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Breakfast at Tiffany's (novella)

Breakfast at Tiffany's is a novella by Truman Capote published in 1958. In it, a contemporary writer recalls his early days in New York City, when he makes the acquaintance of his remarkable neighbor, Holly Golightly, who is one of Capote's best-known creations.

Breakfast at Tiffany's
First edition cover
AuthorTruman Capote
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherRandom House
Publication date
October 28, 1958[1]
Media typePrint (Hardback and paperback), e-book, audio-CD
Pages179
OCLC964700
813/.54 20
LC ClassPS3505.A59 A6 1993

Setting edit

The novella is set in New York, specifically the Upper East Side, in a brownstone apartment. An area that experienced many changes following the Civil War, it went through its most major shift at the turn of the century. Brownstones (the type of building that Holly lives in) were rebranded as more "stylish" (though that really depends) places to live, rather than being thought of as decrepit and outdated buildings.[2] By the 1940s (the decade in which the novella is set) it had become a fairly affluent area. The novella's setting plays a great role in the plot; various wealthy characters from the Upper East Side come in and out of Holly Golightly's life.

Though the novella does not take place in the American South, there are mentions of it later in the novella. While we follow Golightly's life in Manhattan for the entirety of the novella, she was actually born in Texas, a place that she was desperate to escape.

Plot edit

In autumn 1943, the unnamed narrator befriends Holly Golightly. The two are tenants in a brownstone apartment in Manhattan's Upper East Side. Holly (age 18–19) is a country girl turned New York café society girl. As such, she has no job and lives by socializing with wealthy men, who take her to clubs and restaurants, and give her money and expensive presents; she hopes to marry one of them. According to Capote, Golightly is not a prostitute, but an "American geisha".[3]

As the novella opens, we are introduced to an unnamed narrator who reflects back on his friendship with Holly Golightly. Another old friend, Joe Bell, reaches out to the narrator because he believes a wood carving that he has come across depicts Golightly. We can assume many years have passed, as the carving is said to be from 1956.

The narrator recalls the specific night he meets Holly. She climbs through his window in order to escape the man that came home with her that night. She mentions the resemblance the narrator has to her brother, Fred, and asks if she can call him that. As they continue to talk, Holly realizes it is Thursday, and explains to the narrator that she visits a prisoner, Sally Tomato, every Thursday in exchange for $100.

We are introduced to a slew of characters that are constantly coming in and out of Holly's apartment. During this scene, she strikes up a conversation with our narrator about how Tiffany's is the only place that calms her when she's feeling anxious or overwhelmed. The title is attributed to this scene.

The narrator and Holly's friendship develops, but they feud over a trifling matter. However, when the narrator suspects Holly is being watched, he decides it may be right to break the feud to warn her about this person. He is confronted by the man who has been watching her. The man tells the narrator of Holly's past. He divulges that she was born Lulamae Barnes, and that he is her husband, Doc Golightly. Doc tries to persuade her to come back to Texas with him, but she insists she must stay in New York. They part ways.

Holly finds out her brother has died in the war and this sends her into an emotional spiral. She eventually strikes up a relationship with a character named Jose Ybarra-Jaeger and plans to move to Brazil with him.

Eventually, Holly's visits to the prison draw suspicion and she is arrested after further evidence unveils that Sally Tomato was running a drug ring. Jose sends her a letter explaining that he does not see a future with her because of her arrest. After getting out on bail, she plans to leave and go to Brazil without Jose. Before leaving, she sets her cat loose—the cat that she had never given a name. The narrator receives a brief note from her, but hears nothing else. He hopes, though, she has found a place that feels like home.[4]

Characters edit

  • The unnamed narrator-writer: a writer who relates his memories of Holly Golightly, the people in her life, and his relationship with her.
  • Holiday (Holly) Golightly: downstairs neighbor and center of attention of the writer's memoirs.
  • Joe Bell: A bartender acquainted with both the writer and Holly.
  • Mag Wildwood: Holly's friend and sometime roommate, a fellow socialite and model.
  • Rusty Trawler: A presumably wealthy man, thrice divorced, well known in society circles.
  • José Ybarra-Jaegar: A Brazilian diplomat, who is the companion of Mag Wildwood and, later, of Holly.
  • Doc Golightly: A veterinarian from Texas, whom Holly married as a teenager.
  • O. J. Berman: A talent agent from Hollywood, who has discovered Holly and groomed her to become a professional actress.
  • Salvatore "Sally" Tomato: A convicted racketeer, whom Holly visits weekly in Sing Sing prison.
  • Madame Sapphia Spanella: Another tenant in the brownstone.
  • Mr. I. Y. Yunioshi: A Japanese photographer, who lives in the top floor studio apartment of the brownstone.

