Following his 1935 successes
Waiting for Lefty and
Awake and Sing!, Odets went to
Hollywood to write
The General Died at Dawn with the intention of using his salary to support the
Group Theatre, the independent theatre company that had produced his earlier plays, despite his previous protests against large corporations, including movie studios. His own internal struggle to choose between art and materialism became the basis for the theme of his play, his first to focus more on
psychology and personal relationships than social criticism. The
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reviewer noted that Odets wrote about social consciousness in
Waiting for Lefty and "lessons of faith" in
Awake and Sing, but in
Golden Boy he set out to "merely tell a story." Odets called the play "symbolic", with one latter-era critic noting that "the show pits spiritual ideals against lust for fame and money in what can only be termed an implausible setup." According to
John Lahr, "The heroes of 'Golden Boy' and 'The Big Knife' are both torn between commercial success and artistic fulfillment, driven crazy by their decision to live against their natures; both murder themselves out of nostalgia for their lost integrity." where it ran for 250 performances. The cast included
Luther Adler as Joe,
Robert Lewis as Roxy,
Morris Carnovsky as Joe's father, Roman Bohnen as Tom, and
Frances Farmer as Lorna,
John Garfield as Siggie,
Lee J. Cobb as Mr. Carp,
Elia Kazan as Eddie Fuselli and
Howard da Silva as Lewis. The play was revived on Broadway at the
ANTA Playhouse, opening on March 12, 1952, and closing on April 6, 1952, after 55 performances.
John Garfield played Joe. A second Broadway revival, produced by the
Lincoln Center Theater, opened on December 6, 2012 at the
Belasco Theatre. Direction is by
Bartlett Sher with Seth Numrich as Joe Bonaparte,
Yvonne Strahovski as Lorna Moon,
Tony Shalhoub as Mr. Bonaparte and
Danny Burstein as Tokio. The play closed on January 20, 2013 after 53 performances and 30 previews.
Golden Boy received eight 2013
Tony Award nominations, including Best Revival of a Play and Best Performance By An Actor In A Featured Role In A Play for both Shalhoub and Burstein, and three
Drama Desk Award nominations, including Outstanding Revival of a Play. A London revival, directed by
Sam Yates and starring
Josh O'Connor, is planned to open in September 2026 at the
Almeida Theatre. ==References==