Paul Green Papers Inventory (#3693)![]() Manuscripts Department, Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
|
|
Collection Information
|
|
|
Back to Top Descriptive Summary Including Abstract
Back to Top Administrative Information
Online Catalog Terms
Related Collections
PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICES, UNC-CH. Photographs of Paul Green. UNC ARCHIVES. ACADEMIC AFFAIRS: RECORDS OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DRAMATIC ART. Series 2: Carolina Playmakers. Subseries 3: Scripts. ("Enchanted Maze," "Shroud My Body Down," "Texas Calls," "Tread the Green Grass"). NORTH CAROLINA COLLECTION. Typed transcriptions of diaries (VCB G79g) and other materials. Biographical Note[The following essay is a slightly adapted version of a sketch by William S. Powell, published in Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, volume 2, pp. 358-359 (Chapel Hill: UNC Press, 1986), and used with permission. It is followed by a list of works by Paul Green prepared by Rhoda Wynn in 1976, also slightly adapted.] PAUL ELIOT GREEN, dramatist, author, and teacher, was born on 17 March 1894 in Harnett County, North Carolina, the son of William Archibald and Betty Lorine Byrd Green. He grew up on his father's farm engaging in the labors and pleasures of rural life. For a time he played minor-league baseball for a team in Lillington and was widely acclaimed as a pitcher because he was ambidextrous. Music also was an important part of his life. His mother bought an organ and taught her children to play. Green taught himself to play the violin and later composed music for his plays. After graduation from nearby Buies Creek Academy in 1914, he worked to earn money for college and entered The University of North Carolina in 1916. As a freshman he wrote poems that were published in The Carolina Magazine, and he was the author of the play produced by the seniors at commencement. In April 1917, before finishing his first year at the university, Green enlisted in the army for service in World War I. Before leaving for France he published at his own expense a thin volume of poems, Trifles of Thought by P.E.G., because he was not certain that he would survive the war to pursue the literary career of which he dreamed. Young Green rose rapidly through the ranks from private to corporal, sergeant, and sergeant-major with the 105th Engineers, 30th Division; afterwards he was commissioned second lieutenant with the Chief of Engineers in Paris. During a year's service at the front in Belgium and France, he participated in several months of heavy combat in the trenches. This experience had a lasting effect on him, though he was always reluctant to speak about it. He returned to the university in 1919 and graduated with a major in philosophy in 1921. Green studied under Frederick H. Koch, a newly arrived member of the faculty, who had organized the Carolina Playmakers in 1918. The new professor encouraged Green and others to write "folk plays" based on local subjects and their own experiences. Plays by his students, including many by Paul Green, were produced. One of the students, Elizabeth Lay, daughter of the Reverend George Lay, rector of St. Mary's College in Raleigh, married Green on 6 July 1922. After a year of graduate study in philosophy under Professor Horace Williams in Chapel Hill, Green went to Cornell University for further graduate work and in 1923 became an assistant professor of philosophy at The University of North Carolina. He remained in that department until 1939, when he became a professor of dramatic art. In 1944, he resigned to devote full time to writing. Throughout his twenty-one years as a professor, Green wrote plays as well as short stories, novels, and poetry. Although many were produced by the Carolina Playmakers in Chapel Hill, some were produced in Washington, D. C., New York, and elsewhere. In 1927 he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for In Abraham's Bosom produced at the Garrick Theater in New York. His other Broadway plays included The House of Connelly, Roll Sweet Chariot, Johnny Johnson, and Native Son . For many years Paul and Elizabeth Green collaborated with others in the production of "The Literary Lantern," a newspaper column of book reviews and book news. In 1925, Green became editor of The Reviewer, a literary journal. He also contributed to newspapers, particularly the Raleigh News and Observer. Travel for educational purposes occupied some of his time. In the summer of 1926 he was at the MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire, and, while on leave of absence as a Guggenheim Fellow in 1928 and 1929, he studied the theatre in Germany and England. In 1951, supported by the Rockefeller Foundation, he traveled and studied the theater in Japan and elsewhere in the Orient. After seeing the motion picture, The Birth of a Nation, in 1915, Green anticipated the development of this medium as a true art form. He welcomed the opportunity in 1932 to go to Hollywood, Calif., under contract to Warner Brothers to write scripts for motion pictures. For various lengths of time and for different companies, including Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, he wrote scripts in Hollywood for films starring George Arliss, Lionel Barrymore, Bette Davis, Clark Gable, Greer Garson, Will Rogers, and others. Although well paid for his work, he was rarely satisfied with the artistic quality of the final product, and scandalized by what he saw as Hollywood's immorality. He often declined to accept particular assignments and finally ended the association after 1964. Long interested in a new form of drama, Green was inspired by some plays he saw in Germany. As early as 1928, he wrote Professor Koch of his hope to use the theme of the "Lost Colony" of Roanoke Island in dramatic production. This was realized in 1937, when The Lost Colony, a "symphonic drama" as he termed it, was produced in an outdoor theatre on Roanoke Island, site of the 1587 colony. Employing the spoken word, song, music, dance, pantomime, and light, it was a notable success and except for the years of World War II has been produced by the Roanoke Island Historical Association each summer since. This was merely the first of such works by Green and others; historical dramas, presented at or near the site of the actual events depicted, have appeared all around the United States. Green himself was the author of fifteen plays written to be performed outdoors in North Carolina, Florida, Virginia, Kentucky, Texas, and elsewhere. Green's contributions were widely recognized. In addition to the early Pulitzer Prize and the Guggenheim Fellowship, he received the Belasco Little Theatre Tournament trophy in 1925. Other