Conception edit

In early drafts of the story Holly was named Connie Gustafson; Capote later changed her name to Holiday Golightly. He apparently based the character of Holly on several different women, all friends or close acquaintances of his. Claims have been made as to the source of the character, the "real Holly Golightly", in what Capote called the "Holly Golightly Sweepstakes",[5] including socialite Gloria Vanderbilt, actress Oona O'Neill,[6] writer/actress Carol Grace,[7] writer Maeve Brennan,[8] writer Doris Lilly,[9] model Dorian Leigh (whom Capote dubbed "Happy Go Lucky"),[10][11] and her sister, model Suzy Parker. A November 2020 obituary in The New York Times states that the main inspiration for Holly was socialite Marguerite Littman.[12]

 
 
Several women (or their agents) claimed to be models for Holly Golightly. Many were dark-haired sophisticated beauties like Audrey Hepburn, yet Capote has said his model was a blonde ("strands of albino-blonde and yellow") closer in character to Marilyn Monroe, whom he preferred for the film role that ultimately went to Hepburn.[13] A November 2020 obituary in the New York Times states that the main inspiration for Holly was Capote's friend Marguerite Littman.[12]

Capote's biographer Gerald Clarke wrote "half the women he knew... claimed to be the model for his wacky heroine."[6] Clarke also wrote of the similarities between the author himself and the character.[14] There are also similarities between the lives of Holly and Capote's mother, Nina Capote; among other shared attributes both women were born in the rural south with similar "hick" birth names that they changed (Holly Golightly was born Lulamae Barnes in Texas, Nina Capote was born Lillie Mae Faulk in Alabama), both left the husbands they married as teenagers and abandoned relatives they loved and were responsible for, instead going to New York, and both achieved "café society" status through relationships with wealthier men, though Capote's mother was born two decades earlier than the fictional Holly Golightly.[6][15] Capote was also unsuccessfully sued for libel and invasion of privacy by a Manhattan resident named Bonnie Golightly who claimed that he had based Holly on her.[6] The New York Times November 2020 obituary of Littman, who was a friend of Capote, states that she was the main inspiration for the character.[12]

According to the biographer of Joan McCracken, McCracken had a violent dressing room outburst after learning of the wartime death of her brother, while she was appearing in the play Bloomer Girl (1944). McCracken's biographer suggests that Capote was inspired by this event as a model for a scene in which Holly reacts to her brother's death overseas. McCracken and her husband Jack Dunphy were close friends of Capote, and Dunphy became Capote's life companion after his 1948 divorce from McCracken. In the novella, Holly Golightly is also depicted singing songs from Oklahoma! (in which McCracken appeared) accompanying herself on a guitar, and owning The Baseball Guide, which was edited by McCracken's uncle.[16]

Publication history edit

Breakfast at Tiffany's was originally sold to Harper's Bazaar for $2,000 and intended for publication in its July 1958 issue. It was to be illustrated with a big series of photo montages by David Attie, who had been hired for the job by Harper's art director Alexey Brodovitch. However, after the publication was scheduled, longtime Harper's editor Carmel Snow was ousted by the magazine's publisher, the Hearst Corporation, and Hearst executives began asking for changes to the novella's tart language. By this time, Attie's montages had been completed, and Alice Morris, the fiction editor of Harper's, recounted that while Capote initially refused to make any changes, he relented "partly because I showed him the layouts... six pages with beautiful, atmospheric photographs."[17] Yet Hearst ordered Harper's not to run the novella anyway. Its language and subject matter were still deemed "not suitable", and there was concern that Tiffany's, a major advertiser, would react negatively.[18][19] An outraged Capote soon resold the work to Esquire for $3,000 ($40,600 today); by his own account, he specified that he "would not be interested if [Esquire] did not use Attie's [original series of] photographs." He wrote to Esquire fiction editor Rust Hills, "I'm very happy that you are using [Attie's] pictures, as I think they are excellent." But to his disappointment, Esquire ran just one full-page image of Attie's (another was later used as the cover of at least one paperback edition of the novella).[20] Attie's photo was the first-ever visual depiction of Holly Golightly—who is seen laughing and smiling in a nightclub. The novella appeared in the November 1958 issue. Shortly afterward, a collection of the novella and three short stories by Capote was published by Random House — and the glowing reviews caused sales of the Esquire issue to skyrocket. Both Attie and Brodovitch went on to work with Capote on other projects – Attie on Brooklyn Heights: A Personal Memoir,[21] and Brodovitch on Observations, both published in 1959.

In 2021 Esquire re-ran the novella online, reuniting the text with many of Attie's original images.[22]

The collection has been reprinted several times with the other short stories, "House of Flowers", "A Diamond Guitar" and "A Christmas Memory". The novella itself has been included in other Capote collections.

