UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C.  20549

FORM N-CSR

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT OF REGISTERED MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Investment Company Act file number:  811-06730

 ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND, INC.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)
1345 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10105

(Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code)

Mark R. Manley
AllianceBernstein L.P.
1345 Avenue of the Americas
New York, New York 10105

(Name and address of agent for service)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code:  (800) 221-5672

Date of fiscal year end:  July 31, 2006

Date of reporting period:  July 31, 2006


ITEM 1.   REPORTS TO STOCKHOLDERS.



- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ANNUAL REPORT
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund


Annual Report

July 31, 2006


     [LOGO]
ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN
   INVESTMENTS



Investment Products Offered

o Are Not FDIC Insured
o May Lose Value
o Are Not Bank Guaranteed

The investment return and principal value of an investment in the Fund will
fluctuate as the prices of the individual securities in which it invests
fluctuate, so that your shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than
their original cost. You should consider the investment objectives, risks,
charges and expenses of the Fund carefully before investing. For a free copy of
the Fund's prospectus, which contains this and other information, visit our web
site at www.alliancebernstein.com or call your financial advisor or
AllianceBernstein(R) at (800) 227-4618. Please read the prospectus carefully
before you invest.

You may obtain performance information current to the most recent month-end by
visiting www.alliancebernstein.com.

This shareholder report must be preceded or accompanied by the Fund's
prospectus for individuals who are not current shareholders of the Fund.

You may obtain a description of the Fund's proxy voting policies and
procedures, and information regarding how the Fund voted proxies relating to
portfolio securities during the most recent 12-month period ended June 30,
without charge. Simply visit AllianceBernstein's web site at
www.alliancebernstein.com, or go to the Securities and Exchange Commission's
(the "Commission") web site at www.sec.gov, or call AllianceBernstein at (800)
227-4618.

The Fund files its complete schedule of portfolio holdings with the Commission
for the first and third quarters of each fiscal year on Form N-Q. The Fund's
Forms N-Q are available on the Commission's web site at www.sec.gov. The Fund's
Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the Commission's Public Reference
Room in Washington, DC; information on the operation of the Public Reference
Room may be obtained by calling (800) SEC-0330. AllianceBernstein publishes
full portfolio holdings for the Fund monthly at www.alliancebernstein.com.

AllianceBernstein Investments, Inc. is an affiliate of AllianceBernstein L.P.,
the manager of the funds, and is a member of the NASD.

AllianceBernstein(R) and the AB Logo are registered trademarks and service
marks used by permission of the owner, AllianceBernstein L.P.



September 27, 2006

Annual Report

This report provides management's discussion of fund performance for
AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund (the "Fund") for the annual reporting
period ended July 31, 2006.

Investment Objective and Policies

This open-end fund's investment objective is long-term growth of capital. The
fund invests primarily in equity securities of U.S. companies. Unlike most
equity funds, the Fund focuses on a relatively small number of intensively
researched companies. AllianceBernstein selects the Fund's investments from a
research universe of approximately 500 companies. Under normal circumstances,
the Fund will invest at least 80% of its net assets in common stocks of
large-capitalization companies. Normally, the Fund invests in about 40 to 60
companies that AllianceBernstein believes have strong management, superior
industry positions, excellent balance sheets and superior earnings growth
prospects. The 25 most highly regarded of these companies usually constitute
70% of the Fund's net assets.

Investment Results

The table on page 4 shows the Fund's performance compared to its benchmark, the
Russell 1000 Growth Index, for the six- and 12-month periods ended July 31,
2006. For comparison to the overall market, returns for the Standard & Poor's
(S&P) 500 Stock Index, a common measure of the broad U.S. stock market, have
also been provided.

Recent weakness in the equity markets, particularly among growth stocks, has
been largely indiscriminate and appears to predominantly reflect "macro"
concerns. Nevertheless, both large cap growth stocks and the Fund posted
negative returns for the annual reporting period ended July 31, 2006.

For the 12-month period ended July 31, 2006, the Fund underperformed its
benchmark largely due to sub-par stock selection. The Fund lost approximately
80 basis points relative to the Index in the health care sector due to stock
selection (-4.0% versus 0.7% for the Index). The Fund also lost some ground
relative to its benchmark in the producer durables and consumer staples sectors
(about 115 basis points in total) due to both sub-par stock selection and
underweighting these outperforming sectors. In the consumer discretionary
sector, the Fund outperformed the Index by approximately 10 basis points.
Additionally, the Fund gained roughly 80 basis points on the Index in the
financial services and energy sectors due to overweighting these outperforming
sectors. Relatively better stock selection in the technology sector (-8.4%
versus -9.3% for the Index) added approximately 85 basis points to the Fund's
overall return.

For the six-month period ended July 31, 2006, the Fund underperformed its
benchmark primarily due to poor stock selection. The Fund lost approximately
380 basis points relative to the Index in the technology sector almost entirely
due to stock selection (-27.9% versus -12.3% for the Index). The Fund lost
nearly 150 basis points relative to the Index in the health care sector as the
loss from sub-par stock selection (-9.4% versus -1.3% for the Index) exceeded


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 1


the gain from overweighting this outperforming sector. Additionally, the Fund
lost about 140 basis points compared to the Index in the consumer discretionary
sector due to stock selection (-16.5% versus -8.4% for the Index). In both the
financial services and energy sectors, the Fund lost approximately 55 basis
points relative to the Index due to stock selection (-6.2% versus -1.5% for the
Index) and (-12.3% versus -8.2% for the Index), respectively.

Market Review and Investment Strategy

The market uncertainty that emerged in the first quarter of 2006 accelerated in
the second quarter. As a result, investors experienced volatility and saw
renewed gyrations in day-to-day returns. Growth stocks in particular suffered
more than their share of this volatility, with the Russell 1000 Growth Index
dropping 0.9% in the first half of the year, while its value counterpart rose
6.6%. This renewed sign of life in the already long-in-the-tooth value cycle
comes at a time when the Fund has been very aggressively positioned for a
return to a growth cycle. For the last three quarters of 2005, when growth
outperformed modestly, the Fund generated very significant returns. This year,
when growth suffered still another reversal, the Fund's holdings suffered
disproportionately, as the Fund tended to own the most representative stocks
within the growth universe.

Despite the underperformance in the first half of 2006, the Fund remains
aggressively positioned because the Fund's U.S. Large Cap Investment team ("the
team") continues to believe that the current opportunity for growth stock price
appreciation is as attractive as they have experienced in the last 20 years.
Given the mismatches between earnings growth expectations and valuation that
pervade today's market, the team has a unique opportunity to capitalize on
investor aversion to the highest quality U.S. growth companies. As has been the
case for some time now, future year earnings growth forecasts for the Russell
1000 Growth Index are at or above historical averages, yet the premiums
(relative to the broad market) that investors must pay for this superior growth
have remained near the lowest on record.


2 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


HISTORICAL PERFORMANCE

An Important Note About the Value of Historical Performance

The performance shown on the following pages represents past performance and
does not guarantee future results. Current performance may be lower or higher
than the performance information shown. You may obtain performance information
current to the most recent month-end by visiting www.alliancebernstein.com.

The investment return and principal value of an investment in the Fund will
fluctuate, so that your shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than
their original cost. You should consider the investment objectives, risks,
charges and expenses of the Fund carefully before investing. For a free copy of
the Fund's prospectus, which contains this and other information, visit our
website at www.alliancebernstein.com or call your financial advisor or
AllianceBernstein Investments at 800.227.4618. You should read the prospectus
carefully before you invest.

All fees and expenses related to the operation of the Fund have been deducted.
NAV returns do not reflect sales charges; if sales charges were reflected, the
Fund's quoted performance would be lower. SEC returns reflect the applicable
sales charges for each share class: a 4.25% maximum front-end sales charge for
Class A shares; the applicable contingent deferred sales charge for Class B
shares (4% year 1, 3% year 2, 2% year 3, 1% year 4); a 1% 1 year contingent
deferred sales charge for Class C shares. Returns for the different share
classes will vary due to different expenses associated with each class.
Performance assumes reinvestment of distributions and does not account for
taxes.

Benchmark Disclosure

Neither the unmanaged Russell 1000 Growth Index nor the unmanaged Standard &
Poor's (S&P) 500 Stock Index reflects fees and expenses associated with the
active management of a mutual fund portfolio. The Russell 1000 Growth Index
contains those securities in the Russell 1000 Index with a greater-than-average
growth orientation. The unmanaged Russell 1000 Index is comprised of 1,000 of
the largest capitalized companies that are traded in the United States. The S&P
500 Stock Index is comprised of 500 U.S. companies and is a common measure of
the performance of the overall U.S. stock market. An investor cannot invest
directly in an index, and its results are not indicative of the performance for
any specific investment, including the Fund.

A Word About Risk

The Fund concentrates its investments in a limited number of issues and an
investment in the Fund is therefore subject to greater risk and volatility than
investments in a more diversified portfolio. Growth investing does not
guarantee a profit or eliminate risk. The stocks of these companies can have
relatively high valuations. Because of these high valuations, an investment in
a growth stock can be more risky than an investment in a company with more
modest growth expectations. While the Fund invests principally in common stocks
and other equity securities, in order to achieve its investment objectives, the
Fund may at times use certain types of investment derivatives, such as options,
futures, forwards and swaps. These instruments involve risks different from,
and in certain cases, greater than, the risks presented by more traditional
investments. These risks are fully discussed in the Fund's prospectus.


(Historical Performance continued on next page)


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 3


HISTORICAL PERFORMANCE
(continued from previous page)

                                                            Returns
THE FUND VS. ITS BENCHMARK                       -----------------------------
PERIODS ENDED JULY 31, 2006                          6 Months      12 Months
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund
   Class A                                            -14.19%        -3.08%
   Class B                                            -14.55%        -3.82%
   Class C                                            -14.51%        -3.75%
   Advisor Class*                                     -14.09%        -2.78%
   Class R*                                           -14.32%        -3.19%
   Class K*                                           -14.13%        -2.82%
   Class I*                                           -14.06%        -2.61%
Russell 1000 Growth Index                              -4.49%        -0.76%
S&P 500 Stock Index                                     0.67%         5.38%

*  Please note that these share classes are for investors purchasing shares
through institutional pension plans and investment advisory clients of, and
certain other persons associated with, the Adviser and its affiliates or the
Fund.


GROWTH OF A $10,000 INVESTMENT IN THE FUND
7/31/96 TO 7/31/06

AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund Class A: $16,489
S&P 500 Stock Index: $23,406
Russell 1000 Growth Index: $17,665

[THE FOLLOWING DATA WAS REPRESENTED BY A MOUNTAIN CHART IN THE PRINTED MATERIAL]

                  AllianceBernstein
                      Large Cap               S&P 500          Russell 1000
                 Growth Fund Class A        Stock Index        Growth Index
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   7/31/96            $  9,575               $ 10,000            $ 10,000
   7/31/97            $ 15,820               $ 15,211            $ 15,185
   7/31/98            $ 20,381               $ 18,148            $ 18,210
   7/31/99            $ 25,156               $ 21,814            $ 22,588
   7/31/00            $ 30,678               $ 23,771            $ 28,094
   7/31/01            $ 19,851               $ 20,367            $ 18,244
   7/31/02            $ 13,128               $ 15,556            $ 12,999
   7/31/03            $ 13,838               $ 17,211            $ 14,512
   7/31/04            $ 14,459               $ 19,476            $ 15,747
   7/31/05            $ 17,008               $ 22,211            $ 17,801
   7/31/06            $ 16,489               $ 23,406            $ 17,665

This chart illustrates the total value of an assumed $10,000 investment in
AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund Class A shares (from 7/31/96 to
7/31/06) as compared to the performance of the Fund's benchmark, the Russell
1000 Growth Index, and the broad market, as represented by the S&P 500 Stock
Index. The chart reflects the deduction of the maximum 4.25% sales charge from
the initial $10,000 investment in the Fund and assumes the reinvestment of
dividends and capital gains distributions.

See Historical Performance and Benchmark disclosures on previous page.

(Historical Performance continued on next page)


4 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


HISTORICAL PERFORMANCE
(continued from previous page)

AVERAGE ANNUAL RETURNS AS OF JULY 31, 2006

- --------------------------------------------------------------
                                 NAV Returns    SEC Returns
Class A Shares
1 Year                             -3.08%         -7.20%
5 Years                            -3.65%         -4.48%
10 Years                            5.58%          5.13%

Class B Shares
1 Year                             -3.82%         -7.67%
5 Years                            -4.37%         -4.37%
10 Years(a)                         4.98%          4.98%

Class C Shares
1 Year                             -3.75%         -4.71%
5 Years                            -4.34%         -4.34%
10 Years                            4.85%          4.85%

Advisor Class Shares+
1 Year                             -2.78%         -2.78%
5 Years                            -3.35%         -3.35%
Since Inception*                    5.18%          5.18%

Class R Shares+
1 Year                             -3.19%         -3.19%
Since Inception*                    4.03%          4.03%

Class K Shares+
1 Year                             -2.82%         -2.82%
Since Inception*                    4.05%          4.05%

Class I Shares+
1 Year                             -2.61%         -2.61%
Since Inception*                    4.25%          4.25%


(a)  Assumes conversion of Class B shares into Class A shares after eight years.

*  Inception Dates: 10/1/96 for Advisor Class shares; 11/3/03 for Class R
shares; 3/1/05 for Class K and Class I shares.

+  These share classes are offered at net asset value (NAV) to eligible
investors and their SEC returns are the same as their NAV returns. Please note
that these share classes are for investors purchasing shares through
institutional pension plans and investment advisory clients of, and certain
other persons associated with, the Adviser and its affiliates or the Funds. The
inception dates for these share classes are listed above.

See Historical Performance and Benchmark disclosures on page 3.

(Historical Performance continued on next page)


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 5


HISTORICAL PERFORMANCE
(continued from previous page)

SEC AVERAGE ANNUAL RETURNS (WITH ANY APPLICABLE SALES CHARGES)
AS OF THE MOST RECENT CALENDAR QUARTER-END (JUNE 30, 2006)

                                                SEC Returns
- --------------------------------------------------------------
Class A Shares
1 Year                                             1.38%
5 Years                                           -4.35%
10 Years                                           4.85%

Class B Shares
1 Year                                             1.08%
5 Years                                           -4.24%
10 Years(a)                                        4.72%

Class C Shares
1 Year                                             4.06%
5 Years                                           -4.22%
10 Years                                           4.57%

Advisor Class Shares+
1 Year                                             6.16%
5 Years                                           -3.23%
Since Inception*                                   5.57%

Class R Shares+
1 Year                                             5.81%
Since Inception*                                   5.46%

Class K Shares+
1 Year                                             6.12%
Since Inception*                                   6.82%

Class I Shares+
1 Year                                             6.45%
Since Inception*                                   7.07%


(a)  Assumes conversion of Class B shares into Class A shares after eight years.