honors included the National Theatre Conference plaque, the American Theater Association citation for distinguished service to the theater, the North Carolina Civil Liberties Union's Frank P. Graham Award, the Morrison Award, the North Caroliniana Society Award, the North Carolina Writers Conference Award, and the Sir Walter Raleigh cup. In 1979 the General Assembly named him North Carolina's dramatist laureate. He received honorary doctorates from The University of North Carolina, Davidson College, Campbell College, the North Carolina School of the Arts, and four out-of-state colleges and universities. He was a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and of the executive committee of the U. S. National Commission for UNESCO (1950-52). In 1951, he was a delegate to the UNESCO conference in Paris. Green also held the following positions: president, American Folk Festival, 1934-1945; president, National Theatre Conference, 1940-1942; member, Board of Directors, American National Theatre and Academy, 1959-61; delegate, International Conference on the Performing Arts, Athens, Greece, 1962; member, Advisory Committee, North Carolina School of the Arts, beginning in 1964; member, Advisory Board, Institute of Outdoor Drama, beginning in 1952. From his youth, when he demonstrated sympathy and compassion for the poor, blacks, and others whom he saw around him in his rural community, Paul Green acted and spoke in support of the basic rights of all humanity. A gentle, kindly man, he knew when, where, and how to direct attention to the wrongs he witnessed and to seek redress. Civil rights, poverty, and political oppression were all causes of concern to him, and he lent support to them in person, in print, and financially. He spoke out against and wrote plays dealing with war, lynching, chain gangs, prejudice, and superstition. Even though at times his stand was unpopular in many quarters, his ideals were understood and there was little or no personal criticism of him. It was known that Green was "haunted by the ideal of perfection" and that he believed in the "uniqueness of man as responsible to his neighbor and to God." Paul and Elizabeth Green were the parents of Paul Eliot, Jr., Nancy Byrd (Cornwell), Elizabeth "Betsy" McAllister (Moyer), and Janet MacNeill (Lauritzen, 1955-1958, and later Catlin). Paul Green's siblings were Daniel Hugh Green, Gladys Green Sylvester, Mary Green Johnson, Erma Green Gold, and Caro Mae Green Russell (Couch in the mid-1960s). Elizabeth Lay Green's sisters were Virginia "Ginger" Lay Hawkins, Ellen Lay Hodgkinson, Nancy Lay White, and Lucy Lay Zuber; her brother was Henry C. Lay. Paul Green died on 4 May 1981. He was buried in the old Chapel Hill Cemetery near the Paul Green Theatre on the university campus. SEE: Agatha B. Adams, Paul Green of Chapel Hill (1951); Chapel Hill Newspaper, 30 June, 1, 2, 5 July 1976, 5, 6, 10 May 1981; Barrett H. Clark, Paul Green (1928); Vincent S. Kenny, Paul Green (1971); Walter S. Lazenby, Paul Green (1970); McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama, vol. 2 (1972), for a list of his plays (a copy in the North Carolina Collection, University of North Carolina Library, Chapel Hill, has been updated with typed additions); New York Times, 6, 10 May 1981; Pembroke Magazine 10 (1978); Raleigh News and Observer, 2 Apr. 1950, 5, 6, May 1918; Who's Who in America (1980).
In Abraham's Bosom, 1926 The Field God, 1927 The House of Connelly, 1928 Johnny Johnson, 1937, with Kurt Weill Native Son, 1941, with Richard Wright The No 'Count Boy, 1925 Roll, Sweet Chariot, 1935 Numerous bills of one-act plays on and off Broadway "Symphonic Dramas: " The Lost Colony, annually since 1937, Roanoke Island, North Carolina The Highland Call, 1939, 1940, Fayetteville, North Carolina; 1955, 1956, Campbell College, Buies Creek, North Carolina; and 1976 as Cumberland County Bicentennial Drama, Fayetteville, North Carolina The Common Glory, annually since 1947, Williamsburg, Virginia Faith of Our Fathers, 1950, 1951, Washington, D.C. The 17th Star, 1953, Columbus, Ohio Wilderness Road, 1955, 1956, 1957, and annually since 1973, Berea, Kentucky The Founders, 1957, 1958, and 1964, Williamsburg, Virginia The Confederacy, 1958, 1959, Virginia Beach, Virginia Cross and Sword, annually since 1965, St. Augustine, Florida The Stephen Foster Story, annually since 1959, Bardstown, Kentucky Texas, annually since 1966, Palo Duro Canyon, Texas Trumpet in the Land, annually since 1970, New Philadelphia, Ohio Drumbeats in Georgia, 1972, 1973, Jekyll Island, Georgia We the People, 1976, Bicentennial Drama, Columbia, Maryland Louisiana Cavalier, premiered 1976, Natchitoches, Louisiana The Lone Star, premiered 1977, Galveston, Texas Plays Published: The Lord's Will and Other Carolina Plays, 1925 Lonesome Road, Six Plays for the Negro Theatre, 1926 The Field God and In Abraham's Bosom, 1927 In the Valley and Other Carolina Plays, 1928 The House of Connelly and Other Plays, 1931 Roll, Sweet Chariot, 1935 Shroud My Body Down, 1935 Hymn to the Rising Sun, 1936 Johnny Johnson (with music by Kurt Weill), 1937 The Enchanted Maze, 1939 Out of the South, fifteen plays, 1939 Native Son (adaptation of Richard Wright's novel), 1941 Peer Gynt, (American version), 1951 Wings For to Fly, Three radio plays of Negro life, 1959 Five Plays of the South, 1963 The Sheltering Plaid, (one-act), 1965 The Honeycomb, 1972 Symphonic Dramas as indicated above. Also many one-act plays published individually.
The Laughing Pioneer, 1932 This Body the Earth, 1935
Wide Fields, 1928 Salvation on a String, 1946 Dog on the Sun, 1949 Words and Ways, 1968 Home to My Valley, 1970 The Land of Nod and Other Stories, 1976
The Hawthorn Tree, 1943 Forever Growing, 1945 Dramatic Heritage, 1953 Drama and the Weather, 1958 Plough and Furrow, 1963
Cabin in the Cotton (from the novel of the same title by H. H. Kroll), Warner Brothers, 1932, starring Richard Barthelmess and Bette Davis. Voltaire, Warner Brothers, 1933, starring George Arliss. State Fair (from the novel of the same title by Phil Strong), Fox Film Corporation, 1932, starring Janet Gaynor and Will Rogers. Dr. Bull (from the novel, The Last Adam, by James Gould Cozzens), Fox Film Corporation, 1933, starring Will Rogers. David Harum (from the novel by E. N. Westcott), Twentieth-Century Fox, starring Will Rogers. Time Out of Mind (from a Rachel Field novel), Twentieth-Century-Fox, starring Lionel Barrymore. The Rosary (Treatment). Broken Soil, Sam Goldwyn, starring Gary Cooper and Anna Sten. Red Shoes Run Faster (from the novel by Henry Bellaman). Roseanna McCoy (from the novel by Alberta Hannum), Sam Goldwyn. Black Like Me or Journey into Shame (from the autobiography by John Howard Griffin), Film Features, 1964.