Capote's original typed manuscript was offered for sale by a New Hampshire auction house in April 2013.[23] It was sold to Igor Sosin, a Russian billionaire entrepreneur, for US$306,000 (equivalent to US$384,000 in 2022). Sosin said he planned to display it publicly in Moscow and Monte Carlo.[24]

Literary significance and reception edit

In "Breakfast at Sally Bowles", Ingrid Norton of Open Letters Monthly pointed out Capote's debt to Christopher Isherwood, one of his mentors, in creating the character of Holly Golightly: "Breakfast at Tiffany's is in many ways Capote's personal crystallization of Isherwood's Sally Bowles."[25]

Truman Capote's aunt, Marie Rudisill, notes that Holly is a kindred spirit of Miss Lily Jane Bobbit, the central character of his short story "Children on Their Birthdays". She observes that both characters are "unattached, unconventional wanderers, dreamers in pursuit of some ideal of happiness."[26]

Capote said Golightly was the favorite of his characters.[27]

The novella's prose style prompted Norman Mailer to call Capote "the most perfect writer of my generation," adding that he "would not have changed two words in Breakfast at Tiffany's".[28]

Adaptations edit

Film edit

The novella was loosely adapted into the 1961 movie Breakfast at Tiffany's starring Audrey Hepburn and directed by Blake Edwards. The movie was transposed to 1960 rather than the 1940s, the period of the novella. In addition to this, at the end of the film the protagonist and Holly fall in love and stay together, whereas in the novella there is no love affair whatsoever – Holly just leaves the United States and the narrator has no idea what happened to her since then, except for a photograph of a wood carving found years later in Africa which bears a striking resemblance to Holly. In addition, there are many other changes, including major omissions, to the plot and main character in the film from the novella. Capote originally envisioned Marilyn Monroe as Holly, and lobbied the studio for her, but the film was done at Paramount, and though Monroe did independent films, including for her own production company, she was still under contract with Twentieth Century Fox, and had just completed Let's Make Love with Yves Montand.

Musical edit

A musical version of Breakfast at Tiffany's (also known as Holly Golightly) premiered in 1966 in Boston.[citation needed] The initial performances were panned by the critics and despite a rewrite by Edward Albee, it closed after four previews and never officially opened.[29]

Television edit

Three years after the musical adaptation, Stefanie Powers and Jack Kruschen starred in another adaptation, Holly Golightly (1969), an unsold ABC sitcom pilot. Kruschen's role was based on Joe Bell, a major character in Capote's novella who was omitted from the film version.

Plays edit

There have been two adaptations of the novella into stage plays, both directed by Sean Mathias. The first production was written by Samuel Adamson and was presented in 2009 at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in London, starring Anna Friel as Holly Golightly and Joseph Cross as William "Fred" Parsons.[30][31] The second version was written by Richard Greenberg for a 2013 Broadway production at the Cort Theatre, starring Emilia Clarke as Holly Golightly, Cory Michael Smith as Fred, and George Wendt as Joe Bell.[32] The Greenberg play was produced in the UK in 2016, called "a play with music". It ran at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in the West End in June to September 2016, with Pixie Lott starring as Holly Golightly.[33]

Investigative journalism edit

On October 2023, Air Mail (magazine) reported on Amar Singh (art dealer) accusing Liza-Johanna Holgersson of stealing a first edition signed Breakfast at Tiffany's book, mistakenly priced at $10,000 [1] the Metropolitan Police confirmed they're investigating the alleged theft.

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ "Books Today". The New York Times: 32. October 28, 1958.
  2. ^ "Friends of the Upper East Side Historic District". friends-use.org. 2020.
  3. ^ A March 1968 interview with Playboy contains the following exchange:

    Playboy: Would you elaborate on your comment that Holly was the prototype of today's liberated female and representative of a "whole breed of girls who live off men but are not prostitutes. They're our version of the geisha girl..."?
    Capote: Holly Golightly was not precisely a call girl. She had no job, but accompanied expense-account men to the best restaurants and night clubs, with the understanding that her escort was obligated to give her some sort of gift, perhaps jewelry or a check ... if she felt like it, she might take her escort home for the night. So these girls are the authentic American geishas, and they're much more prevalent now than in 1943 or 1944, which was Holly's era.