*  Inception Dates: 10/1/96 for Advisor Class shares; 11/3/03 for Class R
shares; 3/1/05 for Class K and Class I shares.

+  Please note that these share classes are for investors purchasing shares
through institutional pension plans and investment advisory clients of, and
certain other persons associated with, the Adviser and its affiliates of the
Funds. The inception dates for these share classes are listed above.

See Historical Performance disclosures on page 3.


6 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


FUND EXPENSES

As a shareholder of the Fund, you incur two types of costs: (1) transaction
costs, including sales charges (loads) on purchase payments, contingent
deferred sales charges on redemptions and (2) ongoing costs, including
management fees; distribution (12b-1) fees; and other Fund expenses. This
example is intended to help you understand your ongoing costs (in dollars) of
investing in the Fund and to compare these costs with the ongoing costs of
investing in other mutual funds.

The Example is based on an investment of $1,000 invested at the beginning of
the period and held for the entire period as indicated below.

Actual Expenses

The table below provides information about actual account values and actual
expenses. You may use the information, together with the amount you invested,
to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period. Simply divide your
account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000
= 8.6), then multiply the result by the number under the heading entitled
"Expenses Paid During Period" to estimate the expenses you paid on your account
during this period.

Hypothetical Example for Comparison Purposes

The table below also provides information about hypothetical account values and
hypothetical expenses based on the Fund's actual expense ratio and an assumed
annual rate of return of 5% before expenses, which is not the Fund's actual
return. The hypothetical account values and expenses may not be used to
estimate the actual ending account balance or expenses you paid for the period.
You may use this information to compare the ongoing costs of investing in the
Fund and other funds by comparing this 5% hypothetical example with the 5%
hypothetical examples that appear in the shareholder reports of other funds.

Please note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight your
ongoing costs only and do not reflect any transactional costs, such as sales
charges (loads), or contingent deferred sales charges on redemptions.
Therefore, the hypothetical example is useful in comparing ongoing costs only,
and will not help you determine the relative total costs of owning different
funds. In addition, if these transactional costs were included, your costs
would have been higher.



                         Beginning                            Ending
                       Account Value                       Account Value                    Expenses Paid
                     February 1, 2006                      July 31, 2006                    During Period*
            ------------------------------   -------------------------------   ---------------------------
                Actual         Hypothetical        Actual         Hypothetical**       Actual       Hypothetical
            -----------   ----------------   -----------   -----------------   -----------   -------------
                                                                              
Class A         $1,000           $1,000            $858.07          $1,018.55           $5.80          $ 6.31
Class B         $1,000           $1,000            $854.50          $1,014.83           $9.24          $10.04
Class C         $1,000           $1,000            $854.95          $1,014.98           $9.11          $ 9.89
Advisor
Class           $1,000           $1,000            $859.13          $1,020.03           $4.43          $ 4.81
Class R         $1,000           $1,000            $856.81          $1,017.21           $7.04          $ 7.65
Class K         $1,000           $1,000            $858.66          $1,019.19           $5.21          $ 5.66
Class I         $1,000           $1,000            $859.38          $1,019.39           $5.03          $ 5.46


*  Expenses are equal to the classes' annualized expense ratios of 1.26%,
2.01%, 1.98%, 0.96%, 1.53%, 1.13% and 1.09%, respectively, multiplied by the
average account value over the period, multiplied by 181/365 (to reflect the
one-half year period).

**  Assumes 5% return before expenses.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 7


PORTFOLIO SUMMARY
July 31, 2006


PORTFOLIO STATISTICS
Net Assets ($mil): $2,787.8


SECTOR BREAKDOWN*
[ ]  26.0%   Technology                         [PIE CHART OMITTED]
[ ]  23.8%   Health Care
[ ]  17.3%   Finance
[ ]   9.3%   Energy
[ ]   8.4%   Consumer Services
[ ]   5.5%   Consumer Staples
[ ]   4.8%   Aerospace & Defense
[ ]   2.0%   Basic Industry
[ ]   1.3%   Capital Goods
[ ]   0.6%   Multi-Industry Companies
[ ]   0.4%   Transportation

[ ]   0.6%   Short-Term


TEN LARGEST HOLDINGS**
July 31, 2006

                                                                    Percent of
Company                                          U.S. $ Value       Net Assets
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Apple Computer, Inc.                           $  163,606,904           5.9%
WellPoint, Inc.                                   152,993,200           5.5
Google, Inc. Class A                              135,913,096           4.9
Halliburton Co.                                   121,487,112           4.3
The Procter & Gamble Co.                          115,805,720           4.1
The Boeing Co.                                    114,078,370           4.1
Genentech, Inc.                                   108,791,802           3.9
Yahoo!, Inc.                                       94,745,740           3.4
Alcon, Inc.                                        91,262,130           3.3
QUALCOMM, Inc.                                     88,301,618           3.2
                                               $1,186,985,692          42.6%

*  All data are as of July 31, 2006. The Fund's sector breakdown is expressed
as a percentage of total investments (excluding security lending collateral)
and may vary over time.

Please Note: The sector classifications presented herein are based on the
sector categorization methodology of the Adviser. These sector classifications
are broadly defined. The "Portfolio of Investments" section of the report
reflects more specific industry information and is consistent with the
investment restrictions discussed in the Fund's prospectus.

**  Long-term investments.


8 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


PORTFOLIO OF INVESTMENTS
July 31, 2006

Company                                                Shares      U.S. $ Value
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

COMMON STOCKS-99.8%

Technology-26.2%
Communication Equipment-6.1%
Corning, Inc.(a)                                    2,816,450    $   53,709,701
Juniper Networks, Inc.(a)*                          2,184,800        29,385,560
QUALCOMM, Inc.                                      2,504,300        88,301,618
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    171,396,879
Computer Hardware/Storage-5.9%
Apple Computer, Inc.(a)*                            2,407,400       163,606,904

Computer Peripherals-1.5%
Network Appliance, Inc.(a)*                         1,377,190        40,888,771

Internet Media-8.3%
Google, Inc. Class A(a)                               351,560       135,913,096
Yahoo!, Inc.(a)*                                    3,491,000        94,745,740
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    230,658,836
Semiconductor Components-4.4%
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.(a)*                    2,878,600        55,816,054
Broadcom Corp. Class A(a)                           2,378,300        57,055,417
NVIDIA Corp.(a)                                       442,800         9,799,164
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    122,670,635
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    729,222,025
Health Care-23.9%
Biotechnology-7.0%
Amgen, Inc.(a)                                        155,300        10,830,622
Genentech, Inc.(a)                                  1,346,100       108,791,802
Gilead Sciences, Inc.(a)*                           1,239,000        76,173,720
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    195,796,144
Drugs-2.8%
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Ltd. (ADR)*         2,319,400        76,725,752

Medical Products-3.3%
Alcon, Inc.*                                          826,500        91,262,130

Medical Services-10.8%
Caremark Rx, Inc.                                   1,444,100        76,248,480
Medco Health Solutions, Inc.(a)                       570,500        33,847,765
UnitedHealth Group, Inc.                              818,030        39,126,375
WellPoint, Inc.(a)*                                 2,053,600       152,993,200
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    302,215,820
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    665,999,846
Finance-17.4%
Banking-Money Center-4.7%
JPMorgan Chase & Co.                                1,460,000        66,605,200
UBS AG                                              1,154,700        62,815,680
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    129,420,880


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 9


Company                                                Shares      U.S. $ Value
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Banking - Regional-0.8%
Northern Trust Corp.*                                 393,500    $   22,468,850

Brokerage & Money Management-8.4%
Franklin Resources, Inc.                              714,493        65,340,385
Legg Mason, Inc.*                                     794,170        66,289,370
Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.*                            683,400        49,765,188
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.                         349,400        53,370,850
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    234,765,793
Insurance-2.3%
American International Group, Inc.                  1,066,550        64,707,589

Miscellaneous-1.2%
Nasdaq Stock Market, Inc.(a)*                         605,040        16,656,751
NYSE Group, Inc.(a)*                                  281,600        17,512,704
                                                                 --------------
                                                                     34,169,455
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    485,532,567
Energy-9.3%
Oil Service-9.3%
Baker Hughes, Inc.                                    334,200        26,719,290
GlobalSantaFe Corp.*                                  643,200        35,330,976
Halliburton Co.*                                    3,641,700       121,487,112
Nabors Industries, Ltd.(a)*                         1,566,720        55,336,550
Schlumberger, Ltd.                                    309,000        20,656,650
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    259,530,578
Consumer Services-8.4%
Cellular Communications-1.3%
America Movil S.A. de C.V. (ADR)                      978,100        34,996,418

Restaurants & Lodging-3.2%
Hilton Hotels Corp.*                                  665,200        15,918,236
Las Vegas Sands Corp.(a)*                             237,500        14,732,125
McDonald's Corp.                                    1,271,400        44,994,846
Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, Inc.             238,000        12,514,040
                                                                 --------------
                                                                     88,159,247
Retail-0.6%
eBay, Inc.(a)*                                        745,500        17,944,185

Retail - General Merchandise-3.3%
Lowe's Cos., Inc.*                                  1,610,100        45,646,335
Target Corp.*                                       1,025,100        47,072,592
                                                                 --------------
                                                                     92,718,927
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    233,818,777
Consumer Staples-5.5%
Household Products-4.1%
The Procter & Gamble Co.                            2,060,600       115,805,720


10 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


                                                    Shares or
                                                    Principal
                                                       Amount
Company                                                  (000)     U.S. $ Value
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Retail - Food & Drug-1.4%
Walgreen Co.*                                         427,900    $   20,017,162
Whole Foods Market, Inc.*                             310,600        17,862,606
                                                                 --------------
                                                                     37,879,768
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    153,685,488
Aerospace & Defense-4.8%
Aerospace-4.8%
Rockwell Collins, Inc.                                375,900        20,061,783
The Boeing Co.*                                     1,473,500       114,078,370
                                                                 --------------
                                                                    134,140,153
Basic Industry-2.0%
Chemicals-2.0%
Monsanto Co.                                        1,285,500        55,263,645

Capital Goods-1.3%
Electrical Equipment-0.8%
Emerson Electric Co.                                  289,900        22,878,908

Miscellaneous-0.5%
United Technologies Corp.                             217,400        13,520,106
                                                                 --------------
                                                                     36,399,014
Multi-Industry Companies-0.6%
Multi-Industry Companies-0.6%
Textron, Inc.                                         196,500        17,667,315

Transportation-0.4%
Railroad-0.4%
CSX Corp.                                             207,800        12,609,304

Total Common Stocks
  (cost $2,367,379,228)                                           2,783,868,712

SHORT-TERM INVESTMENT-0.6%
Time Deposit-0.6%
State Street Euro Dollar
  4.60%, 8/01/06
  (cost $15,917,000)                                 $ 15,917        15,917,000

Total Investments Before Security Lending
  Collateral-100.4%
  (cost $2,383,296,228)                                           2,799,785,712

INVESTMENT OF CASH COLLATERAL
  FOR SECURITIES LOANED-13.2%
Short-Term Investment
UBS Private Money Market Fund, LLC
  (cost $367,603,714)                             367,603,714       367,603,714


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 11


                                                                   U.S. $ Value
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Investments-113.6%
  (cost $2,750,899,942)                                          $3,167,389,426
Other assets less liabilities-(13.6)%                              (379,584,946)

Net Assets-100%                                                  $2,787,804,480


*  Represents entire or partial securities out on loan. See Note E for
securities lending information.

(a)  Non-income producing security.

Glossary:

ADR - American Depositary Receipt

See notes to financial statements.


12 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


STATEMENT OF ASSETS & LIABILITIES
July 31, 2006

Assets
Investments in securities, at value
  (cost $2,750,899,942--including investment of cash
  collateral for securities loaned of $367,603,714)          $ 3,167,389,426(a)
Cash                                                                     170
Receivable for capital stock sold                                 15,435,642
Receivable for investment securities sold                          9,624,097
Dividends and interest receivable                                  1,383,569
Total assets                                                   3,193,832,904

Liabilities
Payable for collateral on securities loaned                      367,603,714
Payable for capital stock redeemed                                22,211,062
Payable for investment securities purchased                       11,353,246
Advisory fee payable                                               1,782,927
Transfer Agent fee payable                                         1,146,302
Distribution fee payable                                             404,998
Administrative fee payable                                            29,318
Accrued expenses                                                   1,496,857
Total liabilities                                                406,028,424
Net Assets                                                   $ 2,787,804,480

Composition of Net Assets
Capital stock, at par                                        $       159,347
Additional paid-in capital                                    10,634,054,167
Accumulated net realized loss on investment transactions      (8,262,898,518)
Net unrealized appreciation of investments                       416,489,484
                                                             $ 2,787,804,480


Net Asset Value Per Share--21 billion shares of capital stock authorized, $.001
par value

                                          Shares         Net Asset
Class              Net Assets          Outstanding         Value
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
A               $ 1,107,602,641         59,677,472        $ 18.56*
B               $ 1,117,481,172         67,217,074        $ 16.62
C               $   396,989,721         23,803,347        $ 16.68
Advisor         $   151,816,160          7,903,863        $ 19.21
R               $     1,492,106             80,677        $ 18.49
K               $     1,585,955             85,051        $ 18.65
I               $    10,836,725            579,435        $ 18.70


*  The maximum offering price per share for Class A shares was $19.38 which
reflects a sales charge of 4.25%.

(a)  Includes securities on loan with a value of $354,794,120 (see Note E).