The Lost Colony Songbook, compiler/lyricist, 1938 The Highland Call Songbook, compiler/lyricist, 1941 Song in the Wilderness (Cantata with music by Charles Vardell) lyrics, 1947 The Common Glory Songbook, compiler/lyricist (includes Paul Green melodies), 1951* Carmen (American version), 1953 Texas Songbook, compiler/lyricist (includes Paul Green melodies), 1967 Numerous tunes and lyrics for his dramatic works
A Start in Life, in The Free Company Presents, ed. James Boyd, 1941 Wings For to Fly, Three Plays of Negro Life, 1959. Foreign productions: The Field God, Gate Theatre, London, 1927-28 White Dresses, Japan, 1951 Johnny Johnson, Bochum, Germany, 1973-74 Johnny Johnson, Finnish National Theatre, Helsinki, 1975-77 The House of Connelly, Vienna, Austria Collection OverviewThis collection documents practically all facets of the life of Paul Green from his army service in France in World War I until his death in 1981. It also includes significant material documenting the life and work of his wife, Elizabeth Lay Green, and numerous items relating to members of the Greens' immediate and extended families. Green's work as a dramatist and writer is thoroughly documented. "General Files" (Series 1), arranged by year and then alphabetically by correspondent or subject, were established by Green and his assistants. These are primarily Green's professional correspondence files. They are extensive, holding about 30,000 items, and have been intensively indexed. Series 2 ("Dramatic Works") and Series 3 ("Other Writings") further document Green's professional career. Each of his "symphonic dramas" is covered in Series 2 by a set of files that typically includes background material, drafts, musical scores, and business records of various types. Series 3 consists of drafts of poems, novels, essays, and other works, and other material relating to them; these extend from poems written in France during and just after World War I to writings on which Green was working shortly before his death. Series 8 consists of material that Green filed as "Source Material," largely items relating to research for essays, articles, lectures, and plays. Green's work as writer and dramatist also is referred to in some of the family correspondence in Series 4, is reflected in the financial records, appointment books, and subject files in Subseries 5.1 and 5.5, and 5.6 respectively, is discussed in his diaries in Series 6, and is evident in some of the photographs and tape recordings in Series 7. Series 8 contains "source material," and is maintained as it was organized by Paul Green or his assistants. This series is comprised of a variety of material, including preliminary research for articles, lectures, essays, and plays, miscellaneous clippings and other writings, novelty items, and family correspondence during Paul Green's trip to Greece and the USSR during the summer of 1962. Green's humanitarian interests and activities also are extensively documented in this collection. They are the subject of many letters in Series 1, which, again, are accessible through the index that forms the appendix to this inventory. They also are mentioned in letters in Series 4 and are reflected in Subseries 5.1 and 5.5. Subseries 5.3 is a set of files devoted by Green to material relating to capital punishment (see also Series 8, under "C," and Series 3.3, folder 3926Y). All series, except the two (2 and 3) devoted strictly to his writings, document Paul Green's personal life. Green included many personal and family letters in his professional correspondence files (Series 1), and many otherwise professional letters include personal elements. It should be noted, finally, that this collection documents the lives of others as well. This is especially true of Green's wife, Elizabeth Lay Green. Series 4 consists of her files; it documents her own work as a writer and editor, her friendships, and events in the lives of relatives close and distant. The Addition of January 2006 consists of one mounted photograph of Thomas Wolfe, inscribed to Paul Green from Wolfe's sister Mabel, 1950. The Addition of January 2007 consists of three letters, 1918-1927, two of which were written by Paul Green to his father and to Florence Shaw of Asheville, N.C., and one of which was written by Mary Green to Florence Shaw. Back to TopOrganization of Collection
2. Dramatic Works 2.1. Major Dramatic Works 2.2. Other Dramatic Works 2.3. Plays in Progress 3. Other Writings 3.1. Poetry 3.2. Fiction 3.3 Essays, Articles, and Lectures 3.4. Words and Ways. 3.5. Other Projects 4. Elizabeth Lay Green Files 4.1. Correspondence Files 4.2. Subject Files 5. Miscellaneous Files 5.1. Financial Records 5.2. Student and Teaching Materials 5.3. Capital Punishment 5.4. World Tour, 1951-1952 5.5. Appointment Books and Calendars 5.6. Outdoor Drama Miscellaneous Files 5.7. Mary McMillan Material on Paderewski 5.8. Other Files 6. Diaries and Miscellaneous Volumes 6.1. Diaries 6.2. Miscellaneous Volumes 7. Audio-visual Materials 7.1 Pictures 7.2. Audio Tapes 7.3. Video Tapes 8. Source Material Additions Addition of June 1996 Material Processed in 1998 Other Additions Addition of December 2004 Addition of January 2006 Addition of January 2007 Microfilm Items SeparatedItems separated include oversize papers (OP-3693/1-9); volumes (S-3693/1-3); pictures (P-3693/folders 1-113; OP-P-3693/26, 137, 427-429, 963, 1018-1019, 1077-1083, 1515, 1567; PA-3693/1-4); audio tapes (T-3693/1-16); and video tape (V-3693/1). Series Descriptions1. General Files, 1916-1981.
About 38,000 items.
Arrangement: By year, then alphabetically by correspondent, subject, or event.
This series is available on microfilm.
These are Paul Green's central professional correspondence files. They were maintained year-by-year by Green and his assistants.
They consist largely of correspondence, though other types of items--address lists, speeches, financial materials, newspaper
clippings, etc.--also are included. The contents of these files are largely professional, though much personal material is
included, usually filed by the name of the relative or friend involved.
