Porgy's Ghost is full of original insights and new information about a fascinating but elusive figure who lived in the shadow of her famous husband. Harlan Greene tells a compelling story that is, by turns, witty, tragic, and surprising.--James M. Hutchisson "Emeritus Professor of English, The Citadel, and author of DuBose Heyward: A Charleston Gentleman and the World of Porgy and Bess."
In Porgy's Ghost, Harlan Greene sensitively treads through the minefields of race and gender in the United States to reveal the story of the Ohio-born playwright Dorothy Heyward, who often downplayed her significant contributions to the libretto of Porgy and Bess. Beleaguered by ill health, self-doubt, and the social constraints of her time, Heyward struggled to advance her own career while fighting to maintain her late husband's name as one of the creators of the now classic American opera.--Michael Owen "Consulting Historian and Archivist, Ira and Leonore Gershwin Trusts"
With clear-eyed analysis and narrative flair, Harlan Greene's Porgy's Ghost recovers the remarkable yet long-overlooked story of Dorothy Heyward--playwright, collaborator, and pivotal creative force behind Porgy and Bess and other foundational works of American theater. Greene illuminates Heyward's artistic vision, her struggles for recognition within a male-dominated cultural sphere, and her enduring influence on American theatrical and literary traditions. An essential contribution to the fields of theater history, musicology, and American studies, Porgy's Ghost not only restores Dorothy Heyward's legacy, but also offers a nuanced exploration of the collaborative dynamics that shaped some of the nation's most iconic cultural texts.--Anna Harwell Celenza "editor of The Cambridge Companion to Gershwin"
Porgy's Ghost is an adventure in literary sleuthing worthy of Sherlock Holmes. But in the hands of ace archivist Harlan Greene, Dorothy Heyward's underappreciated role in the creation of an American classic also provides the stuff of great biography--deep insight not only into the person but also into her place and times. Meticulously researched and exquisitely written, this fine book should find an audience well beyond the many devotees of Porgy and Bess.--Kevin Sack "Pulitzer Prize winner and author of Mother Emanuel: Two Centuries of Race, Resistance, and Forgiveness in One Charleston Church"
Harlan Green re-animates and places in the spotlight the crucial figure of Dorothy Heyward in Porgy's Ghost. Working with materials largely unknown to previous scholars, Greene demonstrates how deeply and crucially Dorothy was involved in every stage of the complex process that began with the germination of the novel as a creative writing project and ended with the triumphant production of Gershwin's opera. This is a brilliant feat of scholarly reclamation that results not only in an indelible portrait of a gifted, idiosyncratic, and enigmatic woman but in a far more richly textured and dynamic understanding than we have had of the many energies pulsing through Gershwin's masterwork.--Geoffrey Galt Harpham "author of Citizenship on Catfish Row: Race and Nation in American Popular Entertainment"
Finally, the true story behind the iconic Porgy and Bess is revealed in this fascinating biography of Dorothy Heyward by Harlan Greene. A skillful writer and playwright both before and after her marriage to DuBose Heyward, she was key to the success of this great work. Porgy's Ghost is a treasure for not only what it reveals about this very talented woman but also the intertwined history of American theater, women writers, and race relations in the twentieth-century United States.--Marjorie J. Spruill "author of New Women of the New South"