See notes to financial statements.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 13


STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
Year Ended July 31, 2006

Investment Income
Dividends (net of foreign taxes withheld
  of $510,786)                                   $  20,384,216
Interest                                               803,013    $  21,187,229

Expenses
Advisory fee                                        24,958,987
Distribution fee--Class A                            4,050,221
Distribution fee--Class B                           14,253,735
Distribution fee--Class C                            4,957,625
Distribution fee--Class R                                3,925
Distribution fee--Class K                                1,152
Transfer agency--Class A                             5,091,229
Transfer agency--Class B                             6,129,188
Transfer agency--Class C                             1,981,190
Transfer agency--Advisor Class                         659,807
Transfer agency--Class R                                 2,118
Transfer agency--Class K                                   315
Transfer agency--Class I                                 6,130
Printing                                             3,693,061
Legal                                                  538,449
Custodian                                              480,303
Registration fees                                      151,619
Administrative                                          88,481
Audit                                                   41,643
Directors' fees and expenses                            30,599
Miscellaneous                                          129,627
Total expenses                                      67,249,404
Less: expense offset arrangement
  (see Note B)                                        (340,218)
Net expenses                                                         66,909,186
Net investment loss                                                 (45,721,957)

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)
on Investment Transactions
Net realized gain on investment
  transactions
842,636,072(a)
Net change in unrealized
  appreciation/depreciation
  of investments                                                   (871,749,841)
Net loss on investment transactions                                 (29,113,769)
Net Decrease in Net Assets from
  Operations                                                      $ (74,835,726)


(a)  On August 5, 2005, the Fund had a redemption-in-kind with total proceeds
in the amount of $889,298,358. The net realized gain on the transactions of
$337,021,310 will not be realized for tax purposes.

See notes to financial statements.


14 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN NET ASSETS

                                                 Year Ended       Year Ended
                                                  July 31,         July 31,
                                                    2006             2005
                                              ---------------   ---------------
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets
from Operations
Net investment loss                           $   (45,721,957)  $   (51,583,251)
Net realized gain on investment
  transactions                                    842,636,072       287,552,147
Net change in unrealized appreciation/
  depreciation of investments                    (871,749,841)      490,377,829
Net increase (decrease) in net assets
  from operations                                 (74,835,726)      726,346,725

Capital Stock Transactions
Net decrease                                   (1,623,233,425)   (1,090,829,489)
Total decrease                                 (1,698,069,151)     (364,482,764)

Net Assets
Beginning of period                             4,485,873,631     4,850,356,395
End of period, (including accumulated
  net investment loss of $0 and $0,
  respectively)                               $ 2,787,804,480   $ 4,485,873,631


See notes to financial statements.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 15


NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
July 31, 2006

NOTE A

Significant Accounting Policies

AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc. (the "Fund"), organized as a
Maryland corporation on July 9, 1992, is registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 as a diversified, open-end management investment company.
The Fund offers Class A, Class B, Class C, Advisor Class, Class R, Class K and
Class I shares. Class A shares are sold with a front-end sales charge of up to
4.25% for purchases not exceeding $1,000,000. With respect to purchases of
$1,000,000 or more, Class A shares redeemed within one year of purchase may be
subject to a contingent deferred sales charge of 1%. Class B shares are
currently sold with a contingent deferred sales charge which declines from 4%
to zero depending on the period of time the shares are held. Class B shares
will automatically convert to Class A shares eight years after the end of the
calendar month of purchase. Class C shares are subject to a contingent deferred
sales charge of 1% on redemptions made within the first year after purchase.
Class R and Class K shares are sold without an initial or contingent deferred
sales charge. Advisor Class and Class I shares are sold without an initial or
contingent deferred sales charge and are not subject to ongoing distribution
expenses. All seven classes of shares have identical voting, dividend,
liquidation and other rights, except that the classes bear different
distribution and transfer agency expenses. Each class has exclusive voting
rights with respect to its distribution plan. The financial statements have
been prepared in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles
which require management to make certain estimates and assumptions that affect
the reported amounts of assets and liabilities in the financial statements and
amounts of income and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results
could differ from those estimates. Additional information about some of the
items discussed in these Notes to Financial Statements is contained in the
Fund's Statement of Additional Information, which is available upon request.
The following is a summary of significant accounting policies followed by the
Fund.

1. Security Valuation

Portfolio securities are valued at their current market value determined on the
basis of market quotations or, if market quotations are not readily available
or are deemed unreliable, at "fair value" as determined in accordance with
procedures established by and under the general supervision of the Fund's Board
of Directors.

In general, the market value of securities which are readily available and
deemed reliable are determined as follows. Securities listed on a national
securities exchange (other than securities listed on The NASDAQ Stock Market,
Inc. ("NASDAQ")) or on a foreign securities exchange are valued at the last
sale price at the close of the exchange or foreign securities exchange. If
there has been no sale on such day, the securities are valued at the mean of
the closing bid and asked prices on such day. Securities listed on more than
one exchange are valued by ref-


16 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


erence to the principal exchange on which the securities are traded; securities
listed only on NASDAQ are valued in accordance with the NASDAQ Official Closing
Price; listed put or call options are valued at the last sale price. If there
has been no sale on that day, such securities will be valued at the closing bid
prices on that day; open futures contracts and options thereon are valued using
the closing settlement price or, in the absence of such a price, the most
recent quoted bid price. If there are no quotations available for the day of
valuation, the last available closing settlement price is used; securities
traded in the over-the-counter market, ("OTC") are valued at the mean of the
current bid and asked prices as reported by the National Quotation Bureau or
other comparable sources; U.S. Government securities and other debt instruments
having 60 days or less remaining until maturity are valued at amortized cost if
their original maturity was 60 days or less; or by amortizing their fair value
as of the 61st day prior to maturity if their original term to maturity
exceeded 60 days; fixed-income securities, including mortgage backed and asset
backed securities, may be valued on the basis of prices provided by a pricing
service or at a price obtained from one or more of the major broker/dealers. In
cases where broker/dealer quotes are obtained, AllianceBernstein L.P. (prior to
February 24, 2006 known as Alliance Capital Management L.P.) (the "Adviser")
may establish procedures whereby changes in market yields or spreads are used
to adjust, on a daily basis, a recently obtained quoted price on a security;
and OTC and other derivatives are valued on the basis of a quoted bid price or
spread from a major broker/dealer in such security.

Securities for which market quotations are not readily available (including
restricted securities) or are deemed unreliable are valued at fair value.
Factors considered in making this determination may include, but are not
limited to, information obtained by contacting the issuer, analysts, analysis
of the issuer's financial statements or other available documents. In addition,
the Fund may use fair value pricing for securities primarily traded in non-U.S.
markets because, most foreign markets close well before the Fund values its
securities at 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time. The earlier close of these foreign
markets gives rise to the possibility that significant events, including broad
market moves, may have occurred in the interim and may materially affect the
value of those securities. To account for this, the Fund may frequently value
many of its foreign equity securities using fair value prices based on third
party vendor modeling tools to the extent available.

2. Currency Translation

Assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies and commitments under
forward currency exchange contracts are translated into U.S. dollars at the
mean of the quoted bid and asked prices of such currencies against the U.S.
dollar. Purchases and sales of portfolio securities are translated into U.S.
dollars at the rates of exchange prevailing when such securities were acquired
or sold. Income and expenses are translated into U.S. dollars at rates of
exchange prevailing when accrued.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 17


Net realized gain or loss on foreign currency transactions represents foreign
exchange gains and losses from sales and maturities of foreign fixed income
investments, foreign currency exchange contracts, holding of foreign
currencies, currency gains or losses realized between the trade and settlement
dates on foreign investment transactions, and the difference between the
amounts of dividends, interest and foreign withholding taxes recorded on the
Fund's books and the U.S. dollar equivalent amounts actually received or paid.
Net unrealized currency gains and losses from valuing foreign currency
denominated assets and liabilities at period end exchange rates are reflected
as a component of net unrealized appreciation or depreciation of investments
and foreign currency denominated assets and liabilities.

3. Taxes

It is the Fund's policy to meet the requirements of the Internal Revenue Code
applicable to regulated investment companies and to distribute all of its
investment company taxable income and net realized gains, if any, to
shareholders. Therefore, no provisions for federal income or excise taxes are
required. The Fund may be subject to taxes imposed by countries in which it
invests. Such taxes are generally based on income and/or capital gains earned
or repatriated. Taxes are accrued and applied to net investment income, net
realized gains and net unrealized appreciation/depreciation as such income
and/or gains are earned.

4. Investment Income and Investment Transactions

Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date or as soon as the Fund is
informed of the dividend. Interest income is accrued daily. Investment
transactions are accounted for on the trade date the securities are purchased
or sold. Investment gains and losses are determined on the identified cost
basis. The Fund amortizes premiums and accretes discounts as adjustments to
interest income.

5. Class Allocations

All income earned and expenses incurred by the Fund are borne on a pro-rata
basis by each outstanding class of shares, based on the proportionate interest
in the Fund represented by the net assets of such class, except for class
specific expenses which are allocated to the respective class. Realized and
unrealized gains and losses are allocated among the various share classes based
on their relative net assets.

6. Dividends and Distributions

Dividends and distributions to shareholders, if any, are recorded on the
ex-dividend date. Income dividends and capital gains distributions are
determined in accordance with federal tax regulations and may differ from those
determined in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles. To
the extent these differences are permanent, such amounts are reclassified
within the capital accounts based on their federal tax basis treatment;
temporary differences do not require such reclassification.


18 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


NOTE B

Advisory Fee and Other Transactions with Affiliates

Under the terms of the investment advisory agreement, the Fund pays the Adviser
an advisory fee at an annual rate of .75% of the first $2.5 billion, .65% of
the next $2.5 billion and .60% in excess of $5 billion of the Fund's average
daily net assets. Prior to September 7, 2004, the Fund paid the Adviser an
advisory fee at an annual rate of 1.00% of the Fund's average daily net assets
up to $5 billion, .95% of the next $2.5 billion, .90% of the next $2.5 billion,
and .85% of the Fund's average daily net assets over $10 billion. The fee is
accrued daily and paid monthly.

Pursuant to the advisory agreement, the Fund paid $88,481 to the Adviser
representing the cost of certain legal and accounting services provided to the
Fund by the Adviser for the year ended July 31, 2006.

The Fund compensates AllianceBernstein Investor Services, Inc. (prior to
February 24, 2006 known as Alliance Global Investor Services, Inc.) ("ABIS"), a
wholly-owned subsidiary of the Adviser, under a Transfer Agency Agreement for
providing personnel and facilities to perform transfer agency services for the
Fund. ABIS may make payments to intermediaries that provide omnibus account
services, sub-accounting services and/or networking services. Such compensation
retained by ABIS amounted to $7,274,250 for the year ended July 31, 2006.

For the year ended July 31, 2006, the Fund's expenses were reduced by $340,218
under an expense offset arrangement with ABIS.

AllianceBernstein Investments, Inc. (prior to February 24, 2006 known as
AllianceBernstein Investment Research and Management, Inc.) (the
"Distributor"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Adviser, serves as the
distributor of the Fund's shares. The Distributor has advised the Fund that it
has retained front-end sales charges of $38,485 from the sale of Class A shares
and received $32,787, $660,567 and $36,961 in contingent deferred sales charges
imposed upon redemptions by shareholders of Class A, Class B and Class C
shares, respectively, for the year ended July 31, 2006.

Brokerage commissions paid on investment transactions for the year ended July
31, 2006 amounted to $3,984,300, of which $75,266 and $0, respectively, was
paid to Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. LLC and Sanford C. Bernstein Limited,
affiliates of the Adviser.

NOTE C

Distribution Services Agreement

The Fund has adopted a Distribution Services Agreement (the "Agreement")
pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Under the
Agreement, the Fund pays distribution and servicing fees to the Distributor at


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 19


an annual rate of up to .50% of the Fund's average daily net assets
attributable to Class A and Class R shares, 1% of the Fund's average daily net
assets attributable to both Class B and Class C shares and .25% of the Fund's
average daily net assets attributable to Class K shares. There are no
distribution and servicing fees on the Advisor Class and Class I shares. The
fees are accrued daily and paid monthly. The Directors currently limit payments
under the Class A plan to .30% of the average net assets attributable to Class
A shares. The Agreement provides that the Distributor will use such payments in
their entirety for distribution assistance and promotional activities. The
Distributor has incurred expenses in excess of the distribution costs
reimbursed by the Fund in the amounts of $190,656,834, $16,805,042, $9,187 and
$4,758 for Class B, Class C, Class R and Class K shares, respectively; such
costs may be recovered from the Fund in future periods so long as the Agreement
is in effect. In accordance with the Agreement, there is no provision for
recovery of unreimbursed distribution costs incurred by the Distributor beyond
the current fiscal year for Class A shares. The Agreement also provides that
the Adviser may use its own resources to finance the distribution of the Fund's
shares.

NOTE D

Investment Transactions

Purchases and sales of investment securities (excluding short-term investments)
for the year ended July 31, 2006, were as follows:

                                                   Purchases         Sales
                                                --------------   --------------
Investment securities (excluding
  U.S. government securities)                   $2,364,789,574   $3,125,527,579
U.S. government securities                                  -0-              -0-

The cost of investments for federal income tax purposes, gross unrealized
appreciation and unrealized depreciation are as follows:

Cost                                                             $2,779,573,195
Gross unrealized appreciation                                    $  493,253,714
Gross unrealized depreciation                                      (105,437,483)
Net unrealized appreciation                                      $  387,816,231


NOTE E

Securities Lending

The Fund has entered into a securities lending agreement with UBS Securities
LLC (formerly UBS Warburg LLC) (the "Lending Agent"). Under the terms of the
agreement, the Lending Agent, on behalf of the Fund, administers the lending of
portfolio securities to certain broker-dealers. In return, the Fund receives
fee income from the lending transactions or it retains a portion of interest on
the investment of any cash received as collateral. The Fund also continues to
receive dividends or interest on the securities loaned. Unrealized gain


20 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


or loss on the value of the securities loaned that may occur during the term of
the loan will be reflected in the accounts of the Fund. All loans are
continuously secured by collateral exceeding the value of the securities
loaned. All collateral consists of either cash or U.S. government securities.
The Lending Agent may invest the cash collateral received in an eligible money
market vehicle in accordance with the investment restrictions of the Fund. The
Lending Agent will indemnify the Fund for any loss resulting from a borrower's
failure to return a loaned security when due. As of July 31, 2006, the Fund had
loaned securities with a value of $354,794,120 and received cash collateral
which was invested in a money market fund valued at $367,603,714 as included in
the accompanying portfolio of investments. For the year ended July 31, 2006,
the Fund earned fee income of $130,053 which is included in interest income in
the accompanying statement of operations.