Arrangement within each year, maintained as Green established it, is alphabetical, usually, but not always, by correspondent.
Material not arranged alphabetically by correspondent includes the following: subject files related to specific organizations
(e.g., Federal Theatre Project) or events (e.g., Scottsboro trial); files headed "property," which contain correspondence, bills, and other materials from repairmen, contractors, realtors, and others with whom Green
dealt about the sale and maintenance of his property; and "request" files maintained in later years (requests for information about Green or for criticisms and recommendations, requests to
produce, translate, or reprint his work, and requests that Green give talks or interviews or that he teach classes or judge
contests).
Notes follow on significant correspondents and subjects represented in these files for each decade. Detailed folder lists
are not included for this series since the index for this collection provides extensive access to it.
In addition to the correspondents noted below, letters from relatives are found throughout this series. Family correspondents
include Green's wife, Elizabeth; the Greens' children, Paul Eliot Green, Jr., Nancy Byrd Green Cornwell, Elizabeth MacAllister Green Moyer, and Janet MacNeill Green Catlin, and their grandchildren; Paul Green's siblings, Daniel Hugh Green, Gladys Green Sylvester, Mary Green Johnson, Erma Green Gold, and Caro Mae Green Russell; Elizabeth Green's sisters, Virginia Lay Hawkins, Ellen Lay Hodgkinson, and Nancy Lay White; and Green's cousin, Buie Long, and nephew, William A. Johnson. Series 4 ("Elizabeth Lay Green Files") contains much additional family correspondence and related material. Note that Series
8 includes, filed under "G," family correspondence from Paul Green's summer 1962 trip to Greece and the USSR.
Back to Top
General Files: 1916-1929.
Correspondents include Erskine Caldwell, William Rose Benet, Gwen Bristow*, Hart Crane*, Rebecca Cushman, Virginius Dabney*, Jonathan Daniels, Olive Tilford Dargan, Donald Davidson, Sara Haardt, Grover Hall, Julia Harris, Archibald Henderson, DuBose Heyward, Addison Hibbard, Nell Battle Lewis, Henry L. Mencken, Barrett H. Clark, Emily Clark (Balch), Edith J. R. Isaacs, Gerald W. Johnson, Rowena Jelliffe, J. O. Bailey, James Boyd, Cass Canfield, Frederick Koch, Lynn Riggs, P. Beaumont Wadsworth, Edwin Mims, Howard Odum, Julia Peterkin, Carl Sandburg, Katherine Drayton Mayrant Simons, Upton Sinclair*, Allen Tate, Frank Vernon, Edward Wagenknecht, and Marion A. Wright. (* = correspondence concerns only a contribution to The Reviewer.)
Letters from Paul Green to members of his family during his time in the army, both state-side and in France between 1917 and 1919, have been organized separately as seen directly below. The arrangement of this material is chronological. Subjects include
life in Army training camps in South Carolina, homesickness, warfare in France and Green's participation in it, and the Parisian scene after the war's conclusion. Addressees include his father William Archibald, his half-brother John, sisters Mary, Gladys, Caro Mae, and Erma, his cousin Buie Long, and Mrs. Allie M. Long.
Folder
1aWorld War I Letters, 1917
Folder
1bWorld War I Letters, 1918
Folder
1cWorld War I Letters, 1919
Folder
2
1916
Folder
3
1919
Folder
4
1920
Folder
5a
1921
Folder
5b
1922
Folder
6
1923
Folder
7-16
1924
Folder
17-63
1925
Folder
64-81
1926
Folder
82-90
1927
Folder
92-106
1928
Folder
107-108
1929
Folder
109-135
1929
Back to Top
General Files: 1930-1939.
Topics reflected in the files include major professional organizations and interests--Dramatists Guild, Theatre Guild, Samuel French, Robert McBride, Contempo magazine, Universal, Fox, Warner Brothers, and M-G-M film studios, Negro Little Theatre, National Folk Theatre, Repertory Playhouse Associates, Author's League of America, Screen Writer's Guild, American Dramatists, New Theatre, Group Theatre, Federal Theatre Project, Johnny Johnson, and The Lost Colony.
Professional correspondents include Brooks Atkinson, J. O. Bailey, Leo Bulgakov, Cass Canfield, Barrett H. Clark, Emily Clark Balch, Olive Tilford Dargan, James Boyd, Anthony Buttitta, William T. Couch, Carl Carmer, Edith J. R. Isaacs, Gerald Johnson, James Weldon Johnson, Vassili Kouchita, E. C. Mabie, Jessie Rehder, Lynn Riggs, Sheppard Strudwick, P. Beaumont Wadsworth, Langston Hughes, Frederick Koch, Hunter Lovelace, Henry Allen Moe, Wilbur Daniel Steele, Lamar Stringfield, Virginia Vernon, Cheryl Crawford, DuBose Heyward, Rowena Jelliffe, Julian Johnson, Frances Phillips, Tyre Taylor, Erskine Caldwell, Rebecca Kushman, Eda Heinemann, Dorothy McBrayer (Stahl), Henrietta Smedes, Hallie Flanagan (Davis), Hubert Hayes, Kurt Weill, and David H. Stevens.
Among the social organizations and causes reflected in these files are the National Folk Festival (Sarah Gertrude Knott), American Civil Liberties Union, National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, the Burlington Dynamiters, the Scottsboro case, the Spike Bittings case, North Carolina Commission on Interracial Cooperation, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and lynching. Correspondents about social interests include Sarah Gertrude Knott, Frank Porter Graham, Fred Beal, George V. Denny, Jr., Ernest Seeman, and Sherwood Anderson.
Personal correspondents include Clara Booth Byrd, Howard Odum, Norman Foerster, James Holly Hanford, Adeline McCall, Phillips Russell, Leslie Campbell, Ruth Heffner, Hubert Heffner, Addison Hibbard, Struthers Burt, Jonathan Daniels, James Boyd, J. Shepard Bryan, Mordecai Gorelik, and Louis Wright.
