The Little Foxes

The Little Foxes, drama in three acts by Lillian Hellman, a chronicle of greed and hate in a ruthless family in the American South, produced and published in 1939.

The play is set in the South at the turn of the 20th century and concerns the manipulative Regina Giddens and her two brothers, Ben and Oscar Hubbard, who want to borrow money from Regina’s rich, terminally ill husband, Horace, so that they can open the first cotton mill in town. When Horace discovers that they have arranged the theft of $80,000 in bonds, instead of prosecuting his brothers-in-law, he informs Regina that he will draw up a new will leaving her only $80,000. The threatened disinheritance causes Regina to reveal all the loathing and disgust she feels for Horace. When he suffers an attack, Regina withholds his medication and cold-bloodedly watches him die.

Hellman’s later play Another Part of the Forest (1947) portrays the Hubbard family 20 years prior to the action in The Little Foxes.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper, Senior Editor.