Little Women is a “coming of age” drama tracing the lives of four sisters: Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy. During the American Civil War, the girls father is away serving as a minister to the troops. The family, headed by their beloved Marmee, must struggle to make ends meet, with the help of their kind and wealthy neighbor, Mr. Laurence, and his high spirited grandson Laurie.
Little Women (1933) starring Katharine Hepburn, Joan Bennett
From the manufacturer
Frances Dee (Meg), Mabel Colcord (Hannah), Jean Parker (Beth) and Katharine Hepburn (Jo) in RKO’s 1933 film version of LITTLE WOMEN
George Cukor provides direction to Katharine Hepburn during filming of LITTLE WOMEN (1933) | Katharine Hepburn & her director George Cukor pose during production of LITTLE WOMEN (1933). They were frequent collaborators and lifelong friends. | Katharine Hepburn stands behind her on-screen sisters played by Jean Parker, Frances Dee. and Joan Bennett in this publicity still from LITTLE WOMEN (1933) | Original theatrical release poster for RKO’s 1933 film version of Louisa May Alcott’s classic novel LITTLE WOMEN |
Product Description
Academy Award winner Katharine Hepburn stars in Academy Award-winning director George Cukor’s adaptation of an enduring American classic novel–Little Women. 1860s New England. As four sisters grow from girls to young adults during the hard times of the United States’ Civil War, the difficulties, tragedies and joys they experience tear at–but cannot break–the deep bonds of sisterhood and family in this timeless and heartwarming tale of growth and self-discovery.
Editorial Review courtesy of Amazon.com
Louisa May Alcott’s beloved story is one of the most-read novels ever written. It has also proved popular film and telefilm fodder (at least six versions plus a TV series). In addition, Little Women is one of those rare literary projects that can truly be done well on screen. This, the 1933 version, chronicles the lives and loves of sisters Jo, Meg, Amy, and Beth (played, respectively, by Katharine Hepburn, Frances Dee, Joan Bennett, and Jean Parker). It’s a superior rendering to the amiable, perky 1949 version with June Allyson, Janet Leigh, Elizabeth Taylor, Margaret O’Brien, and Peter Lawford, and comparable to the beautiful, feminist Gillian Armstrong 1994 take. Douglass Montgomery’s Laurie isn’t nearly as dreamy as Christian Bale’s (1994), but the lack of chemistry between him and Hepburn’s Jo is perfect for the story, in which Jo loves him like a brother.
Jo’s real love she offers up to perhaps the finest Professor Bhaer (Paul Lukas). Character actress Edna May Oliver is at her indignant best as Aunt March. Director George Cukor’s vision is elegant, warm, and as true to the original source material as 117 minutes allows. This Little Women was a huge box-office hit, and broke all the records to that time. –N.F. Mendoza
Cast of characters
- Katharine Hepburn (Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner; Holiday) … Jo March
- Joan Bennett (House of Dark Shadows; Scarlet Street) … Amy March
- Paul Lukas (The Ghost Breakers) … Professor Bhaer
- Edna May Oliver (The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle) … Aunt March
- Jean Parker (Lady for a Day) … Beth March
- Frances Dee (I Walked with a Zombie) … Meg March
- Henry Stephenson (The Young in Heart) … Mr. Laurence
- Douglass Montgomery (The Cat and the Canary [1939]) … Laurie
- John Lodge … Brooke (as John Davis Lodge)
- Spring Byington (In the Good Old Summertime) … Marmee March
- Samuel S. Hinds (The Raven (1935)) … Mr. March
- Mabel Colcord … Hannah
- Marion Ballou … Mrs. Kirke
- Nydia Westman (The Reluctant Astronaut) … Mamie
- Harry Beresford (High Pressure) … Doctor Bangs