Folder
136-164
1930
Folder
165-180
1931
Folder
181-196
1931
Folder
197-232
1932
Folder
233-252
1933
Folder
253-280
1933
Folder
281-324
1934
Folder
325-339
1934
Folder
340-371
1935
Folder
372-392
1936
Folder
393-398
1936
Folder
399-429
1937
Folder
430-450
1938
Folder
451-469
1938
Folder
470-510
1939
Back to Top
General Files: 1940-1949.
Professional organizations and activities reflected in the files for this period include the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, Native Son,
Dramatists Play Service, National Theatre Conference, Federal Theatre Project, Dock Street Theatre, Dramatists Guild, Samuel French, Group Theatre, Robert McBride, William Morris Agency, Inc., National Institute of Arts and Letters, Paul R. Reynolds and Son, Theatre Arts Monthly, Columbia Broadcasting System, The Free Company, Hedgerow Theatre, Radio Research Project, Redpath Bureau, Screen Writers' Guild, Southern Film Service, Mr. Mac, Twentieth Century Fox, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Author's League of America, Frederick Koch Memorial, Forever Growing, Lost Colony,
Common Glory, and Hawthorne Tree, and planning for Peer Gynt.
Professional correspondents include Brooks Atkinson, Gilmor Brown, Anthony Buttitta, Erskine Caldwell, Barrett Clark, Cheryl Crawford, Hallie Flanagan (Davis), John Gassner, Hubert Hayes, Eda Heinemann, Noel Houston, Julian Johnson, Frederick Koch, Emmet Lavery, E. C. Mabie, Dorothy McBrayer Stahl, Frederic McConnell, John McGee, Ben Dixon MacNeill, Robert Nachtmann (Robert Dale Martin), John Parker, Hunter Lovelace, Richard Adler, Robert Porterfield, Samuel Selden, Henrietta Smedes, Lamar Stringfield, Richard Walser, Frederick Walsh, Richard Wright, LeGette Blythe, Katherine Cale, Olive Tilford Dargan, Edith J. R. Isaacs, Barclay Leathem, Dolphe Martin, D. Victor Meekins, Orson Welles, Leo Bulgakov, Josephina Niggli, Clifford Odets, William Peery.
Among the social causes and interests of Paul Green in the 1940s that are documented here are capital punishment, American Civil Liberties Union, North Carolina Commission on Interracial Cooperation, Negro rights, Southern Conference for Human Welfare, and National Folk Festival (Sarah Gertrude Knott). Correspondents on social causes included Fred Beal, Sarah Gertrude Knott, Ernest Seeman, and Marion A. Wright.
Letters from the following personal correspondents are included in the files for this period: Lynn Riggs, Benjamin Swalin, James Boyd, Katherine Boyd, Christopher Crittenden, William T. Couch, Malcolm Fowler, Henry Grady Owens, Frances Phillips, Chesley Baity, Jonathan Daniels, Mordecai Gorelik, Joe Feldman, Frank Porter Graham, James Holly Hanford, Hubert Heffner, Allen Tate, Caroline Gordon, P. Beaumont Wadsworth, Kurt Weill, Percival Wilde, Louis Wright, Struthers Burt, Clara Booth Byrd, Leslie Campbell, Clarence Poe, and David H. Stevens.
Paul Green's North Carolina activities and interests in the 1940s included North Carolina Society for the Preservation of Antiquities, North Carolina Literary and Historical Society, a play at Pembroke, University of North Carolina Department of Dramatic Art, North Carolina Symphony, Carolina Playmakers, Raleigh Little Theatre, Watauga Club, Thomas Wolfe, North Carolina Historic Sites, UNC Press, and the Chapel Hill Consumers Association.
Folder
511-512
1940
Folder
513-575
1940
Folder
576-586
1941
Folder
587-654
1941
Folder
655-663
1942
Folder
664-709
1942
Folder
710-740
1943
Folder
741-765
1943
Folder
766-819
1944
Folder
820-888
1945
Folder
889-891
1946
Folder
892-945
1946
Folder
946-955
1947
Folder
956-1007
1947
Folder
1008-1012
1948
Folder
1013-1056
1948
Folder
1057-1072
1949
Folder
1073-1099
1949
Back to Top
General Files: 1950-1959.
Major professional activities and interests reflected in the 1950s files included Authors's League, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science, Peer Gynt adaptation, Library of Congress Fellowship, American Educational Theatre Association, American National Theatre and Academy, Faith of Our Fathers, United States National Committee for UNESCO, Rockefeller Foundation Lectureship, Ford Foundation, American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, Guggenheim Foundation, Lost Colony, National Theatre Conference, P.E.N., Tread the Green Grass, International Theatre Institute, Southern Literary Festival Association, Samuel French, play at Santa Barbara, California,
South-Eastern Theatre Conference, Dramatic Heritage, Dramatists Guild, The Seventeenth Star, American Adventure Radio Series, Screen Writers' Guild (red-scare in Hollywood), Kabuki Theatre, Theatre Arts Monthly, Wilderness Road, National Institute of Arts and Letters, Jamestown (The Founders), Drama and the Weather, and Wings for to Fly.
Professional correspondents included Richard Adler, William Rose Benet, Barrett H. Clark, Cheryl Crawford, Tamara Daykarhanova, John Ehle, Kermit Hunter, Robert Porterfield, Eugenia Rawls (Seawell), Lamar Stringfield, LeGette Blythe, Tyrone Guthrie, Robert Dale Martin (Robert Nachtmann), Clifford Odets, John Gassner, Josephina Niggli, Isaac Van Grove, Audrey Liebling-Wood, Faubion Bowers, Robert Gard, Noel Houston, Barbara Anderson, Louis deRochemont Associates.
Among the social interests and correspondents of the 1950s were National Folk Festival (Sarah Gertrude Knott), American Civil Liberties Union, American Friends Service Committee (David Andrews and Russell Branson), anti-McCarthyism (Kate Way), capital punishment, Integration (Sarah Patton Boyle), Pearsall Plan, Southern Regional Council, Negro Rights, Byron Haworth, William A. McGirt, William Geer, Robert Boyd.