    Norden, Eric (March 1968). "Playboy Interview: Truman Capote". Playboy. Vol. 15, no. 3. pp. 51–53, 56, 58–62, 160–162, 164–170. Reprinted in:

    • Halford, Macy (September 7, 2009). "Was Holly Golightly Really a Prostitute?". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
    • Capote, Truman (1987). "Playboy Interview: Truman Capote". In M. Thomas, Inge (ed.). Truman Capote: Conversations. Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi. p. 141. ISBN 9780878052745. OCLC 14165382.
  4. ^ Capote, Truman (1958). Breakfast at Tiffany's. New York, New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 9780679745655.
  5. ^ "Hello I'm Holly". The Times. London. February 7, 2004.
  6. ^ a b c d Clarke, Gerald (2005). Capote: A Biography. Carroll & Graf Publishers. pp. 94–95, 313–314. ISBN 0-7867-1661-4.
  7. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang (July 24, 2003). "Carol Matthau, a Frank and Tart Memoirist, Dies at 78". The New York Times.
  8. ^ "Maeve Golightly?". Publishersweekly.com. October 25, 2004. Retrieved September 24, 2011.
  9. ^ "Doris Lilly; Author, Columnist". Los Angeles Times. October 11, 1991.
  10. ^ "Dorian Leigh: 'Supermodel' of the 1940s". The Independent. London. July 14, 2008.
  11. ^ "The story behind the song: Moon River". The Daily Telegraph. October 7, 2008. Retrieved May 22, 2014.
  12. ^ a b c Green, Penelope (November 6, 2020). "Marguerite Littman, the Inspiration for Holly Golightly, Dies at 90". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on November 7, 2020. Retrieved November 8, 2020. Ms. Littman, who landed in Los Angeles at midcentury, counted among her closest friends ... Truman Capote, who is said to have distilled that charm into his most famous character, Holly Golightly of 'Breakfast at Tiffany's.'
  13. ^ Churchwell, Sarah (September 5, 2009). "Breakfast at Tiffany's: When Audrey Hepburn won Marilyn Monroe's role". The Guardian (Manchester). Guardian News & Media Limited. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  14. ^ Clarke, chs. 11–13.
  15. ^ Rudisill, Marie; Simmons, James C. (1983). Truman Capote: The Story of His Bizarre and Exotic Boyhood by an Aunt who Helped to Raise Him. William Morrow. p. 92.
  16. ^ Sagolla, Lisa Jo (2003). The Girl who Fell Down: A Biography of Joan McCracken. Boston, MA: Northeastern University Press. p. 110. ISBN 1-55553-573-9.
  17. ^ Clarke, p 308.
  18. ^ Plimpton, George (ed.) Truman Capote Doubleday, 1997. pp 162-163.
  19. ^ Wise, Kelly (ed.) Portrait: Theory Lustrum Press, 1981. p 7.
  20. ^ "Truman Capote's Papers". Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  21. ^ Capote, Truman; Attie, David (2015). Brooklyn: A Personal Memoir: With the lost photographs of David Attie. New York: Little Bookroom. ISBN 978-1936941117.
  22. ^ "Breakfast At Tiffany's Newly Illustrated In 2021". Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  23. ^ "Manuscript of "Breakfast at Tiffany's" up for auction". CBS News. Retrieved April 1, 2013.
  24. ^ "Capote's Breakfast at Tiffany's manuscript sells for $306K at auction to Russian billionaire". The Star (Toronto). Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. Associated Press. April 26, 2013. Retrieved May 13, 2016.
  25. ^ . Openlettersmonthly.com. Archived from the original on August 19, 2011. Retrieved September 24, 2011.
  26. ^ Rudisill, Marie; Simmons, James C. The Southern Haunting of Truman Capote (Nashville, Tennessee: Cumberland House, 2000), page 100.
  27. ^ "Breakfast at Tiffany's". www.moviediva.com.
  28. ^ Mailer, Norman (1959). Advertisements for Myself. Harvard University Press. p. 465. ISBN 0-674-00590-2. ...he is the most perfect writer of my generation, he writes the best sentences word for word, rhythm upon rhythm. I would not have changed two words in Breakfast at Tiffany's which will become a small classic.
  29. ^ Davis, Deborah (2007). Party of the Century: The Fabulous Story of Truman Capote and his Black and White Ball. John Wiley and Sons. pp. 141–142. ISBN 978-0-470-09821-9.
  30. ^ Sookdeo, Niqui (July 17, 2009). "Dreyfus to join cast of Breakfast at Tiffany's". The Stage. Retrieved September 20, 2009.
  31. ^ "West End Breakfast for Anna Friel", BBC News, May 15, 2009
  32. ^ Gans, Andrew. "Broadway's Breakfast at Tiffany's Sets Closing Date" November 2, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Playbill.com, April 15, 2013
  33. ^ Cavendish, Dominic. "Pixie Lott ticks all the boxes in 'Breakfast at Tiffany's' – review" The Telegraph, July 28, 2016
Bibliography