NOTE F

Capital Stock

Each class consists of 3,000,000,000 authorized shares. Transactions in capital
shares for each class were as follows:


                               Shares                         Amount
                     --------------------------  ------------------------------
                      Year Ended    Year Ended     Year Ended      Year Ended
                       July 31,      July 31,       July 31,        July 31,
                         2006          2005           2006            2005
                     ------------  ------------  --------------  --------------
Class A
Shares sold           15,506,453     9,120,152   $ 317,912,708   $ 158,058,675
Shares converted
  from Class B         1,678,657     1,194,471      32,714,960      21,393,988
Shares redeemed      (27,935,134)  (35,137,620)   (565,116,803)   (610,166,042)
Net decrease         (10,750,024)  (24,822,997)  $(214,489,135)  $(430,713,379)

Class B
Shares sold            2,254,439     3,076,383   $  41,239,914   $  48,139,464
Shares converted
  to Class A          (1,873,244)   (1,325,136)    (32,714,960)    (21,393,988)
Shares redeemed      (23,391,971)  (37,997,391)   (422,565,792)   (595,688,318)
Net decrease         (23,010,776)  (36,246,144)  $(414,040,838)  $(568,942,842)

Class C
Shares sold            1,385,102     1,152,760   $  25,732,425   $  18,127,392
Shares redeemed       (8,556,904)  (15,133,060)   (155,272,748)   (237,393,792)
Net decrease          (7,171,802)  (13,980,300)  $(129,540,323)  $(219,266,400)


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 21


                               Shares                         Amount
                     --------------------------  ------------------------------
                       Year Ended    Year Ended    Year Ended      Year Ended
                        July 31,      July 31,      July 31,        July 31,
                          2006          2005          2006            2005
                     ------------  ------------  --------------  --------------
Advisor Class
Shares sold            2,552,875    12,095,279   $  53,420,574   $ 216,904,743
Shares redeemed      (47,327,598)   (4,934,526)   (933,899,836)    (88,916,350)
Net increase
  (decrease)         (44,774,723)    7,160,753   $(880,479,262)  $ 127,988,393

Class R
Shares sold               96,728         5,735   $   1,988,768   $      97,611
Shares redeemed          (21,644)         (744)       (435,046)        (12,872)
Net increase              75,084         4,991   $   1,553,722   $      84,739

                                     March 1,                        March 1,
                                    2005(a) to                      2005(a) to
                                  July 31, 2005                   July 31, 2005
                                   ------------                  --------------
Class K
Shares sold               85,118           567   $   1,730,424   $      10,000
Shares redeemed             (634)           -0-        (12,648)             -0-
Net increase              84,484           567   $   1,717,776   $      10,000

Class I
Shares sold              705,324           567   $  14,446,682   $      10,000
Shares redeemed         (126,456)           -0-     (2,402,047)             -0-
Net increase             578,868           567   $  12,044,635   $      10,000

(a)  Commencement of distribution.


NOTE G

Risks Involved in Investing in the Fund

Foreign Securities Risk--Investing in securities of foreign companies or
foreign governments involves special risks which include changes in foreign
currency exchange rates and the possibility of the future political and
economic developments which could adversely affect the value of such
securities. Moreover, securities of many foreign companies or foreign
governments and their markets may be less liquid and their prices more volatile
than those of comparable U.S. companies or of the U.S. government.

Indemnification Risk--In the ordinary course of business, the Fund enters into
contracts that contain a variety of indemnifications. The Fund's maximum
exposure under these arrangements is unknown. However, the Fund has not had
prior claims or losses pursuant to these indemnification provisions and expects
the risk of loss thereunder to be remote.


22 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


NOTE H

Joint Credit Facility

A number of open-end mutual funds managed by the Adviser, including the Fund,
participate in a $250 million revolving credit facility (the "Facility")
intended to provide short-term financing if necessary, subject to certain
restrictions in connection with abnormal redemption activity. Commitment fees
related to the Facility are paid by the participating funds and are included in
miscellaneous expenses in the statement of operations. The Fund did not utilize
the Facility during the year ended July 31, 2006.

NOTE I

Components of Accumulated Earnings (Deficit)

As of July 31, 2006, the components of accumulated earnings/(deficit) on a tax
basis were as follows:

Accumulated capital and other losses                       $ (8,234,225,261)(a)
Unrealized appreciation/(depreciation)                          387,816,231(b)
Total accumulated earnings/(deficit)                       $ (7,846,409,030)

(a)  On July 31, 2006, the Fund had a net capital loss carryforward of
$8,234,225,261, of which $5,059,666,044 expires in the year 2009,
$2,082,402,414 expires in the year 2010 and $1,092,156,803 expires in the year
2011. To the extent future capital gains are offset by capital loss
carryforward, such gains will not be distributed. The Fund utilized
$489,178,532 of capital loss carryforward during the year.

(b)  The difference between book-basis and tax-basis unrealized
appreciation/(depreciation) is attributable primarily to the tax deferral of
losses on wash sales and return of capital distributions from underlying
investments.

During the current fiscal year, permanent differences, primarily due to a net
investment loss and a redemption-in-kind distribution, resulted in a decrease
in accumulated net investment loss and corresponding increases in accumulated
net realized loss on investment transactions and in additional paid in capital.
This reclassification had no effect on net assets.

NOTE J

Legal Proceedings

As has been previously reported, the staff of the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission ("SEC") and the Office of New York Attorney General ("NYAG") have
been investigating practices in the mutual fund industry identified as "market
timing" and "late trading" of mutual fund shares. Certain other regulatory
authorities have also been conducting investigations into these practices
within the industry and have requested that the Adviser provide information to
them. The Adviser has been cooperating and will continue to cooperate with all
of these authorities.

On December 18, 2003, the Adviser confirmed that it had reached terms with the
SEC and the NYAG for the resolution of regulatory claims relating to the


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 23


practice of "market timing" mutual fund shares in some of the AllianceBernstein
Mutual Funds. The agreement with the SEC is reflected in an Order of the
Commission ("SEC Order"). The agreement with the NYAG is memorialized in an
Assurance of Discontinuance dated September 1, 2004 ("NYAG Order"). Among the
key provisions of these agreements are the following:

(i)  The Adviser agreed to establish a $250 million fund (the "Reimbursement
Fund") to compensate mutual fund shareholders for the adverse effects of market
timing attributable to market timing relationships described in the SEC Order.
According to the SEC Order, the Reimbursement Fund is to be paid, in order of
priority, to fund investors based on (i) their aliquot share of losses suffered
by the fund due to market timing, and (ii) a proportionate share of advisory
fees paid by such fund during the period of such market timing;

(ii)  The Adviser agreed to reduce the advisory fees it receives from some of
the AllianceBernstein long-term, open-end retail funds until December 31, 2008;
and

(iii)  The Adviser agreed to implement changes to its governance and compliance
procedures. Additionally, the SEC Order and the NYAG Order contemplate that the
Adviser's registered investment company clients, including the Fund, will
introduce governance and compliance changes.

In anticipation of final, definitive documentation of the NYAG Order and
effective January 1, 2004, the Adviser began waiving a portion of its advisory
fee. On September 7, 2004, the Fund's investment advisory agreement was amended
to reflect the reduced advisory fee. For more information on this waiver and
amendment to the Fund's investment advisory agreement, please see "Advisory Fee
and Other Transactions with Affiliates" above.

A special committee of the Adviser's Board of Directors, comprised of the
members of the Adviser's Audit Committee and the other independent member of
the Adviser's Board, directed and oversaw an internal investigation and a
comprehensive review of the facts and circumstances relevant to the SEC's and
the NYAG's investigations.

In addition, the Independent Directors of the Fund ("the Independent
Directors") have conducted an investigation of the above-mentioned matters with
the advice of an independent economic consultant and independent counsel.

On October 2, 2003, a purported class action complaint entitled Hindo, et al.
v. AllianceBernstein Growth & Income Fund, et al. ("Hindo Complaint") was filed
against the Adviser, Alliance Capital Management Holding L.P. ("Alliance
Holding"), Alliance Capital Management Corporation, AXA Financial, Inc., the


24 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


AllianceBernstein Funds, certain officers of the Adviser ("Alliance
defendants"), and certain other defendants not affiliated with the Adviser, as
well as unnamed Doe defendants. The Hindo Complaint was filed in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of New York by alleged
shareholders of two of the AllianceBernstein Funds. The Hindo Complaint alleges
that certain of the Alliance defendants failed to disclose that they improperly
allowed certain hedge funds and other unidentified parties to engage in "late
trading" and "market timing" of AllianceBernstein Fund securities, violating
Sections 11 and 15 of the Securities Act, Sections 10(b) and 20(a) of the
Exchange Act and Sections 206 and 215 of the Advisers Act. Plaintiffs seek an
unspecified amount of compensatory damages and rescission of their contracts
with the Adviser, including recovery of all fees paid to the Adviser pursuant
to such contracts.

Since October 2, 2003, 43 additional lawsuits making factual allegations
generally similar to those in the Hindo Complaint were filed in various federal
and state courts against the Adviser and certain other defendants. The
plaintiffs in such lawsuits have asserted a variety of theories for recovery
including, but not limited to, violations of the Securities Act, the Exchange
Act, the Advisers Act, the Investment Company Act, the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974, as amended ("ERISA"), certain state securities
laws and common law. All state court actions against the Adviser either were
voluntarily dismissed or removed to federal court. On February 20, 2004, the
Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation transferred all actions to the
United States District Court for the District of Maryland (the "Mutual Fund
MDL").

On September 29, 2004, plaintiffs filed consolidated amended complaints with
respect to four claim types: mutual fund shareholder claims; mutual fund
derivative claims; derivative claims brought on behalf of Alliance Holding; and
claims brought under ERISA by participants in the Profit Sharing Plan for
Employees of the Adviser. All four complaints include substantially identical
factual allegations, which appear to be based in large part on the SEC Order
and the NYAG Order.

On April 21, 2006, the Adviser and attorneys for the plaintiffs in the mutual
fund shareholder claims, mutual fund derivative claims, and ERISA claims
entered into a confidential memorandum of understanding ("MOU") containing
their agreement to settle these claims. The agreement will be documented by a
stipulation of settlement and will be submitted for court approval at a later
date. The derivative claims brought on behalf of Alliance Holding remain
pending.

On February 10, 2004, the Adviser received (i) a subpoena duces tecum from the
Office of the Attorney General of the State of West Virginia and (ii) a request
for information from West Virginia's Office of the State Auditor, Securities
Commission (the "West Virginia Securities Commissioner") (together, the
"Information Requests"). Both Information Requests require the Adviser to pro-


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 25


duce documents concerning, among other things, any market timing or late
trading in the Adviser's sponsored mutual funds. The Adviser responded to the
Information Requests and has been cooperating fully with the investigation.

On April 11, 2005, a complaint entitled The Attorney General of the State of
West Virginia v. AIM Advisors, Inc., et al. ("WVAG Complaint") was filed
against the Adviser, Alliance Holding, and various other defendants not
affiliated with the Adviser. The WVAG Complaint was filed in the Circuit Court
of Marshall County, West Virginia by the Attorney General of the State of West
Virginia. The WVAG Complaint makes factual allegations generally similar to
those in the Hindo Complaint. On October 19, 2005, the WVAG Complaint was
transferred to the Mutual Fund MDL.

On August 30, 2005, the West Virginia Securities Commissioner signed a Summary
Order to Cease and Desist, and Notice of Right to Hearing addressed to the
Adviser and Alliance Holding. The Summary Order claims that the Adviser and
Alliance Holding violated the West Virginia Uniform Securities Act, and makes
factual allegations generally similar to those in the Commission Order and the
NYAG Order. On January 26, 2006, the Adviser, Alliance Holding, and various
unaffiliated defendants filed a Petition for Writ of Prohibition and Order
Suspending Proceedings in West Virginia state court seeking to vacate the
Summary Order and for other relief. On April 12, 2006, respondents' petition
was denied. On May  4, 2006, respondents appealed the court's determination.

On June 22, 2004, a purported class action complaint entitled Aucoin, et al. v.
Alliance Capital Management L.P., et al. ("Aucoin Complaint") was filed against
the Adviser, Alliance Holding, Alliance Capital Management Corporation, AXA
Financial, Inc., AllianceBernstein Investment Research & Management, Inc.,
certain current and former directors of the AllianceBernstein Mutual Funds, and
unnamed Doe defendants. The Aucoin Complaint names certain of the
AllianceBernstein mutual funds as nominal defendants. The Aucoin Complaint was
filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
by alleged shareholders of an AllianceBernstein mutual fund. The Aucoin
Complaint alleges, among other things, (i) that certain of the defendants
improperly authorized the payment of excessive commissions and other fees from
fund assets to broker-dealers in exchange for preferential marketing services,
(ii) that certain of the defendants misrepresented and omitted from
registration statements and other reports material facts concerning such
payments, and (iii) that certain defendants caused such conduct as control
persons of other defendants. The Aucoin Complaint asserts claims for violation
of Sections 34(b), 36(b) and 48(a) of the Investment Company Act, Sections 206
and 215 of the Advisers Act, breach of common law fiduciary duties, and aiding
and abetting breaches of common law fiduciary duties. Plaintiffs seek an
unspecified amount of compensatory damages and punitive damages, rescission of
their contracts with the Adviser, including recovery of all fees paid to the
Adviser pursuant to


26 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


such contracts, an accounting of all fund-related fees, commissions and soft
dollar payments, and restitution of all unlawfully or discriminatorily obtained
fees and expenses.

Since June 22, 2004, nine additional lawsuits making factual allegations
substantially similar to those in the Aucoin Complaint were filed against the
Adviser and certain other defendants. All nine of the lawsuits (i) were brought
as class actions filed in the United States District Court for the Southern
District of New York, (ii) assert claims substantially identical to the Aucoin
Complaint, and (iii) are brought on behalf of shareholders of the Funds.

On February 2, 2005, plaintiffs filed a consolidated amended class action
complaint ("Aucoin Consolidated Amended Complaint") that asserts claims
substantially similar to the Aucoin Complaint and the nine additional lawsuits
referenced above. On October 19, 2005, the District Court dismissed each of the
claims set forth in the Aucoin Consolidated Amended Complaint, except for
plaintiffs' claim under Section 36(b) of the Investment Company Act. On January
11, 2006, the District Court granted defendants' motion for reconsideration and
dismissed the remaining Section 36(b) claim. On May 31, 2006 the District Court
denied plaintiffs' motion for leave to file an amended complaint. On July 5,
2006, plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal.

It is possible that these matters and/or other developments resulting from
these matters could result in increased redemptions of the AllianceBernstein
Mutual Funds' shares or other adverse consequences to the AllianceBernstein
Mutual Funds. This may require the AllianceBernstein Mutual Funds to sell
investments held by those funds to provide for sufficient liquidity and could
also have an adverse effect on the investment performance of the
AllianceBernstein Mutual Funds. However, the Adviser believes that these
matters are not likely to have a material adverse effect on its ability to
perform advisory services relating to the AllianceBernstein Mutual Funds.