In the 1950s Paul Green's personal correspondents included Agatha Boyd Adams, Julius Bab, Chesley Baity, Katherine Boyd, Anthony Buttitta, Clara Booth Byrd, Ruth Cannon, Jonathan Daniels, Rebecca Cushman, Norman Foerster, Gerald Johnson, Erna Lamprecht Obenaus, Ouida Campbell Roberts Taylor, Dale Spearman, Walter Spearman, Dorothy McBrayer Stahl, David H. Stevens, Betty Smith, Walter Carroll, Werner Friederich, Frances Phillips, Samuel Selden, Richard Walser, Struthers Burt, Hubert Heffner, Lynn Riggs, Malcolm Fowler, James Boyd, Jr., Clarence Poe, and Thad Stem, Jr.
Paul Green's North Carolina interests in the 1950s included the UNC Library, North Carolina Society for the Preservation of Antiquities, Historical Society of North Carolina, North Carolina Symphony, Koch Memorial, Campbell College, North Carolina Writers Conference, Sir Walter Raleigh Day, Horace Williams Society, State Literary and Historical Association of North Carolina, Harnett County Centennial, Penland School of Handicrafts, UNC Press, Merit Employment Program in North Carolina, Carolina Playmakers, North Carolina Society of County and Local Historians.
Folder
1100-1132
1950
Folder
1133-1140
1950
Folder
1141-1183
1951
Folder
1184-1194
1952
Folder
1195-1228
1952
Folder
1229-1258
1953
Folder
1259-1277
1953
Folder
1278-1317
1954
Folder
1318-1329
1955
Folder
1330-1356
1955
Folder
1357-1395
1956
Folder
1396-1398
1957
Folder
1399-1444
1957
Folder
1445-1462
1958
Folder
1463-1497
1958
Folder
1498-1530
1959
Folder
1531-1544
1959
Back to Top
General Files: 1960-1969.
Professional organizations and activities reflected in the files for this period include American National Theatre and Academy, Samuel French, Memorial Recreation Forest of Eastern North Carolina, Reader's Digest article, South-Eastern Theatre Conference, United States National Commission for UNESCO, William Morris Agency, Paul Green Collection at the University of Wisconsin, American Educational Theatre Association, Black Like Me screen play, Carolina Dramatic Association, Greece (travel), UNC Department of Radio, Television, and Motion Pictures, Institute of Outdoor Drama, The Players, Plow and Furrow, Roll Sweet Chariot, Triangle Repertory Theatre, Berea College, and Sing All a Green Willow.
Correspondents on professional matters included John Ehle, John Gassner, Kermit Hunter, G. E. Cheek, Isaac Van Grove, Maggie Dent, Robert Dale Martin (Robert Nachtmann), Richard Adler, John Cauble, John Howard Griffin, Josephina Niggli, Lee Devin, Mark Sumner, Wesley Van Tassel, Joel Climenhaga, Cheryl Crawford, Edward Devany, Vincent Kenny, Eugenia Rawls (Seawell), and Tyrone Guthrie.
Social causes and organizations of interest to Paul Green in the 1960s were North Carolina Civil Liberties Union, National Folk Festival, American Friends Service Committee, Negro rights, capital punishment, Dunn (North Carolina) Indians, Southern Regional Council, Penn Community Services (St. Helena Island, South Carolina), We Dissent (Hoke Norris), Junius Scales, National Folk Festival (Sarah Gertrude Knott), Southern Regional Council, and Vietnam peace. Correspondents on social issues included David Andrews, Russell Branson, Frances Cox, Gordon W. Blackwell, Marion A. Wright, Sarah Gertrude Knott, William Wallace Finlator, Hugh B. Hester, and Norman Cousins. Correspondence regarding an article written by Jesse Helms, which attacked Paul Green's opposition to the Speaker Ban Law, is contained in the "Green" folder for 1963.
Paul Green's personal correspondents in the 1960s included Jonathan Daniels, Rebecca Cushman, John McKay, Frances Phillips, Samuel Selden, Dale Spearman, Thad Stem, Jr., David H. Stevens, James Boyd, Jr., Katherine Boyd, Malcolm Fowler, Gerald W. Johnson, Anthony Buttitta, Clara Booth Byrd, Norman Foerster, Frank Porter Graham, Hubert Heffner, Mary Louise Medley, Don Somers, Sidney Blackmer, Pauline Goddard. See also Series 8, under "G," for family correspondence from Green's summer 1962 trip to Greece and the USSR.
His North Carolina activities and interests in the 1960s included North Carolina Society of County and Local Historians, Campbell College, North Carolina Writers Conference, Carolina Playmakers' Fiftieth Anniversary, Morrison Award, North Carolina Council on Human Relations, Penland School of Handicrafts, North Carolina Charter Tercentenary, North Carolina Symphony, UNC Press, Harnett County history, UNC Library, North Carolina Historical Society, Face of North Carolina (about), North Carolina Seashore Park, Bennett House (Durham) Civil War Celebration, North Carolina Film Board, University Day talk, North Carolina Arts Council, North Carolina School of the Arts, North Carolina Achievement Award, North Carolina Folklore Society, and the Chapel Hill Historical Society.
Folder
1545-1593
1960
Folder
1594-1599
1960
Folder
1600-1644
1961
Folder
1645-1653
1962
Folder
1654-16951962
Folder
1696-1711
1963
Folder
1712-1749
1963
Folder
1750-1764
1964
Folder
1765-1804
1964
Folder
1805-1824
1965
Folder
1825-1858
1965
Folder
1859-1872
1966
Folder
1873-1915
1966
Folder
1916-1923
1967
Folder
1924-1972
1967
Folder
1973-2020
1968
Folder
2021-2030
1968
Folder
2031-2069
1969
Folder
2070-2088
1969
Back to Top
General Files: 1970-1973.
Professional organizations and activities reflected in the files for this period include South-Eastern Theatre Conference, American Theatre Conference, Author's Guild, Samuel French, Institute of Outdoor Drama, National Theatre Conference, American Revolution Bicentennial Commission, Outdoor dramas, Kurt Weill Berlin to Broadway, Dramatists Guild, and the Louisiana Council on Music and the Performing Arts.
