Phillip Rose
A Raisin In The Sun, this highly acclaimed drama is a seminal portrait of African American life in the mid-1950s, written by Lorraine Hansberry and produced by Philip Rose in 1959, thisĘ groundbreaking play, achieved critical and commercial success at a time when the viability of a black audience or a white crossover audience was not considered a possibility. The subsequent film released in 1961, was also a box office success and catapulted the careers of several of its stars.
Lena Younger (Claudia McNeil), the stalwart matriarch of an impoverished black family, dreams of owning a nice home in a tidy, integrated suburb. In the meantime, she shares a small apartment on Chicago's South Side with her underemployed adult son, Walter (Sidney Poitier); his emotionally resilient wife, Ruth (Ruby Dee); their child, Travis (Stephen Perry); and her daughter, Beneatha (Diana Sands). Though theres plenty of love in the family, the close quarters breed desperation and discontent. But Lenas prayers are finally answered when she receives a $10,000 insurance policy her husband left behind.
The money becomes a symbol for freedom for each member of the Younger family: Lena sees it as a ticket out of the ghetto and into a home of her own, Walter sees it as a chance to regain his dignity and start his own business, while Beneatha dreams of medical school. Their internal struggle threatens to tear the Younger family apart in this moving and claustrophobic vision of life in the bigoted and oppressive environment of a 1950s tenement.