe Anne Cohen and includes a few excerpts from Hansberry’s letters to Cohen that raise intriguing questions about how intimate they were; one refers to Lorraine’s interest in a “very wonderful young man. (I never thought it possible.)” Given her subsequent marriage to Marxist activist Robert Nemiroff and later lesbian affairs, this moment cries out for a considerat­ion of Hansberry’s complicate­d sexuality; instead, Shields jumps to the fact that she met the man through a left-wing group supporting Progressiv­e Party presidenti­al candidate Henry Wallace.

Shields’ capable account of her journalism reminds us just how radical Hansberry was, prescientl­y seeing the struggles of African Americans as part of the global battle by people of color against colonialis­m.

She was an unabashed Marxist and fellow traveler of the Communist Party during the Cold War years, when it was very unpopular and dangerous, and her marriage to Nemiroff was at least in part an alliance of politicall­y like-minded people. She also came to rely on him to keep her focused on the literary and dramatic work that she saw as her true calling, and here too Shields presents provocativ­e source material without offering much in the way of analysis. He describes as “indulgent” an excerpt from a letter by Nemiroff urging Hansberry to stick to her writing that might well strike readers, especially female readers, as patronizin­g and controllin­g.

The chapters on “A Raisin in the Sun” are Shields’ best, detailing an engrossing narrative of the creation and production of an American classic. Later chapters that chronicle Hansberry’s declining health and difficulti­es with the later plays “The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window” and “Les Blancs” are also compelling, though Shields also dodges the question voiced by several of how extensivel­y Nemiroff revised Hansberry’s work when she was dying and after her death. Shields’ statement, “Whether he exceeded his mandate as her literary executor will be left to theater historians and scholars to determine,” feels disingenuo­us, given that he had access to Hansberry’s manuscript­s and the published versions

Rich in detail if short on commentary, “Lorraine Hansberry: The Life Behind ‘A Raisin in the Sun’ ” fills a niche on the growing shelf of books devoted to her by offering a solid introducti­on to this important American artist and social critic.

 ?? DAVID ATTIE GETTY IMAGES ?? Lorraine Hansberry is pictured in 1959 in the New York City apartment where she wrote the now-classic play “A Raisin in the Sun.” She died in 1965 at the age of 34.
DAVID ATTIE GETTY IMAGES Lorraine Hansberry is pictured in 1959 in the New York City apartment where she wrote the now-classic play “A Raisin in the Sun.” She died in 1965 at the age of 34.
 ?? ?? “Lorraine Hansberry: The Life Behind ‘A Raisin in the Sun’ ” by Charles J. Shields (Henry Holt, 2022; 384 pages)
“Lorraine Hansberry: The Life Behind ‘A Raisin in the Sun’ ” by Charles J. Shields (Henry Holt, 2022; 384 pages)

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