NOTE K

Change of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

On June 14, 2006, KPMG LLP ("KPMG") was selected as the Fund's independent
registered public accounting firm for the 2006 fiscal year. A majority of the
Fund's Board of Directors, including a majority of the Independent Directors,
approved the appointment of KPMG LLP. The predecessor independent registered
public accounting firm's reports on the Fund's financial statements for the
year ended July 31, 2005 and the year ended July 31, 2004 contained no adverse
opinion or disclaimer of opinion and were not qualified or modified as to
uncertainty, audit scope or accounting principles. During such fiscal periods
there were no disagreements between the Fund and the predecessor independent
registered public accounting firm on any matter of accounting principles or
practices, financial statement disclosure, or auditing scope or procedures,
which such disagree-


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 27


ments, if not resolved to the satisfaction of the predecessor independent
registered public accounting firm, would have caused them to make reference to
the subject matter of the disagreement in connection with their reports on the
financial statements for such periods.

NOTE L

Recent Accounting Pronouncement

On July 13, 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") released
FASB Interpretation No. 48 "Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes" ("FIN
48").  FIN 48 provides guidance for how uncertain tax positions should be
recognized, measured, presented and disclosed in the financial statements.  FIN
48 requires the evaluation of tax positions taken or expected to be taken in
the course of preparing the Fund's tax returns to determine whether the tax
positions are "more-likely-than-not" of being sustained by the applicable tax
authority.  Tax positions not deemed to meet the more-likely-than-not threshold
would be recorded as a tax benefit or expense in the current year.  Adoption of
FIN 48 is required for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2006 and is to
be applied to all open tax years as of the effective date.  At this time,
management is evaluating the implications of FIN 48 and its impact in the
financial statements has not yet been determined.


28 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

Selected Data For A Share Of Capital Stock Outstanding Throughout Each Period



                                                                       Class A
                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  December 1,          Year Ended
                                             Year Ended July 31,                    2002 to            November 30,
                              ------------------------------------------------     July 31,     -------------------------
                                   2006            2005             2004            2003(a)         2002         2001
                              -------------  ---------------  ----------------  --------------  ------------  -----------
                                                                                            
Net asset value,
  beginning of period             $19.15          $16.28          $15.58             $15.07          $20.24       $29.51

Income From Investment
  Operations
Net investment loss(b)              (.19)           (.14)(c)        (.15)(c)(d)        (.10)           (.19)        (.19)
Net realized and
  unrealized gain (loss)
  on investment
  transactions                      (.40)           3.01             .85                .61           (4.98)       (6.43)
Net increase (decrease)
  in net asset value
  from operations                   (.59)           2.87             .70                .51           (5.17)       (6.62)

Less: Distributions
Distributions from
  net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.38)
Distributions in excess
  of net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-        (.27)
Total distributions                   -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.65)
Net asset value,
  end of period                   $18.56          $19.15          $16.28             $15.58          $15.07       $20.24

Total Return
Total investment return
  based on net asset
  value(e)                         (3.08)%         17.63%           4.49%              3.38%         (25.54)%     (24.90)%

Ratios/Supplemental
  Data
Net assets, end of period
  (000's omitted)             $1,107,602      $1,348,678      $1,550,292         $1,757,243      $2,098,623   $3,556,040
Ratio to average
  net assets of:
  Expenses,
    net of waivers/
    reimbursements                  1.54%(f)        1.50%           1.58%              1.89%(g)        1.73%        1.53%
  Expenses,
    before waivers/
    reimbursements                  1.54%(f)        1.53%           1.76%              1.89%(g)        1.73%        1.53%
  Net investment loss               (.92)%(f)       (.82)%(c)       (.90)%(c)(d)      (1.08)%(g)      (1.09)%       (.83)%
Portfolio turnover rate               68%             56%             61%                60%             93%         135%



See footnote summary on page 35.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 29


Selected Data For A Share Of Capital Stock Outstanding Throughout Each Period



                                                                       Class B
                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  December 1,          Year Ended
                                             Year Ended July 31,                    2002 to            November 30,
                              ------------------------------------------------     July 31,     -------------------------
                                   2006            2005             2004            2003(a)         2002         2001
                              -------------  ---------------  ----------------  --------------  ------------  -----------
                                                                                            
Net asset value,
  beginning of period             $17.28          $14.80          $14.27             $13.88          $18.78       $27.76

Income From Investment
  Operations
Net investment loss(b)              (.30)           (.25)(c)        (.25)(c)(d)        (.16)           (.29)        (.35)
Net realized and
  unrealized gain (loss)
  on investment
  transactions                      (.36)           2.73             .78                .55           (4.61)       (5.98)
Net increase (decrease)
  in net asset value
  from operations                   (.66)           2.48             .53                .39           (4.90)       (6.33)

Less: Distributions
Distributions from
  net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.38)
Distributions in excess
  of net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-        (.27)
Total distributions                   -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.65)
Net asset value,
  end of period                   $16.62          $17.28          $14.80             $14.27          $13.88       $18.78

Total Return
Total investment return
  based on net asset
  value(e)                         (3.82)%         16.76%           3.71%              2.81%         (26.09)%     (25.48)%

Ratios/Supplemental
  Data
Net assets, end of period
  (000's omitted)             $1,117,481      $1,559,369      $1,871,308         $2,670,330      $3,080,955   $5,774,836
Ratio to average
  net assets of:
  Expenses,
    net of waivers/
    reimbursements                  2.30%(f)        2.25%           2.34%              2.65%(g)        2.47%        2.25%
  Expenses,
    before waivers/
    reimbursements                  2.30%(f)        2.28%           2.52%              2.65%(g)        2.47%        2.25%
  Net investment loss              (1.68)%(f)      (1.57)%(c)      (1.66)%(c)(d)      (1.84)%(g)      (1.84)%      (1.59)%
Portfolio turnover rate               68%             56%             61%                60%             93%         135%


See footnote summary on page 35.


30 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


Selected Data For A Share Of Capital Stock Outstanding Throughout Each Period



                                                                        Class C
                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  December 1,          Year Ended
                                             Year Ended July 31,                   2002 to             November 30,
                              ------------------------------------------------     July 31,     -------------------------
                                   2006            2005             2004            2003(a)         2002         2001
                              -------------  ---------------  ----------------  --------------  ------------  -----------
                                                                                            
Net asset value,
  beginning of period             $17.33          $14.83          $14.30             $13.90          $18.81       $27.80

Income From Investment
  Operations
Net investment loss(b)              (.30)           (.24)(c)        (.25)(c)(d)        (.16)           (.29)        (.35)
Net realized and
  unrealized gain (loss)
  on investment
  transactions                      (.35)           2.74             .78                .56           (4.62)       (5.99)
Net increase (decrease)
  in net asset value
  from operations                   (.65)           2.50             .53                .40           (4.91)       (6.34)

Less: Distributions
Distributions from
  net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.38)
Distributions in excess
  of net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-        (.27)
Total distributions                   -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.65)
Net asset value,
  end of period                   $16.68          $17.33          $14.83             $14.30          $13.90       $18.81

Total Return
Total investment return
  based on net asset
  value(e)                         (3.75)%         16.86%           3.71%              2.88%         (26.10)%     (25.48)%

Ratios/Supplemental
  Data
Net assets, end of period
  (000's omitted)               $396,990        $536,804        $666,851           $943,029      $1,116,314   $2,173,671
Ratio to average
  net assets of:
  Expenses,
    net of waivers/
    reimbursements                  2.26%(f)        2.22%           2.31%              2.62%(g)        2.45%        2.26%
  Expenses,
    before waivers/
    reimbursements                  2.26%(f)        2.25%           2.49%              2.62%(g)        2.45%        2.26%
  Net investment loss              (1.65)%(f)      (1.53)%(c)      (1.62)%(c)(d)      (1.81)%(g)      (1.81)%      (1.59)%
Portfolio turnover rate               68%             56%             61%                60%             93%         135%



See footnote summary on page 35.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 31


Selected Data For A Share Of Capital Stock Outstanding Throughout Each Period



                                                                   Advisor Class
                              -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                  December 1,          Year Ended
                                             Year Ended July 31,                   2002 to             November 30,
                              ------------------------------------------------     July 31,     -------------------------
                                   2006            2005             2004            2003(a)         2002         2001
                              -------------  ---------------  ----------------  --------------  ------------  -----------
                                                                                              
Net asset value,
  beginning of period             $19.76          $16.74          $15.97             $15.42          $20.65       $29.99

Income From Investment
  Operations
Net investment loss(b)              (.11)           (.09)(c)        (.10)(c)(d)        (.08)           (.14)        (.14)
Net realized and
  unrealized gain (loss)
  on investment
  transactions                      (.44)           3.11             .87                .63           (5.09)       (6.55)
Net increase (decrease)
  in net asset value
  from operations                   (.55)           3.02             .77                .55           (5.23)       (6.69)

Less: Distributions
Distributions from
  net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.38)
Distributions in excess
  of net realized gain
  on investment
  transactions                        -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-        (.27)
Total distributions                   -0-             -0-             -0-                -0-             -0-       (2.65)
Net asset value,
  end of period                   $19.21          $19.76          $16.74             $15.97          $15.42       $20.65

Total Return
Total investment return
  based on net asset
  value(e)                         (2.78)%         18.04%           4.82%              3.57%         (25.33)%     (24.72)%

Ratios/Supplemental
  Data
Net assets, end of period
  (000's omitted)               $151,816      $1,040,894        $761,895           $793,162        $590,508     $510,603
Ratio to average
  net assets of:
  Expenses,
    net of waivers/
    reimbursements                  1.22%(f)        1.20%           1.28%              1.60%(g)        1.45%        1.25%
  Expenses,
    before waivers/
    reimbursements                  1.22%(f)        1.23%           1.46%              1.60%(g)        1.45%        1.25%
  Net investment loss               (.66)%(f)       (.53)%(c)       (.60)(c)(d)        (.78)%(g)       (.79)%       (.59)%
Portfolio turnover rate               68%             56%             61%                60%             93%         135%



See footnote summary on page 35.


32 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


Selected Data For A Share Of Capital Stock Outstanding Throughout Each Period



                                                          Class R
                                            -------------------------------------
                                                                      November 3,
                                                                        2003(h)
                                                Year Ended July 31,       to
                                            ------------------------    July 31,
                                                2006         2005        2004
                                            -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                               
Net asset value, beginning of period          $19.10       $16.25       $16.59

Income From Investment Operations
Net investment loss(b)                          (.15)        (.17)(c)     (.20)(c)(d)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)
  on investment transactions                    (.46)        3.02         (.14)
Net increase (decrease) in net asset
  value from operations                         (.61)        2.85         (.34)
Net asset value, end of period                $18.49       $19.10       $16.25

Total Return
Total investment return based on net
  asset value(e)                               (3.19)%      17.54%       (2.05)%

Ratios/Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of period (000's omitted)     $1,492         $107          $10
Ratio to average net assets of:
  Expenses, net of waivers/reimbursements       1.55%(f)     1.59%        1.70%(g)
  Expenses, before waivers/reimbursements       1.55%(f)     1.62%        1.95%(g)
  Net investment loss                           (.75)%(f)    (.90)%(c)   (1.08)%(c)(d)(g)
Portfolio turnover rate                           68%          56%          61%



See footnote summary on page 35.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 33


Selected Data For A Share Of Capital Stock Outstanding Throughout Each Period

                                                             Class K
                                                     -----------------------
                                                                   March 1,
                                                     Year Ended   2005(h) to
                                                      July 31,     July 31,
                                                        2006         2005
                                                     ----------   ----------
Net asset value, beginning of period                   $19.19       $17.63

Income From Investment Operations
Net investment loss(b)                                   (.05)        (.04)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)
  on investment transactions                             (.49)        1.60
Net increase (decrease) in net asset
  value from operations                                  (.54)        1.56
Net asset value, end of period                         $18.65       $19.19

Total Return
Total investment return based on net
  asset value(e)                                        (2.82)%       8.85%

Ratios/Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of period (000's omitted)              $1,586          $11
Ratio to average net assets of:
  Expenses                                               1.09%(f)     1.03%(g)
  Net investment loss                                    (.27)%(f)    (.48)%(g)
Portfolio turnover rate                                    68%          56%


See footnote summary on page 35.


34 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


Selected Data For A Share Of Capital Stock Outstanding Throughout Each Period

                                                             Class I
                                                     -----------------------
                                                                   March 1,
                                                     Year Ended   2005(h) to
                                                      July 31,     July 31,
                                                        2006         2005
                                                     ----------   ----------
Net asset value, beginning of period                   $19.20       $17.63

Income From Investment Operations
Net investment loss(b)                                   (.03)        (.02)
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss)
  on investment transactions                             (.47)        1.59
Net increase (decrease) in net asset
  value from operations                                  (.50)        1.57
Net asset value, end of period                         $18.70       $19.20

Total Return
Total investment return based on
  net asset value(e)                                    (2.61)%       8.90%

Ratios/Supplemental Data
Net assets, end of period (000's omitted)             $10,837          $11
Ratio to average net assets of:
  Expenses                                                .92%(f)      .83%(g)
  Net investment loss                                    (.18)%(f)    (.27)%(g)
Portfolio turnover rate                                    68%          56%


(a)  The Fund changed its fiscal year end from November 30 to July 31.

(b)  Based on average shares outstanding.

(c)  Net of fees and expenses waived/reimbursed by the Adviser.

(d)  Net of fees and expenses waived/reimbursed by the Transfer Agent.

(e)  Total investment return is calculated assuming an initial investment made
at the net asset value at the beginning of the period, reinvestment of all
dividends and distributions at net asset value during the period, and
redemption on the last day of the period. Initial sales charges or contingent
deferred sales charges are not reflected in the calculation of total investment
return. Total return does not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder
would pay on Fund distributions or the redemption of Fund shares. Total
investment return calculated for a period of less than one year is not
annualized.

(f)  The ratio includes expenses attributable to estimated costs of proxy
solicitation.

(g)  Annualized.

(h)  Commencement of distributions.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 35


REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

The Board of Directors and Shareholders
AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.

We have audited the accompanying statement of assets and liabilities, including
the portfolio of investments, of AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.
as of July 31, 2006, and the related statement of operations, statement of
changes in net assets, and the financial highlights for the year then ended.
These financial statements and financial highlights are the responsibility of
the Fund's management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these
financial statements and financial highlights based on our audit. The statement
of changes in net assets for the year ended July 31, 2005 and the financial
highlights for each of the presented years and periods ended prior to August 1,
2005 were audited by other independent registered public accountants whose
report thereon, dated September 16, 2005 expressed an unqualified opinion on
that financial statement and those financial highlights.

