In 1994, a year of testosterone-heavy films like "Pulp Fiction" and "The Shawshank Redemption," a female director teamed up with a female producer, female writer and female-led cast to make a movie based on a book by a female author. Male studio executives wrote off "Little Women," the third big-screen adaptation chronicling the 19th-century March sisters, as mere family Christmas sap ahead of its December release. But those involved in the project knew they were working on something special. "I don't think anyone really expected it to do as well as it did. It wasn't the talk of the town," Winona Ryder said. Made for $18 million, Gillian Armstrong's version of "Little Women," starring Ryder as Jo March and Susan Sarandon as the matriarch Marmee, was a critical and box office triumph, earning $95 million worldwide (about $165 million today), three Oscar nominations and a devoted fan base. Ahead of Greta Gerwig's new take in December, I asked the stars, director and others about how their version of Louisa May Alcott's classic tale came to be. Writer Robin Swicord and Amy Pascal, then executive vice president of production at Columbia, had spent 12 years shopping "Little Women" to various studios…. Read full this story
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