External links edit

  • "Breakfast at Tiffany's" at the Internet Archive
  • GradeSaver study guide on Breakfast at Tiffany's
  • Breakfast at Tiffany's teaching guide
  • Breakfast at Tiffany's Homepage - The Novel - Critical Analysis

breakfast, tiffany, novella, breakfast, tiffany, novella, truman, capote, published, 1958, contemporary, writer, recalls, early, days, york, city, when, makes, acquaintance, remarkable, neighbor, holly, golightly, capote, best, known, creations, breakfast, tif. Breakfast at Tiffany s is a novella by Truman Capote published in 1958 In it a contemporary writer recalls his early days in New York City when he makes the acquaintance of his remarkable neighbor Holly Golightly who is one of Capote s best known creations Breakfast at Tiffany sFirst edition coverAuthorTruman CapoteCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishPublisherRandom HousePublication dateOctober 28 1958 1 Media typePrint Hardback and paperback e book audio CDPages179OCLC964700Dewey Decimal813 54 20LC ClassPS3505 A59 A6 1993 Contents 1 Setting 2 Plot 3 Characters 4 Conception 5 Publication history 6 Literary significance and reception 7 Adaptations 7 1 Film 7 2 Musical 7 3 Television 7 4 Plays 7 5 Investigative journalism 8 References 9 External linksSetting editThe novella is set in New York specifically the Upper East Side in a brownstone apartment An area that experienced many changes following the Civil War it went through its most major shift at the turn of the century Brownstones the type of building that Holly lives in were rebranded as more stylish though that really depends places to live rather than being thought of as decrepit and outdated buildings 2 By the 1940s the decade in which the novella is set it had become a fairly affluent area The novella s setting plays a great role in the plot various wealthy characters from the Upper East Side come in and out of Holly Golightly s life Though the novella does not take place in the American South there are mentions of it later in the novella While we follow Golightly s life in Manhattan for the entirety of the novella she was actually born in Texas a place that she was desperate to escape Plot editIn autumn 1943 the unnamed narrator befriends Holly Golightly The two are tenants in a brownstone apartment in Manhattan s Upper East Side Holly age 18 19 is a country girl turned New York cafe society girl As such she has no job and lives by socializing with wealthy men who take her to clubs and restaurants and give her money and expensive presents she hopes to marry one of them According to Capote Golightly is not a prostitute but an American geisha 3 As the novella opens we are introduced to an unnamed narrator who reflects back on his friendship with Holly Golightly Another old friend Joe Bell reaches out to the narrator because he believes a wood carving that he has come across depicts Golightly We can assume many years have passed as the carving is said to be from 1956 The narrator recalls the specific night he meets Holly She climbs through his window in order to escape the man that came home with her that night She mentions the resemblance the narrator has to her brother Fred and asks if she can call him that As they continue to talk Holly realizes it is Thursday and explains to the narrator that she visits a prisoner Sally Tomato every Thursday in exchange for 100 We are introduced to a slew of characters that are constantly coming in and out of Holly s apartment During this scene she strikes up a conversation with our narrator about how Tiffany s is the only place that calms her when she s feeling anxious or overwhelmed The title is attributed to this scene The narrator and Holly s friendship develops but they feud over a trifling matter However when the narrator suspects Holly is being watched he decides it may be right to break the feud to warn her about this person He is confronted by the man who has been watching her The man tells the narrator of Holly s past He divulges that she was born Lulamae Barnes and that he is her husband Doc Golightly Doc tries to persuade her to come back to Texas with him but she insists she must stay in New York They part ways Holly finds out her brother has died in the war and this sends her into an emotional spiral She eventually strikes up a relationship with a character named Jose Ybarra Jaeger and plans to move to Brazil with him Eventually Holly s visits to the prison draw suspicion and she is arrested after further evidence unveils that Sally Tomato was running a drug ring Jose sends her a letter explaining that he does not see a future with her because of her arrest After getting out on bail she plans to leave and go to Brazil without Jose Before leaving she sets her cat loose the cat that she had never given a name The narrator receives a brief note from her but hears nothing else He hopes though she has found a place that feels like home 4 Characters editThe unnamed narrator writer a writer who relates his memories of Holly Golightly the people in her life and his relationship with her Holiday Holly Golightly downstairs neighbor and center of attention of the writer s memoirs Joe Bell A bartender acquainted with both the writer and Holly Mag Wildwood Holly s friend and sometime roommate a fellow socialite