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements and financial highlights are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our procedures
included confirmation of securities owned as of July 31, 2006, by
correspondence with the custodian and brokers or by other appropriate auditing
procedures. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
financial statement presentation. We believe that our audit provides a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the financial statements and financial highlights referred to
above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of
AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc. as of July 31, 2006, and the
results of its operations, changes in its net assets, and its financial
highlights for the year then ended, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles.


/s/ KPMG LLP

New York, New York
September 25, 2006


36 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


BOARD OF DIRECTORS

William H. Foulk, Jr.(1), Chairman
Marc O. Mayer, President
Ruth Block(1)
David H. Dievler(1)
John H. Dobkin(1)
Michael J. Downey(1)
D. James Guzy(1)
Nancy P. Jacklin(1)
Marshall C. Turner, Jr.(1)

OFFICERS

Philip L. Kirstein, Senior Vice President and Independent Compliance Officer
Thomas J. Bardong, Vice President
David P. Handke, Jr.(2), Vice President
Syed J. Hasnain(2), Vice President
James G. Reilly(2), Vice President
Michael J. Reilly(2), Vice President
P. Scott Wallace(2), Vice President
Emilie D. Wrapp, Secretary
Joseph J. Mantineo, Treasurer & Chief Financial Officer
Vincent S. Noto, Controller

Custodian

State Street Bank & Trust Company
One Lincoln Street
Boston, MA 02111

Principal Underwriter

AllianceBernstein Investments, Inc.
1345 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10105

Transfer Agent

AllianceBernstein Investor Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 786003
San Antonio, TX 78278-6003
Toll-Free (800) 221-5672

Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

KPMG LLP
345 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10154

Legal Counsel

Seward & Kissel LLP
One Battery Park Plaza
New York, NY 10004


(1)  Member of the Audit Committee, the Governance and Nominating Committee and
the Independent Directors Committee.

(2)  The day-to-day management of and investment decisions for the Fund's
portfolio are made by the Large Cap Growth Team. Messrs. Hasnain, Handke, James
Reilly, Michael Reilly and Wallace are the investment professionals with the
most significant responsibility for the day-to-day management of the Fund's
portfolio.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 37


MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND

Board of Directors Information

The business and affairs of the Fund are managed under the direction of the
Board of Directors. Certain information concerning the Fund's Directors is set
forth below.



                                                                                PORTFOLIOS
                                             PRINCIPAL                            IN FUND           OTHER
     NAME, ADDRESS                         OCCUPATION(S)                          COMPLEX       DIRECTORSHIPS
     DATE OF BIRTH,                           DURING                            OVERSEEN BY        HELD BY
(FIRST YEAR OF SERVICE*)                    PAST 5 YEARS                         DIRECTOR          DIRECTOR
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
Marc O. Mayer, **                   Executive Vice President of the                 111          SCB Partners
1345 Avenue of the                  Adviser since 2001 and Executive                               Inc. and
Americas                            Managing Director of AllianceBernstein                         SCB, Inc.
New York, NY 10105                  Investments, Inc. ("ABI") since
10/2/57                             2003; prior thereto he was head of
(2003)                              AllianceBernstein Institutional
                                    Investments, a unit of the
                                    Adviser from 2001-2003. Prior
                                    thereto, Chief Executive Officer
                                    of Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.,
                                    LLC (institutional research and
                                    brokerage arm of Bernstein &
                                    Co. LLC ("SCB & Co.")) and its
                                    predecessor since prior to 2001.

DISINTERESTED DIRECTORS

William H. Foulk, Jr., #+           Investment Adviser and an                       113             None
P.O. Box 5060                       Independent Consultant. He was
Greenwich, CT 06831                 formerly Senior Manager of Barrett
Chairman of the Board               Associates, Inc., a registered
9/7/32                              investment adviser, with which he
(1992)                              had been associated since prior to
                                    2001. He was formerly Deputy
                                    Comptroller and Chief Investment
                                    Officer of the State of New York
                                    and, prior thereto, Chief
                                    Investment Officer of the New
                                    York Bank for Savings.

Ruth Block, #++                     Formerly Executive Vice President               100             None
500 S.E. Mizner Blvd.               and Chief Insurance Officer of The
Boca Raton, FL 33432                Equitable Life Assurance Society
11/7/30                             of the United States; Chairman
(1992)                              and Chief Executive Officer of
                                    Evlico (insurance); Director of
                                    Avon, BP (oil and gas), Ecolab
                                    Incorporated (specialty chemi-
                                    cals), Tandem Financial Group
                                    and Donaldson, Lufkin &
                                    Jenrette Securities Corporation;
                                    Governor at Large, National
                                    Association of Securities
                                    Dealers, Inc.



38 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND




                                                                                PORTFOLIOS
                                             PRINCIPAL                            IN FUND           OTHER
     NAME, ADDRESS                         OCCUPATION(S)                          COMPLEX       DIRECTORSHIPS
     DATE OF BIRTH,                           DURING                            OVERSEEN BY        HELD BY
(FIRST YEAR OF SERVICE*)                    PAST 5 YEARS                         DIRECTOR          DIRECTOR
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        
DISINTERESTED DIRECTORS
(continued)

David H. Dievler, #                 Independent Consultant. Until                   112             None
P.O. Box 167                        December 1994 he was Senior
Spring Lake, NJ 07762               Vice President of Alliance
10/23/29                            Capital Management Corporation
(1992)                              ("ACMC") responsible for mutual
                                    fund administration. Prior to joining
                                    ACMC in 1984, he was Chief
                                    Financial Officer of Eberstadt Asset
                                    Management since 1968. Prior to
                                    that, he was a Senior Manager at
                                    Price Waterhouse & Co. Member of
                                    American Institute of Certified
                                    Public Accountants since 1953.

John H. Dobkin, #                   Consultant. He was formerly                     111             None
P.O. Box 12                         President of Save Venice, Inc.
Annandale, NY 12504                 (preservation organization) from
2/19/42                             2001-2002, Senior Advisor from
(1992)                              June 1999-June 2000 and
                                    President of Historic Hudson Valley
                                    (historic preservation) from
                                    December 1989-May 1999.
                                    Previously, Director of the National
                                    Academy of Design and during
                                    1988-1992, Director and Chairman
                                    of the Audit Committee of ACMC.

Michael J. Downey, #                Consultant since 2004. Formerly                 111         Asia Pacific
c/o AllianceBernstein L.P.          managing partner of Lexington Capital,                     Fund, Inc. and
Attention: Philip L. Kirstein       LLC (investment advisory firm) from                        The Merger Fund.
1345 Avenue of the                  1997 until December 2003. Prior
Americas                            thereto, Chairman and CEO of
New York, NY 10105                  Prudential Mutual Fund Management
1/26/44                             from 1987 until 1993.
(2005)

D. James Guzy, #                    Chairman of the Board of PLX                    111             Intel
P.O. Box 128                        Technology (semi-conductors)                                 Corporation;
Glenbrook, NV 89413                 and of SRC Computers Inc., with                              Cirrus Logic
3/7/36                              which he has been associated                                 Corporation
(2005)                              since prior to 2001. He is also                            (semi-conductors);
                                    President of the Arbor Company                                  and the
                                    (private family investments).                               Davis Selected
                                                                                                 Advisors Group
                                                                                                of Mutual Funds.



ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 39




                                                                                PORTFOLIOS
                                             PRINCIPAL                            IN FUND           OTHER
     NAME, ADDRESS                         OCCUPATION(S)                          COMPLEX       DIRECTORSHIPS
     DATE OF BIRTH,                           DURING                            OVERSEEN BY        HELD BY
(FIRST YEAR OF SERVICE*)                    PAST 5 YEARS                         DIRECTOR          DIRECTOR
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                        

DISINTERESTED DIRECTORS
(continued)

Nancy P. Jacklin, #                 Formerly U.S. Executive Director                111
4046 Chancery Court, NW             of the International Monetary
Washington, DC 20007                Fund (December 2002-May
5/22/48                             2006); partner, Clifford Chance
(2006)                              (1992-2002); Senior Counsel,
                                    International Banking and Finance,
                                    and Associate General Counsel,
                                    Citicorp (1985-1992); Assistant
                                    General Counsel (International),
                                    Federal Reserve Board of Governors
                                     (1982-1985); and Attorney Advisor,
                                    U.S. Department of the Treasury
                                     (1973-1982). Member of the Bar of
                                    the District of Columbia and of New
                                    York; member of the Council on
                                    Foreign Relations.

Marshall C. Turner, Jr., #          Principal of Turner Venture                     111        The George Lucas
220 Montgomery Street               Associates (venture capital and                               Educational
Penthouse 10                        consulting) since prior to 2001.                            Foundation; and
San Francisco, CA 94104             From 2003 until May 31, 2006,                              National Datacast,
10/10/41                            he was CEO of Toppan Photomasks,                                  Inc.
(2005)                              Inc. (semi-conductor manufacturing
                                    services), Austin, Texas.



*  There is no stated term of office for the Fund's Directors.

**  Mr. Mayer is an "interested director", as defined in the 1940 Act, due to
his position as an Executive Vice President of the Adviser.

#  Member of the Audit Committee, the Governance and Nominating Committee and
the Independent Directors Committee.

+  Member of the Fair Value Pricing Committee.

++  Ms. Block was an "interested person", as defined in the 1940 Act, from July
22, 1992 until October 21, 2004 by reason of her ownership of securities of a
control person of the Adviser. Ms. Block received shares of The Equitable
Companies Incorporated ("Equitable") as part of the demutualization of The
Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States in 1992. Ms. Block's
Equitable shares were subsequently converted through a corporate action into
American Depositary Shares of AXA, which were sold for approximately $2,400 on
October 21, 2004. Equitable and AXA are control persons of the Adviser.


40 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


Officer Information

Certain information concerning the Fund's Officers is listed below.



  NAME, ADDRESS* AND                   POSITION(S)                       PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION
    DATE OF BIRTH                     HELD WITH FUND                     DURING PAST 5 YEARS**
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              
Marc O. Mayer                       President and Chief             See biography above.
10/2/57                             Executive Officer

Philip L. Kirstein                  Senior Vice President           Senior Vice President and Independent
5/29/45                             and Independent                 Compliance Officer of the
                                    Compliance Officer              AllianceBernstein Funds, with which he
                                                                    has been associated since October
                                                                    2004. Prior thereto, he was Of Counsel
                                                                    to Kirkpatrick & Lockhart, LLP from
                                                                    October 2003 to October 2004, and
                                                                    General Counsel of Merrill Lynch
                                                                    Investment Managers, L.P. since prior
                                                                    to 2001 until March 2003.

Thomas J. Bardong                   Vice President                  Senior Vice President of the Adviser,**
4/28/45                                                             with which he has been associated
                                                                    since prior to 2001.

David P. Handke, Jr.                Vice President                  Senior Vice President of the Adviser,**
8/12/49                                                             with which he has been associated
                                                                    since prior to 2001.

Syed J. Hasnain                     Vice President                  Senior Vice President of the Adviser,**
8/1/64                                                              with which he has been associated
                                                                    since prior to 2001.

Michael J. Reilly                   Vice President                  Senior Vice President of the Adviser,**
6/3/64                                                              with which he has been associated since
                                                                    prior to 2001.

James G. Reilly                     Vice President                  Executive Vice President of the
7/12/61                                                             Adviser,** with which he has been associated
                                                                    since prior to 2001.

Patrick (Scott) Wallace             Vice President                  Senior Vice President of the Adviser,**
10/11/64                                                            with which he has been associated
                                                                    since prior to 2001.

Emilie D. Wrapp                     Secretary                       Senior Vice President, Assistant
11/15/55                                                            General Counsel and Assistant
                                                                    Secretary of ABI,** with which she has
                                                                    been associated since prior to 2001.



ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 41





  NAME, ADDRESS* AND                   POSITION(S)                       PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION
    DATE OF BIRTH                     HELD WITH FUND                     DURING PAST 5 YEARS**
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              
Joseph J. Mantineo                  Treasurer and Chief             Senior Vice President of
3/28/59                             Financial Officer               AllianceBernstein Investor Services, Inc.
                                                                    ("ABIS"),** with which he has been
                                                                    associated since prior to 2001.

Vincent S. Noto                     Controller                      Vice President of ABIS,** with which
12/14/64                                                            he has been associated since prior to
                                                                    2001.



*  The address for each of the Fund's officers is 1345 Avenue of the Americas,
New York, NY 10105.

**  The Adviser, ABI, ABIS and SCB & Co. are affiliates of the Fund.

The Fund's Statement of Additional Information (SAI) has additional information
about the Fund's Directors and Officers and is available without charge upon
request. Contact your financial representative or AllianceBernstein at (800)
227-4618 for a free prospectus or SAI.


42 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


Information Regarding the Review and Approval of the Fund's Advisory Agreement

The Fund's disinterested directors (the "directors") unanimously approved the
continuance of the Advisory Agreement between the Fund and the Adviser at a
meeting held on June 14, 2006.

In preparation for the meeting, the directors had requested from the Adviser
and received and evaluated extensive materials, including performance and
expense information for other investment companies with similar investment
objectives as the Fund derived from data compiled by Lipper Inc. ("Lipper"),
which is not affiliated with the Adviser. The directors also reviewed an
independent evaluation from the Fund's Senior Officer (who is also the Fund's
Independent Compliance Officer) of the reasonableness of the advisory fees in
the Fund's Advisory Agreement (as contemplated by the September 2004 Assurance
of Discontinuance between the Adviser and the New York Attorney General)
wherein the Senior Officer concluded that such fees were reasonable. In
addition, the directors received a presentation from the Adviser and had an
opportunity to ask representatives of the Adviser various questions relevant to
the proposed approval. The directors noted that the Senior Officer's evaluation
considered the following factors: management fees charged to institutional and
other clients of the Adviser for like services; management fees charged by
other mutual fund companies for like services; cost to the Adviser and its
affiliates of supplying services pursuant to the Advisory Agreement, excluding
any intra-corporate profit; profit margins of the Adviser and its affiliates
from supplying such services; possible economies of scale as the Fund grows
larger; and nature and quality of the Adviser's services including the
performance of the Fund.