Professional correspondents included Joel Climenhaga, John Ehle, Samuel Hirsch, Vincent Kenny, Eugenia Rawls (Seawell), Mark Sumner, Maxim Tabory, Isaac Van Grove, Maggie Dent, Kermit Hunter, John Haber, and Robert Dale Martin (Robert Nachtmann).
Social organizations and causes of interest to Paul Green in the 1970s included Southern Regional Council, North Carolinians Against the Death Penalty, National Folk Festival, North Carolina Civil Liberties Union, Frank Porter Graham Award, and Vietnam peace. Correspondents about social matters included Robert M. Randolph, Marion A. Wright, Elizabeth Bowne Wall, Sarah Gertrude Knott, and Hugh B. Hester.
Paul Green's personal correspondents in the 1970s included Sidney Blackmer, Jonathan Daniels, Malcolm Fowler, William Wallace Finlator, Pauline Goddard, Hubert Heffner, John A. McKay, Frances Phillips, Thad Stem, Jr., David H. Stevens, Otho Ross, Anthony Buttitta, Don Somers, and P. Beaumont Wadsworth.
His North Carolina interests in the 1970s included Campbell College, North Carolina Arts Council, Carolina Playmakers, Harnett County Historical Society, North Carolina Education Advisory Council to the Division of Cultural Arts, North Carolina School of the Arts, North Carolina Society of County and Local Historians, North Carolina Symphony, Horace Williams, Chapel Hill Historical Society, Country Doctor Museum (Bailey), Orange and Chatham counties bicentennials, North Carolina Folklore Society, Sir Walter Raleigh Memorial, and the UNC Radio, Television, and Motion Pictures Department Anniversary.
Folder
2089-2121
1970
Folder
2122-2138
1970
Folder
2139-2169
1971
Folder
2170-2197
1971
Folder
2198-2223
1972
Folder
2224-2257
1972
Folder
2258-2275
1973
Folder
2276-2308
1973
Back to Top
General Files: 1974-1981.
Professional activities and interests reflected in the files from the last eight years of Green's life include the outdoor
dramas The Lone Star,
The Louisiana Cavalier, We The People, foreign productions of Johnny Johnson, a book of short stories (The Land of Nod and Other Stories), American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, American Theatre Association, Dramatists Guild, Federal Theatre Project, Institute of Outdoor Drama, National Theatre Conference, and Pembroke Magazine. Professional correspondents included Robert Aldridge, Laurence Avery, Joel Climenhaga, Cheryl Crawford, Maggie Dent, John Ehle, William M. Hardy, Jr., Kermit Hunter, Vincent Kenny, Eugenia Rawls, Mark Sumner, Benjamin F. Swalin, Maxim Tabory, Isaac Van Grove, M. Abbott Von Nostrand, Ira David Wood, III, and Ellen Wright.
Paul Green's social organizations and concerns in this period included Alliance for Progress, nuclear disarmament, North Carolina Civil Liberties Union, People to Preserve Jockey's Ridge, and Southern Regional Council. Correspondents on social causes included David Andrews and Marion A. Wright.
Green's personal correspondents included Anthony Buttitta, Albert Coates, Jonathan Daniels, David Davis, William Wallace Finlator, A.J. Fletcher, Pauline Goddard, Hubert Heffner, Kermit Hunter, John A. McKay, Sam Ragan, Otho Ross, Thad Stem, Jr., and David M. Stevens.
During this period Paul Green's other interests in North Carolina included Campbell College, Carolina Regional Theater, Carolina Theatre Anniversary, Chapel Hill Historical Society, Harnett County Historical Society, James Archibald Campbell House, North Carolina School of the Arts, North Carolina Symphony, North Carolina Writers Conference, North Caroliniana Society, Paul Green Theatre, Playmakers Repertory Company, and Thomas Wolfe Society.
Folder
2309-2343
1974
Folder
2344-2351
1975
Folder
2352-2377
1975
Folder
2378-2396
1976
Folder
2397-2410
1976
Folder
2411-2439
1977
Folder
2440-2441
1977
Folder
2442-2477
1978
Folder
2478-2479
1979
Folder
2480-2513
1979
Folder
2514-2518
1980
Folder
2519-2544
1980
Folder
2545-2564
1981
Back to Top 2. Dramatic Works. Material relating to the dramatic works of Paul Green, from one-act plays to symphonic dramas, as well as unfinished and projected
works. This series includes handwritten and typed scripts, musical scores, research materials, correspondence, business files,
programs, and related items. It is arranged in three subseries: Major Dramatic Works; Minor Dramatic Works; and Plays in Progress
(unfinished and/or abandoned projects). For more information about plays, researchers may wish to consult Series 1 (General
Files), Subseries 3.3 (Essays, Articles, and Lectures), Subseries 4.1 (Elizabeth Lay Green Files), Subseries 5.1 (Financial
Material), Subseries 5.6 (Outdoor Drama Miscellaneous Files), the diaries and other volumes in Series 6, and Series 8 (Source
Material).
Note: See related typescripts in the North CarolinaCollection (call number VCBG79g).
Back to Top
2.1. Major Dramatic Works, 1926-1980.
About 20,000 items.
Arrangement: alphabetically by title, then as originally filed.
Material relating to symphonic dramas, Broadway plays, motion picture screenplays, and a small number of musicals and other
plays, all of which were actually produced. In almost every case, the material for a play is arranged as it was filed by Green
and/or his assistants; original folder titles also have been retained.
Major Dramatic Works: Black Like Me, ca. 1963-1964.
About 60 items.
Folder
2565-2568Notes
Folder
2569-2570A Motion Picture Script Treatment, 1963
Folder
2571A Motion Picture Script Treatment
Folder
2572-2573A Motion Picture Script, April 10, 1963
Major Dramatic Works: Broken Soil, 1934.
1 item.
Folder
2574
"Second Version," Aug. 29, 1934
Major Dramatic Works: The Cabin in the Cotton, 1932.
1 item
Folder
2575Treatment by Paul Green, March 24, 1932
Major Dramatic Works: Carmen, ca. 1951-1954.