and model Rusty Trawler A presumably wealthy man thrice divorced well known in society circles Jose Ybarra Jaegar A Brazilian diplomat who is the companion of Mag Wildwood and later of Holly Doc Golightly A veterinarian from Texas whom Holly married as a teenager O J Berman A talent agent from Hollywood who has discovered Holly and groomed her to become a professional actress Salvatore Sally Tomato A convicted racketeer whom Holly visits weekly in Sing Sing prison Madame Sapphia Spanella Another tenant in the brownstone Mr I Y Yunioshi A Japanese photographer who lives in the top floor studio apartment of the brownstone Conception editIn early drafts of the story Holly was named Connie Gustafson Capote later changed her name to Holiday Golightly He apparently based the character of Holly on several different women all friends or close acquaintances of his Claims have been made as to the source of the character the real Holly Golightly in what Capote called the Holly Golightly Sweepstakes 5 including socialite Gloria Vanderbilt actress Oona O Neill 6 writer actress Carol Grace 7 writer Maeve Brennan 8 writer Doris Lilly 9 model Dorian Leigh whom Capote dubbed Happy Go Lucky 10 11 and her sister model Suzy Parker A November 2020 obituary in The New York Times states that the main inspiration for Holly was socialite Marguerite Littman 12 nbsp Oona O Neill 1943 nbsp Gloria Vanderbilt 1959 nbsp Suzy Parker 1963 nbsp Marilyn Monroe 1952 Several women or their agents claimed to be models for Holly Golightly Many were dark haired sophisticated beauties like Audrey Hepburn yet Capote has said his model was a blonde strands of albino blonde and yellow closer in character to Marilyn Monroe whom he preferred for the film role that ultimately went to Hepburn 13 A November 2020 obituary in the New York Times states that the main inspiration for Holly was Capote s friend Marguerite Littman 12 Capote s biographer Gerald Clarke wrote half the women he knew claimed to be the model for his wacky heroine 6 Clarke also wrote of the similarities between the author himself and the character 14 There are also similarities between the lives of Holly and Capote s mother Nina Capote among other shared attributes both women were born in the rural south with similar hick birth names that they changed Holly Golightly was born Lulamae Barnes in Texas Nina Capote was born Lillie Mae Faulk in Alabama both left the husbands they married as teenagers and abandoned relatives they loved and were responsible for instead going to New York and both achieved cafe society status through relationships with wealthier men though Capote s mother was born two decades earlier than the fictional Holly Golightly 6 15 Capote was also unsuccessfully sued for libel and invasion of privacy by a Manhattan resident named Bonnie Golightly who claimed that he had based Holly on her 6 The New York Times November 2020 obituary of Littman who was a friend of Capote states that she was the main inspiration for the character 12 According to the biographer of Joan McCracken McCracken had a violent dressing room outburst after learning of the wartime death of her brother while she was appearing in the play Bloomer Girl 1944 McCracken s biographer suggests that Capote was inspired by this event as a model for a scene in which Holly reacts to her brother s death overseas McCracken and her husband Jack Dunphy were close friends of Capote and Dunphy became Capote s life companion after his 1948 divorce from McCracken In the novella Holly Golightly is also depicted singing songs from Oklahoma in which McCracken appeared accompanying herself on a guitar and owning The Baseball Guide which was edited by McCracken s uncle 16 Publication history editBreakfast at Tiffany s was originally sold to Harper s Bazaar for 2 000 and intended for publication in its July 1958 issue It was to be illustrated with a big series of photo montages by David Attie who had been hired for the job by Harper s art director Alexey Brodovitch However after the publication was scheduled longtime Harper s editor Carmel Snow was ousted by the magazine s publisher the Hearst Corporation and Hearst executives began asking for changes to the novella s tart language By this time Attie s montages had been completed and Alice Morris the fiction editor of Harper s recounted that while Capote initially refused to make any changes he relented partly because I showed him the layouts six pages with beautiful atmospheric photographs 17 Yet Hearst ordered Harper s not to run the novella anyway Its language and subject matter were still deemed not suitable and there was concern that Tiffany s a major advertiser would react negatively 18 19 An outraged Capote soon resold the work to Esquire for 3 000 40 600 today by his own account he specified that he would not be interested if Esquire did not use Attie s original series of photographs He wrote to Esquire fiction editor Rust Hills I m very happy that you are using Attie s pictures as I think they are excellent But to his disappointment Esquire ran just one full page image of Attie s another was later used as the cover of at least one paperback edition of the novella 20 Attie s photo was the first ever visual depiction of Holly Golightly who is seen laughing and smiling in