Suzuki Beane
Suzuki Beane is a humor book written in 1961 by Sandra Scoppettone and illustrated by Louise Fitzhugh. The novel is a downtown satire on Kay Thompson's Eloise series (1956–59).[1] First published in hardcover by Doubleday & Company, Suzuki Beane reappeared as a McFadden Books paperback that same year.
The story, sometimes described as "the Eloise of Greenwich Village", is told from the viewpoint of a young child of Bleecker Street beats. Little Suzuki encounters a different lifestyle when she becomes friends with Henry Martin, a rich kid from the Upper East Side. The two learn about life, love and how to deal with prejudice in the early 1960s. The pair finally decide to "run away from home and start a village where a Square can be a square and a swinging cat can swing in peace".
Desilu purchased the rights in 1962 for a possible adaptation of the characters for development and inclusion into a live-action television series starring comedian-musician Victor Borge. A television pilot was made, with Katie Sweet as Suzuki and Jimmy Garrett as Henry, but the series was not picked up.[2]
The Suzuki Beane book continued to sell. Original copies of the books are now considered collectibles and are frequently traded for high prices on the Internet and at antique book stores. David Teague purchased the rights to Suzuki Beane from Scoppettone and has written and illustrated sequels to the original book. Fitzhugh, who would later be notable for her book Harriet the Spy, died in 1974.
References
- Bird, Betsy; Danielson, Julie; Sieruta, Peter (5 August 2014). Wild Things! Acts of Mischief in Children’s Literature. Candlewick Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-7636-6771-9.
- Karol, Michael (1 January 2004). Lucy A to Z: The Lucille Ball Encyclopedia. iUniverse. p. 365. ISBN 978-0-595-29761-0.