Prior to voting, the directors reviewed the proposed continuance of the
Advisory Agreement with management and with experienced counsel who are
independent of the Adviser and received a memorandum from such counsel
discussing the legal standards for their consideration of the proposed
continuance. The directors also discussed the proposed continuance in two
private sessions at which only the directors, their independent counsel and the
Fund's Independent Compliance Officer were present. In reaching their
determinations relating to continuance of the Advisory Agreement, the directors
considered all factors they believed relevant, including the following:

1.  information comparing the performance of the Fund to other investment
companies with similar investment objectives and to an index;

2.  the nature, extent and quality of investment, compliance, administrative
and other services rendered by the Adviser;

3.  payments received by the Adviser from all sources in respect of the Fund
and all investment companies in the AllianceBernstein Funds complex;


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 43


4.  the costs borne by, and profitability of, the Adviser and its affiliates in
providing services to the Fund and to all investment companies in the
AllianceBernstein Funds complex;

5.  comparative fee and expense data for the Fund and other investment
companies with similar investment objectives;

6.  the extent to which economies of scale would be realized to the extent the
Fund grows and whether fee levels reflect any economies of scale for the
benefit of investors;

7.  the Adviser's policies and practices regarding allocation of portfolio
transactions of the Fund, including the extent to which the Adviser benefits
from soft dollar arrangements;

8.  information about "revenue sharing" arrangements that the Adviser has
entered into in respect of the Fund;

9.  portfolio turnover rates for the Fund compared to other investment
companies with similar investment objectives;

10.  fall-out benefits that the Adviser and its affiliates receive from their
relationships with the Fund;

11.  information about fees charged by the Adviser to other clients with a
substantially similar investment style as the Fund;

12.  the Senior Officer's evaluation of the reasonableness of the fee payable
to the Adviser in the Advisory Agreement;

13.  the professional experience and qualifications of the Fund's portfolio
management team and other senior personnel of the Adviser; and

14.  the terms of the Advisory Agreement.

The directors also considered their knowledge of the nature and quality of the
services provided by the Adviser to the Fund gained from their experience as
directors or trustees of most of the registered investment companies advised by
the Adviser, their overall confidence in the Adviser's integrity and competence
they have gained from that experience and the Adviser's responsiveness to
concerns raised by them in the past, including the Adviser's willingness to
consider and implement organizational and operational changes designed to
improve investment results and the services provided to the AllianceBernstein
Funds.


44 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


In their deliberations, the directors did not identify any particular
information that was all-important or controlling, and different directors may
have attributed different weights to the various factors.

The directors determined that the overall arrangements between the Fund and the
Adviser, as provided in the Advisory Agreement, were fair and reasonable in
light of the services performed, expenses incurred and such other matters as
the directors considered relevant in the exercise of their business judgment.

The material factors and conclusions that formed the basis for the directors
reaching their determinations to approve the continuance of the Advisory
Agreement (including their determinations that the Adviser should continue to
be the investment adviser for the Fund, and that the fees payable to the
Adviser pursuant to the Advisory Agreement are appropriate) were separately
discussed by the directors.

Nature, extent and quality of services provided by the Adviser

The directors noted that, under the Advisory Agreement, the Adviser, subject to
the control of the directors, administers the Fund's business and other
affairs. The Adviser manages the investment of the assets of the Fund,
including making purchases and sales of portfolio securities consistent with
the Fund's investment objective and policies. Under the Advisory Agreement, the
Adviser also provides the Fund with such office space, administrative and other
services (exclusive of, and in addition to, any such services provided by any
others retained by the Fund) and executive and other personnel as are necessary
for the Fund's operations. The Adviser pays all of the compensation of
directors of the Fund who are affiliated persons of the Adviser and of the
officers of the Fund.

The directors also considered that the Advisory Agreement provides that the
Fund will reimburse the Adviser for the cost of certain clerical, accounting,
administrative and other services provided at the Fund's request by employees
of the Adviser or its affiliates. Requests for these "at no more than cost"
reimbursements are approved by the directors on a quarterly basis and (to the
extent requested and paid) result in a higher rate of total compensation from
the Fund to the Adviser than the fee rates stated in the Fund's Advisory
Agreement.

The directors considered the scope and quality of services provided by the
Adviser under the Advisory Agreement and noted that the scope of services
provided by advisers of funds had expanded over time as a result of regulatory
and other developments. The directors noted, for example, that the Adviser is
responsible for maintaining and monitoring its own and, to varying degrees, the
Fund's compliance programs, and that these compliance programs have recently
been refined and enhanced in light of new regulatory requirements. The
directors considered the quality of the in-house investment research
capabilities of the Adviser and the other resources it has dedicated to
performing services for the


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 45


Fund. The quality of administrative and other services, including the Adviser's
role in coordinating the activities of the Fund's other service providers, also
were considered. The directors also considered the Adviser's response to recent
regulatory compliance issues affecting a number of the investment companies in
the AllianceBernstein Funds complex. The directors concluded that, overall,
they were satisfied with the nature, extent and quality of services provided to
the Fund under the Advisory Agreement.

Costs of Services Provided and Profitability to the Adviser

The directors reviewed a schedule of the revenues, expenses and related notes
indicating the profitability of the Fund to the Adviser for calendar years 2004
and 2005 that had been prepared with an updated expense allocation methodology.
The directors noted that the updated methodology differed in various respects
from the methodology used in prior years. The directors reviewed the
assumptions and methods of allocation used by the Adviser in preparing
fund-specific profitability data, and noted the Adviser's representation to
them that it believed that the methods of allocation used in preparing the
profitability information were reasonable and appropriate and that the Adviser
had previously discussed with the directors that there is no generally accepted
allocation methodology for information of this type.

The directors recognized that it is difficult to make comparisons of
profitability from fund advisory contracts because comparative information is
not generally publicly available and is affected by numerous factors, including
the structure of the particular adviser, the types of funds it manages, its
business mix, numerous assumptions regarding allocations and the adviser's
capital structure and cost of capital. In considering profitability
information, the directors considered the effect of fall-out benefits on the
Adviser's expenses, as well as the "revenue sharing" arrangements the Adviser
has entered into with certain entities that distribute shares of the Fund. The
directors focused on the profitability of the Adviser's relationship with the
Fund before taxes and distribution expenses. The directors recognized that the
Adviser should generally be entitled to earn a reasonable level of profits for
the services it provides to the Fund and, based on their review, concluded that
they were satisfied that the Adviser's level of profitability from its
relationship with the Fund was not excessive.

Fall-Out Benefits

The directors considered that the Adviser benefits from soft dollar
arrangements whereby it receives brokerage and research services from many of
the brokers and dealers that execute purchases and sales of securities on
behalf of its clients on an agency basis. They noted that the Adviser makes
presentations to the directors regarding its trading practices and brokerage
allocation policies, including its policies with respect to soft dollar
arrangements, from time to time and had made a special presentation to the
directors in May 2006 on this subject. The directors noted that the Adviser has
represented to them that all of its soft dollar arrange-


46 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


ments are consistent with applicable legal requirements including the
achievement of best execution.

The directors also considered that the Distributor, which is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of the Adviser, receives 12b-1 fees from the Fund in respect of
classes of shares of the Fund that are subject to the Fund's 12b-1 plan and
retains a portion of such 12b-1 fees, and receives all or a portion of the
sales charges on sales or redemptions of certain classes of shares. The
directors also noted that certain affiliates of the Adviser distribute shares
of the Fund and receive compensation in that connection, that a subsidiary of
the Adviser provides transfer agency services to the Fund and receives
compensation from the Fund for such services, and that brokers who are
affiliated with the Adviser are permitted to execute brokerage transactions for
the Fund subject to satisfaction of certain requirements and receive brokerage
commissions from the Fund and liquidity rebates from electronic communication
networks ("ECNs") in connection with certain of such transactions. The
directors noted that the Adviser had made a recent presentation to the
directors detailing liquidity rebates that Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. LLC
receives in respect of transactions effected through ECNs.

The directors recognized that the Adviser's profitability would be somewhat
lower if it did not receive research for soft dollars or if the Adviser's
affiliates did not receive the other benefits described above. The directors
understood that the Adviser also might derive reputational and other benefits
from its association with the Fund.

Investment Results

In addition to the information reviewed by the directors in connection with the
meeting, the directors receive detailed comparative performance information for
the Fund at each regular Board meeting during the year. At the meeting, the
directors reviewed information from a report prepared by Lipper showing
performance for Class A shares of the Fund as compared to a group of 12 to 8
funds (depending on the year) in its Lipper category selected by Lipper (the
"Performance Group") and as compared to a universe of 134 to 43 funds
(depending on the year) in its Lipper category selected by Lipper (the
"Performance Universe") for periods ended December 31, 2005 over the 1-, 3, 5-
and 10-year periods. The directors also reviewed information prepared by the
Adviser showing performance of the Class A Shares of the Fund as compared to
the Russell 1000 Growth Index (the "Index") for periods ended December 31, 2005
over the 1-, 3-, 5- and 10-year and since inception periods (September 1992
inception). The directors noted that in the Performance Group comparison the
Fund was in the 1st quintile in the 1-year period, 2nd quintile in the 3-year
period and 4th quintile in the 5- and 10-year periods, and in the Performance
Universe comparison the Fund was in the 1st quintile in the 1-year period, 2nd
quintile in the 3-year period, 4th quintile in the 5-year period and 3rd
quintile in the 10-year period. The comparative information showed that the


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 47


Fund underperformed the Index in the 5-year period and outperformed the Index
in all other periods reviewed. Based on their review, the directors concluded
that the Fund's relative performance over time was satisfactory.

Advisory Fees and Other Expenses

The directors considered the advisory fee rate paid by the Fund to the Adviser
and information prepared by Lipper concerning fee rates paid by other funds in
the same Lipper category as the Fund at a common asset level. The directors
recognized that it is difficult to make comparisons of advisory fees because
there are variations in the services that are included in the fees paid by
other funds.

The directors also considered the fees the Adviser charges other clients with
investment objectives similar to those of the Fund. For this purpose, they
reviewed information in the Adviser's Form ADV and a chart prepared by the
Adviser disclosing the institutional fee schedule for institutional products
that have a substantially similar investment style as the Fund. They had
previously received an oral presentation from the Adviser that supplemented
such information. The directors noted that the institutional fee schedule for
clients with a substantially similar investment style as the Fund had much
lower breakpoints than the fee schedule in the Fund's Advisory Agreement. The
directors also noted that the application of such fee schedule to the level of
assets of the Fund would result in a fee rate that would be significantly lower
than that in the Fund's Advisory Agreement. The directors noted that the
Adviser may, in some cases, negotiate fee rates with large institutional
clients that are lower than those reviewed by the directors and that they had
previously discussed with the Adviser its policies in respect of such
negotiated arrangements. The directors also reviewed information that indicated
that the Adviser sub-advises certain registered investment companies that have
investment strategies similar to the Fund at lower fee rates than those paid by
the Fund.

The Adviser reviewed with the directors the significant differences in the
scope of services it provides to institutional clients and sub-advised funds
and to the Fund. For example, the Advisory Agreement requires the Adviser to
provide, in addition to investment advice, office facilities and officers
(including officers to provide required certifications). The Adviser also
coordinates the provision of services to the Fund by non-affiliated service
providers and is responsible for the compensation of the Fund's Independent
Compliance Officer and certain related expenses. The provision of these
non-advisory services involves costs and exposure to liability. The Adviser
explained that many of these services normally are not provided to
non-investment company clients or to investment company clients when the
Adviser acts in a pure sub-advisory capacity, and that fees charged to the Fund
reflect the costs and risks of the additional obligations. The Adviser also
noted that since the Fund is constantly issuing and redeeming its shares, it is
more difficult to manage than an institutional account, where the assets are
relatively stable. In light of these facts, the directors did not place
significant weight on these fee comparisons.


48 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


The directors also considered the total expense ratio of the Class A shares of
the Fund in comparison to the fees and expenses of funds within two comparison
groups created by Lipper: an Expense Group and an Expense Universe. Lipper
described an Expense Group as a representative sample of comparable funds and
an Expense Universe as a broader group, consisting of all funds in the
investment classification/objective with a similar load type as the Fund. The
Class A expense ratio of the Fund was based on the Fund's latest fiscal year
expense ratio. The directors recognized that the expense ratio information for
the Fund potentially reflected on the Adviser's provision of services, as the
Adviser is responsible for coordinating services provided to the Fund by
others. The directors noted that it was likely that the expense ratios of some
funds in the Fund's Lipper category also were lowered by waivers or
reimbursements by those funds' investment advisers, which in some cases were
voluntary and perhaps temporary.

The directors noted that the Fund's at approximate current size contractual
effective fee rate of 71.8 basis points was materially higher than the Expense
Group median and that the latest fiscal year administrative expense
reimbursement by the Fund pursuant to the Advisory Agreement was 0.2 basis
points. The directors also noted that the Adviser advises two other
AllianceBernstein funds with a substantially similar investment style as the
Fund for the same fee rate schedule as the Fund. The directors noted that the
Fund's total expense ratio was significantly higher than the Expense Group
median and materially higher than the Expense Universe median. The directors
also noted that the Adviser had recently reviewed with them steps being taken
that are intended to reduce expenses of the AllianceBernstein Funds. The
directors concluded that the Fund's expense ratio was acceptable.

Economies of Scale

The directors noted that the advisory fee schedule for the Fund contains
breakpoints so that, if assets were to increase over the breakpoint levels, the
fee rates would be reduced on the incremental assets. The directors also
considered a presentation by an independent consultant discussing economies of
scale issues in the mutual fund industry. The directors believe that economies
of scale are realized (if at all) by the Adviser across a variety of products
and services, and not only in respect of a single fund. The directors noted
that there is no uniform methodology for establishing breakpoints that give
effect to fund-specific services provided by the Adviser and to the economies
of scale that the Adviser may realize in its overall mutual fund business or
those components of it which directly or indirectly affect the Fund's
operations. The directors observed that in the mutual fund industry as a whole,
as well as among funds similar to the Fund, there is no uniformity or pattern
in the fees and asset levels at which breakpoints (if any) apply. Depending on
the age and size of a particular fund and its adviser's cost structure,
different conclusions can be drawn as to whether there are economies of scale
to be realized at any particular level of assets, notwithstanding the intuitive
conclusion that such economies exist, or will be realized at some


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 49


level of total assets. Moreover, because different advisers have different cost
structures and service models, it is difficult to draw meaningful conclusions
from the comparison of a fund's advisory fee breakpoints with those of
comparable funds. The directors also noted that the advisory agreements for
many funds do not have breakpoints at all. Having taken these factors into
account, the directors concluded that the Fund's breakpoint arrangements would
result in a sharing of economies of scale in the event of a very significant
increase in the Fund's net assets.