a nightclub The novella appeared in the November 1958 issue Shortly afterward a collection of the novella and three short stories by Capote was published by Random House and the glowing reviews caused sales of the Esquire issue to skyrocket Both Attie and Brodovitch went on to work with Capote on other projects Attie on Brooklyn Heights A Personal Memoir 21 and Brodovitch on Observations both published in 1959 In 2021 Esquire re ran the novella online reuniting the text with many of Attie s original images 22 The collection has been reprinted several times with the other short stories House of Flowers A Diamond Guitar and A Christmas Memory The novella itself has been included in other Capote collections Capote s original typed manuscript was offered for sale by a New Hampshire auction house in April 2013 23 It was sold to Igor Sosin a Russian billionaire entrepreneur for US 306 000 equivalent to US 384 000 in 2022 Sosin said he planned to display it publicly in Moscow and Monte Carlo 24 Literary significance and reception editIn Breakfast at Sally Bowles Ingrid Norton of Open Letters Monthly pointed out Capote s debt to Christopher Isherwood one of his mentors in creating the character of Holly Golightly Breakfast at Tiffany s is in many ways Capote s personal crystallization of Isherwood s Sally Bowles 25 Truman Capote s aunt Marie Rudisill notes that Holly is a kindred spirit of Miss Lily Jane Bobbit the central character of his short story Children on Their Birthdays She observes that both characters are unattached unconventional wanderers dreamers in pursuit of some ideal of happiness 26 Capote said Golightly was the favorite of his characters 27 The novella s prose style prompted Norman Mailer to call Capote the most perfect writer of my generation adding that he would not have changed two words in Breakfast at Tiffany s 28 Adaptations editFilm edit Main article Breakfast at Tiffany s film The novella was loosely adapted into the 1961 movie Breakfast at Tiffany s starring Audrey Hepburn and directed by Blake Edwards The movie was transposed to 1960 rather than the 1940s the period of the novella In addition to this at the end of the film the protagonist and Holly fall in love and stay together whereas in the novella there is no love affair whatsoever Holly just leaves the United States and the narrator has no idea what happened to her since then except for a photograph of a wood carving found years later in Africa which bears a striking resemblance to Holly In addition there are many other changes including major omissions to the plot and main character in the film from the novella Capote originally envisioned Marilyn Monroe as Holly and lobbied the studio for her but the film was done at Paramount and though Monroe did independent films including for her own production company she was still under contract with Twentieth Century Fox and had just completed Let s Make Love with Yves Montand Musical edit Main article Breakfast at Tiffany s musical A musical version of Breakfast at Tiffany s also known as Holly Golightly premiered in 1966 in Boston citation needed The initial performances were panned by the critics and despite a rewrite by Edward Albee it closed after four previews and never officially opened 29 Television edit Three years after the musical adaptation Stefanie Powers and Jack Kruschen starred in another adaptation Holly Golightly 1969 an unsold ABC sitcom pilot Kruschen s role was based on Joe Bell a major character in Capote s novella who was omitted from the film version Plays edit There have been two adaptations of the novella into stage plays both directed by Sean Mathias The first production was written by Samuel Adamson and was presented in 2009 at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in London starring Anna Friel as Holly Golightly and Joseph Cross as William Fred Parsons 30 31 The second version was written by Richard Greenberg for a 2013 Broadway production at the Cort Theatre starring Emilia Clarke as Holly Golightly Cory Michael Smith as Fred and George Wendt as Joe Bell 32 The Greenberg play was produced in the UK in 2016 called a play with music It ran at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in the West End in June to September 2016 with Pixie Lott starring as Holly Golightly 33 Investigative journalism edit On October 2023 Air Mail magazine reported on Amar Singh art dealer accusing Liza Johanna Holgersson of stealing a first edition signed Breakfast at Tiffany s book mistakenly priced at 10 000 1 the Metropolitan Police confirmed they re investigating the alleged theft References editNotes Books Today The New York Times 32 October 28 1958 Friends of the Upper East Side Historic District friends use org 2020 A March 1968 interview with Playboy contains the following exchange Playboy Would you elaborate on your comment that Holly was the prototype of today s liberated female and representative of a whole breed of girls who live off men but are not prostitutes They re our version of the geisha girl Capote Holly Golightly was not precisely a call girl She had no job but accompanied expense account men to the best restaurants and night clubs with the understanding that her escort was obligated to give her some sort of gift perhaps jewelry or a check if