About 210 items.
Folder
2576Set Design
Folder
2577Music
Folder
2578Script, 29 March-1 April 1953
Folder
2579English Version, Working Final Copy, 15 April 1953
Folder
2580Script
Folder
2581Act II, 29 December 1952
Folder
2582Act IV, Scene II stage directions, suggested revisions, Acts I-III, 27 February 1953
Folder
2583Act VII
Folder
2584Script
Folder
2585File Copy, uncorrected
Folder
2586-2587A New American Version
Folder
2588Correspondence, 1952-1954
Folder
2589Clippings, 1953
Folder
2590Business, Correspondence
Folder
2591Miscellaneous
Major Dramatic Works: The Common Glory, 1946-1976.
About 2,000 items.
(See also Volumes 55 and 63 in Series 6.)
Folder
2592Background, Williamsburg Research Material from Records Office
Folder
2593Background, Technical Information
Folder
2594Background, Theatre People in Virginia
Folder
2595Background, Research Material Sent in by Well-Wishers
Folder
2596Background, Research Notes
Folder
2597Background, Virginia and Williamsburg booklets
Folder
2598Background, Notes, ca. 1947
Folder
2599Music in Production - 1971
Folder
2600Music Score (1972)
Folder
2601Lyrics
Folder
2602-2603Music
Folder
2604Out Material 5/15/47
Folder
2605Uncut Version, 1947
Folder
2606Original of Publication Script ... Early October, 1974
Folder
2607Script as Produced, 1947 Season
Folder
2608Production Notes, 1947
Folder
2609Radio Adaptation by Erik Barnow, First Draft 9/30/47
Folder
2610Radio Adaptation by Erik Barnow, 3rd Revision 3/22/48
Folder
2611Notes on Revision...10/27/47 (bound volume)
Folder
2612Improvements for 1948 Season
Folder
2613New Material Not Cut 6/7/48
Folder
2614Revision Suggestions for 1950 Season
Folder
2615Notes 1951
Folder
2616
1954 Rewrite of Jamestown Scene
Folder
2617Revised Acting Version 1959
Folder
2618-2619Revised Version 1960
Folder
2620Act II (1960 Revised Version)
Folder
2621Revisions 1961, correspondence about
Folder
2622
1961 Script
Folder
2623
1963-64 Revisions
Folder
2624
1964 Revisions
Folder
2625
1965 Production Script
Folder
2626-2627
1967 Revised Version
Folder
2628
1968 Script and Revision Notes
Folder
2629
1968 Script
Folder
2630
1970 Script
Folder
2631
1971 Script
Folder
2632Revised for 1972 Production
Folder
2633
1972 Script
Folder
2634
1972 Script with Suggestions for 1974
Folder
2635Out Material 1972
Folder
2636Revised Typescript 10/74
Folder
2637Work Script for 1974 Bicentennial Edition
Folder
2638Scripts with Revisions for 1975
Folder
26391975 Script
Folder
2640Corrected Page Proof of ... Bicentennial Edition 1975
Folder
2641Typescript for Bicentennial Edition
Folder
2642Notes for scenes, undated
Folder
2643Script, undated
Folder
2644Correspondence, A
Folder
2645Correspondence, B
Folder
2646Correspondence, C
Folder
2647Correspondence, D
Folder
2648Correspondence, E
Folder
2649Correspondence, F
Folder
2650Correspondence, G
Folder
2651Correspondence, H
Folder
2652Correspondence, I
Folder
2653Correspondence, J
Folder
2654Correspondence, K
Folder
2655Correspondence, L
Folder
2656Correspondence, Mc
Folder
2657Correspondence, M
Folder
2658Correspondence, N
Folder
2659Correspondence, O
Folder
2660Correspondence, P
Folder
2661Correspondence, People to Whom Book & Songbook Mailed
Folder
2662Correspondence, Q
Folder
2663Correspondence, R
Folder
2664Correspondence, Reviewer List
Folder
2665Correspondence, S
Folder
2666Correspondence, T
Folder
2667Correspondence, U
Folder
2668Correspondence, V
Folder
2669Correspondence, W
Folder
2670Correspondence, X-Y-Z
Folder
2671Business, Correspondence, Newspaper Clippings, 1946-1951
Folder
2672Financial Reports, 1948-49
Folder
2673Financial Statement, 1947-1952
Folder
2674Jamestown Corp. Financial Reports, 1948-1950
Folder
2675Correspondence, 1952-53; Attendance graph, 1952-1957
Folder
2676Business, 1954-1955
Folder
2677
"Manager's Report on 1955 Season"
Folder
2678Business, 1956 Correspondence
Folder
2679Business, 1957
Folder
2680Business, 1958
Folder
2681Business, 1959
Folder
2682Business, 1960
Folder
2683Business, 1961-1962
Folder
2684Clippings, 1962-1963
Folder
2685Business, 1963
Folder
2686Business, 1965
Folder
2687Business, 1966
Folder
2688Business, 1967
Folder
2689Business, 1968
Folder
2690Business, 1969
Folder
2691Business, 1970
Folder
2692Business, 1971-1973
Folder
2693Business, 1972
Folder
2694Business, 1973
Folder
2695Self-study 1973, and S.O.D. Report
Folder
2696Business, 1974
Folder
2697Proposed Television Special, 1974-1976
Folder
2798Business, 1975
Folder
2699Business, The Bicentennial Publication Edition, 1975
Folder
2700Business, 1976
Folder
2701Clippings
Folder
2702Programs, 1947-1957
Folder
2703Programs, 1958-1968
Folder
2704Programs, 1968-1976
Major Dramatic Works: The Confederacy, 1953-1960.
About 350 items.
Folder
2705-2710Background Material
Folder
2711Music, 1959
Folder
2712-2713Music
Folder
2714-2715Typescript, 6 May 1958
Folder
2716Typescript, 1959
Folder
2717-2719Typescript, n.d.
Folder
2720-2721Typescript, n.d.
Folder
2722Galley, 1959
Folder
2723Correspondence, 1957
Folder
| |