she felt like it she might take her escort home for the night So these girls are the authentic American geishas and they re much more prevalent now than in 1943 or 1944 which was Holly s era Norden Eric March 1968 Playboy Interview Truman Capote Playboy Vol 15 no 3 pp 51 53 56 58 62 160 162 164 170 Reprinted in Halford Macy September 7 2009 Was Holly Golightly Really a Prostitute The New Yorker Retrieved February 14 2015 Capote Truman 1987 Playboy Interview Truman Capote In M Thomas Inge ed Truman Capote Conversations Jackson Miss University Press of Mississippi p 141 ISBN 9780878052745 OCLC 14165382 Capote Truman 1958 Breakfast at Tiffany s New York New York Vintage Books ISBN 9780679745655 Hello I m Holly The Times London February 7 2004 a b c d Clarke Gerald 2005 Capote A Biography Carroll amp Graf Publishers pp 94 95 313 314 ISBN 0 7867 1661 4 Saxon Wolfgang July 24 2003 Carol Matthau a Frank and Tart Memoirist Dies at 78 The New York Times Maeve Golightly Publishersweekly com October 25 2004 Retrieved September 24 2011 Doris Lilly Author Columnist Los Angeles Times October 11 1991 Dorian Leigh Supermodel of the 1940s The Independent London July 14 2008 The story behind the song Moon River The Daily Telegraph October 7 2008 Retrieved May 22 2014 a b c Green Penelope November 6 2020 Marguerite Littman the Inspiration for Holly Golightly Dies at 90 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 7 2020 Retrieved November 8 2020 Ms Littman who landed in Los Angeles at midcentury counted among her closest friends Truman Capote who is said to have distilled that charm into his most famous character Holly Golightly of Breakfast at Tiffany s Churchwell Sarah September 5 2009 Breakfast at Tiffany s When Audrey Hepburn won Marilyn Monroe s role The Guardian Manchester Guardian News amp Media Limited Retrieved May 20 2016 Clarke chs 11 13 Rudisill Marie Simmons James C 1983 Truman Capote The Story of His Bizarre and Exotic Boyhood by an Aunt who Helped to Raise Him William Morrow p 92 Sagolla Lisa Jo 2003 The Girl who Fell Down A Biography of Joan McCracken Boston MA Northeastern University Press p 110 ISBN 1 55553 573 9 Clarke p 308 Plimpton George ed Truman Capote Doubleday 1997 pp 162 163 Wise Kelly ed Portrait Theory Lustrum Press 1981 p 7 Truman Capote s Papers Retrieved September 9 2015 Capote Truman Attie David 2015 Brooklyn A Personal Memoir With the lost photographs of David Attie New York Little Bookroom ISBN 978 1936941117 Breakfast At Tiffany s Newly Illustrated In 2021 Retrieved February 9 2023 Manuscript of Breakfast at Tiffany s up for auction CBS News Retrieved April 1 2013 Capote s Breakfast at Tiffany s manuscript sells for 306K at auction to Russian billionaire The Star Toronto Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd Associated Press April 26 2013 Retrieved May 13 2016 Review of Sally Bowles and Breakfest at Tiffany s Open Letters Monthly an Arts and Literature Review Openlettersmonthly com Archived from the original on August 19 2011 Retrieved September 24 2011 Rudisill Marie Simmons James C The Southern Haunting of Truman Capote Nashville Tennessee Cumberland House 2000 page 100 Breakfast at Tiffany s www moviediva com Mailer Norman 1959 Advertisements for Myself Harvard University Press p 465 ISBN 0 674 00590 2 he is the most perfect writer of my generation he writes the best sentences word for word rhythm upon rhythm I would not have changed two words in Breakfast at Tiffany s which will become a small classic Davis Deborah 2007 Party of the Century The Fabulous Story of Truman Capote and his Black and White Ball John Wiley and Sons pp 141 142 ISBN 978 0 470 09821 9 Sookdeo Niqui July 17 2009 Dreyfus to join cast of Breakfast at Tiffany s The Stage Retrieved September 20 2009 West End Breakfast for Anna Friel BBC News May 15 2009 Gans Andrew Broadway s Breakfast at Tiffany s Sets Closing Date Archived November 2 2013 at the Wayback Machine Playbill com April 15 2013 Cavendish Dominic Pixie Lott ticks all the boxes in Breakfast at Tiffany s review The Telegraph July 28 2016 BibliographyCapote Truman 1973 The Dogs Bark Public People and Private Places 1st ed New York Random House ISBN 978 0 394 48751 9 Clarke Gerald 1988 Capote A Biography 1st ed New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 241 12549 6 Davis Deborah 2006 Party of the Century The Fabulous Story of Truman Capote and His Black and White Ball 1st ed Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons Inc ISBN 978 0 471 65966 2 Plimpton George 1997 Truman Capote In Which Various Friends Enemies Acquaintances and Detractors Recall His Turbulent Career 1st ed New York Doubleday ISBN 0 385 23249 7 Rudisill Marie Simmons James 2000 The Southern Haunting of Truman Capote 1st ed Nashville Tennessee Cumberland House ISBN 1 58182 136 0 External links edit Breakfast at Tiffany s at the Internet Archive GradeSaver study guide on Breakfast at Tiffany s Breakfast at Tiffany s teaching guide Breakfast at Tiffany s Homepage The Novel Critical Analysis Portals nbsp 1950s nbsp United States nbsp Novels Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Breakfast at Tiffany 27s novella amp oldid 1186285771 Plays, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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