50 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


THE FOLLOWING IS NOT PART OF THE SHAREHOLDER REPORT OR THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

SUMMARY OF SENIOR OFFICER'S EVALUATION OF INVESTMENT ADVISORY AGREEMENT(1)

The following is a summary of the evaluation of the Investment Advisory
Agreement between AllianceBernstein L.P. (the "Adviser") and AllianceBernstein
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc. (the "Fund"), prepared by Philip L. Kirstein, the
Senior Officer of the Fund for the Directors of the Fund, as required by an
August 2004 agreement between the Adviser and the New York State Attorney
General (the "NYAG").(2) The Senior Officer's evaluation of the Investment
Advisory Agreement is not meant to diminish the responsibility or authority of
the Board of Directors of the Fund to perform its duties pursuant to Section 15
of the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "40 Act") and applicable state law.
The purpose of the summary is to provide shareholders with a synopsis of the
independent evaluation of the reasonableness of the advisory fees proposed to
be paid by the Fund which was provided to the Directors in connection with
their review of the proposed approval of the continuance of the Investment
Advisory Agreement. The Senior Officer's evaluation considered the following
factors:

1.  Management fees charged to institutional and other clients of the Adviser
for like services;

2.  Management fees charged by other mutual fund companies for like services;

3.  Costs to the Adviser and its affiliates of supplying services pursuant to
the advisory agreement, excluding any intra-corporate profit;

4.  Profit margins of the Adviser and its affiliates from supplying such
services;

5.  Possible economies of scale as the Fund grows larger; and

6.  Nature and quality of the Adviser's services including the performance of
the Fund.

FUND ADVISORY FEES, EXPENSE REIMBURSEMENTS & RATIOS

The Adviser proposed that the Fund pay the advisory fee set forth in the table
below for receiving the services to be provided pursuant to the Investment


(1)  It should be noted that the information in the fee summary was completed
on June 2, 2006 and presented to the Board of Directors on June 14, 2006 in
accordance with the Assurance of Discontinuance between the NYAG and the
Adviser. It also should be noted that references in the fee summary pertaining
to performance and expense ratios refer to Class A shares of the Fund.

(2)  Future references to the Fund do not include "AllianceBernstein."


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 51


Advisory Agreement. The fee schedule below, implemented in January 2004 in
connection with the Adviser's settlement with the NYAG in December 2003, is
based on a master schedule that contemplates eight categories of funds with
almost all funds in each category having the same advisory fee schedule.(3)



               Net Assets            Advisory Fee
                02/28/06        Based on % of Average
Category       (million)           Daily Net Assets                     Fund
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     
Growth         $3,554.5        75 bp on 1st $2.5 billion      Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.
                               65 bp on next $2.5 billion
                               60 bp on the balance


The Adviser is reimbursed as specified in the Investment Advisory Agreement for
certain clerical, legal, accounting, administrative and other services provided
to the Fund. Indicated below is the reimbursement amount, which the Adviser
received from the Fund in the Fund's most recently completed fiscal year,
expressed in dollars and as a percentage of average daily net assets:

                                                            As a % of Average
Fund                                         Amount          Daily Net Assets
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc                   $81,420              0.002%

Set forth below are the Fund's total expense ratios, calculated from the
beginning of the Fund's fiscal year though the Fund's semi-annual period:

Fund                            Total Expense Ratio          Fiscal Year End
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.       Class A    1.73%               July 31
                                  Class B    2.48%            (ratios as of
                                  Class C    2.45%           January 31, 2006)
                                  Class R    1.73%
                                  Class K    1.42%
                                  Class I    1.09%
                                  Adv. Class 1.37%

I. MANAGEMENT FEES CHARGED TO INSTITUTIONAL AND OTHER CLIENTS

The management fees charged to investment companies which the Adviser manages
and sponsors are normally higher than those charged to similar sized
institutional accounts, including pension plans and sub-advised investment
companies. The fee differential reflects, among other things, different
services provided to such clients, and different liabilities assumed. Services
provided by the Adviser to the Fund that are not provided to non-investment
company clients include providing office space and personnel to serve as Fund
Officers, who among other responsibilities make the certifications required
under the Sarbanes-


(3)  Most of the AllianceBernstein Mutual Funds, which the Adviser manages,
were affected by the Adviser's settlement with the NYAG.


52 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


Oxley Act of 2002, and coordinating with and monitoring the Fund's third party
service providers such as Fund counsel, auditors, custodians, transfer agents
and pricing services. The accounting, administrative, legal and compliance
requirements for the Fund are more costly than those for institutional assets
due to the greater complexities and time required for investment companies,
although as previously noted, a portion of these expenses is reimbursed by the
Fund to the Adviser. Also, retail mutual funds managed by the Adviser are
widely held. Servicing the Fund's investors is more time consuming and labor
intensive compared to institutional clients since the Adviser needs to
communicate with a more extensive network of financial intermediaries and
shareholders. In addition, managing the cash flow of an investment company may
be more difficult than that of a stable pool of assets, such as an
institutional account with little cash movement in either direction,
particularly, if the Fund is in net redemption and the Adviser is frequently
forced to sell securities to raise cash for redemptions. However, managing a
fund with positive cash flow may be easier at times than managing a stable pool
of assets. Finally, in recent years, investment advisers have been sued by
institutional clients and have suffered reputational damage both by the
attendant publicity and outcomes other than complete victories. Accordingly,
the legal and reputational risks associated with institutional accounts are
greater than previously thought, although still not equal to those related to
the mutual fund industry.

Notwithstanding the Adviser's view that managing an investment company is not
comparable to managing other institutional accounts because the services
provided are different, it is worth considering information regarding the
advisory fees charged to institutional accounts with a substantially similar
investment style as the Fund. It should be noted that the Adviser has indicated
that with respect to institutional accounts with assets greater than $300
million, it will negotiate a fee schedule. Discounts that are negotiated vary
based upon each client relationship. In addition to the AllianceBernstein
Institutional fee schedule, set forth below is what would have been the
effective advisory fee of the Fund had the AllianceBernstein Institutional fee
schedule been applicable to the Fund versus the Fund's advisory fee:



                    Net Assets      AllianceBernstein ("AB")     Effective      Fund
                     02/28/06       Institutional ("Inst.")       AB Inst.     Advisory
Fund                  ($MIL)              Fee Schedule            Adv. Fee      Fee(4)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
Large Cap Growth     $3,554.5      Large Cap Growth                0.259%        0.718%
Fund, Inc.                         80 bp on 1st $25 million
                                   50 bp on next $25 million
                                   40 bp on next $50 million
                                   30 bp on next $100 million
                                   25 bp on the balance
                                   Minimum Account Size: $10 m



(4)  Fund advisory fee information was provided by Lipper. See Section II for
additional discussion.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 53


The AllianceBernstein Variable Products Series Fund, Inc. ("AVPS"), which is
managed by the Adviser and is available through variable annuity and variable
life contracts offered by other financial institutions, offers investors the
option to invest in a portfolio with a substantially similar investment style
as the Fund. The following table shows the fee schedule of the AVPS portfolio
that has a substantially similar investment style as the Fund.

Fund                            AVPS Portfolio             Fee Schedule
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.   Large Cap Growth      75 bp on first $2.5 billion
                              Portfolio             65 bp on next $2.5 billion
                                                    60 bp on the balance

The Alliance Capital Investment Trust Management mutual funds ("ACITM"), which
are offered to investors in Japan, have an "all-in" fee to compensate the
Adviser for investment advisory as well as fund accounting and administrative
related services. The fee schedule of the ACITM mutual fund with a similar
investment style as the Fund is as follows:

Fund                                ACITM Mutual Fund                Fee
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.      Alliance American Premier          0.95%
                                 Growth - Hedge / Non-Hedge

                                 Alliance American Premier          0.735%
                                 Growth FVA(5)

                                 Alliance American Premier          0.70%
                                 Growth F / FB(5)

The Adviser provides sub-advisory investment services to certain other
investment companies managed by other fund families. The Adviser charges the
following fees for each of these sub-advisory relationships:

Fund                          Sub-advised Fund        Fee Schedule
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.      Client #1(6)   0.60% on the first $1 billion
                                                0.55% on the next $500 million
                                                0.50% on the next $500 million
                                                0.45% on the next $500 million
                                                0.40% thereafter

                                 Client #2      0.35% on first $50 million
                                                0.30% on next $100 million
                                                0.25% thereafter

                                 Client #3      0.40% on first $300 million
                                                0.37% on next $300 million
                                                0.35% on next $300 million
                                                0.32% on next $600 million
                                                0.25% thereafter


(5)  This ACITM fund is privately placed or institutional.

(6)  This is the fee schedule of a fund managed by an affiliate of the Adviser.


54 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


It is fair to note that the services the Adviser provides pursuant to
sub-advisory agreements are generally confined to the services related to the
investment process; in other words, they are not as comprehensive as the
services provided to the Fund by the Adviser. In addition, to the extent that
certain of these sub-advisory relationships are with affiliates of the Adviser,
the fee schedules may not reflect arms-length bargaining or negotiations.

II. MANAGEMENT FEES CHARGED BY OTHER MUTUAL FUND COMPANIES FOR LIKE SERVICES.

Lipper, Inc. ("Lipper"), an analytical service that is not affiliated with the
Adviser, compared the fees charged to the Fund with fees charged to other
investment companies for similar services by other investment advisers.
Lipper's analysis included the Fund's ranking with respect to the proposed
management fee relative to the Lipper group median at the approximate current
asset level of the Fund.(7)

                                     Effective         Lipper
                                     Management        Group
Fund                                   Fee(8)          Median         Rank
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.             0.718          0.617          9/12

Lipper also analyzed the total expense ratio of the Fund in comparison to its
Lipper Expense Group(9) and Lipper Expense Universe.(10) Lipper describes a
Lipper Expense Group as a representative sample of comparable funds and a
Lipper Expense Universe as a broader group, consisting of all funds in the same



(7)  The effective management fee is calculated by Lipper using the Fund's
contractual management fee rate at a hypothetical asset level. The hypothetical
asset level is based on the combined net assets of all classes of the Fund,
rounded up to the next $25 million. Lipper's total expense ratio information is
based on the most recent annual report except as otherwise noted. A ranking of
"1" means that the Fund has the lowest effective fee rate in the Lipper peer
group.

(8)  The effective management fee rate for the Fund does not reflect the
aforementioned payments made by the Fund to the Adviser for certain clerical,
legal, accounting, administrative, and other services.

(9)  Lipper uses the following criteria in screening funds to be included in
the Fund's expense group: fund type, investment classification/objective, load
type and similar 12b-1/non-12b-1 service fees, asset (size) comparability, and
expense components and attributes. A Lipper Expense Group will typically
consist of seven to twenty funds.

(10)  Except for asset (size) comparability, Lipper uses the same criteria for
selecting a Lipper Expense Group when selecting a Lipper Expense Universe.
Unlike the Lipper Expense Group, the Lipper Expense Universe allows for the
same adviser to be represented by more than just one fund.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 55


investment classification/objective with a similar load type as the subject
Fund. The result of that analysis is set forth below:

                         Expense    Lipper      Lipper      Lipper      Lipper
                         Ratio       Group      Group      Universe    Universe
Fund                     (%)(11)   Median(%)     Rank      Median(%)     Rank
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth
Fund, Inc.               1.496       1.182      12/12       1.324       80/113

Based on this analysis, the Fund has a more favorable ranking on a management
fee basis than it does on a total expense ratio basis.

III. COSTS TO THE ADVISER AND ITS AFFILIATES OF SUPPLYING SERVICES PURSUANT TO
THE MANAGEMENT FEE ARRANGEMENT, EXCLUDING ANY INTRA-CORPORATE PROFIT.

A consultant was retained by the Senior Officer to work with the Adviser's
personnel to align the Adviser's two profitability reporting systems. The
alignment, which now has been completed, allows the Adviser's management and
the Directors to receive consistent presentations of the financial results and
profitability although the two profitability reporting systems operate
independently. See Section IV for additional discussion.

IV. PROFIT MARGINS OF THE ADVISER AND ITS AFFILIATES FOR SUPPLYING SUCH
SERVICES.

The profitability information for the Fund prepared by the Adviser for the
Board of Directors was reviewed by the Senior Officer. The Adviser's
profitability from providing investment advisory services to the Fund increased
during calendar year 2005 relative to 2004.

In addition to the Adviser's direct profits from managing the Fund, certain of
the Adviser's affiliates have business relationships with the Fund and may earn
a profit from providing other services to the Fund. The courts have referred to
this type of business opportunity as "fall-out benefits" to the Adviser and
indicated that they should be factored into the evaluation of the total
relationship between the Fund and the Adviser. Neither case law nor common
business practice precludes the Adviser's affiliates from earning a reasonable
profit on this type of relationship. These affiliates provide transfer agent,
distribution, and brokerage related services to the Fund and receive transfer
agent fees, Rule 12b-1 payments, front-end sales loads, contingent deferred
sales charges ("CDSC") and commissions for providing brokerage services. In
addition, the Adviser benefits from soft dollar arrangements which offset
expenses the Adviser would otherwise incur. Additional information regarding
distribution related fees can be found in the prospectus of the Fund.


(11)  The total expense ratio shown is for the Fund's Class A shares.


56 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


AllianceBernstein Investments, Inc. ("ABI"), an affiliate of the Adviser, is
the Fund's principal underwriter. ABI and the Adviser have disclosed in the
Fund's prospectus that they may make revenue sharing payments from their own
resources, in addition to resources derived from sales loads and Rule 12b-1
fees, to firms that sell shares of the Fund. In 2005, ABI paid approximately
0.042% of the average monthly assets of the AllianceBernstein Mutual Funds or
approximately $18.0 million for distribution services and educational support
(revenue sharing payments). For 2006, it is anticipated, ABI will pay
approximately 0.04% of the average monthly assets of the AllianceBernstein
Mutual Funds or approximately $17.5 million.(12)

After payments to third party intermediaries, ABI retained the following
amounts for Class A front-end load sales charges from sales of the Fund's Class
A shares during the Fund's most recently completed fiscal year:

Fund                                                          Amount Received
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.                                       $31,554

ABI received the amounts set forth below in Rule 12b-1 fees and CDSC for the
Fund during the Fund's most recent fiscal year:

Fund                                  12b-1 Fees Received      CDSC Received
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.               $26,976,096            $1,458,084

Fees and reimbursements for out of pocket expenses charged by AllianceBernstein
Investor Services, Inc. ("ABIS"), the affiliated transfer agent, are based on
the level of the network account and the class of share held by the account.
ABIS also receives a fee per shareholder sub-account for each account
maintained by an intermediary on an omnibus basis. ABIS' after-tax
profitability increased in 2005 in comparison to 2004. ABIS received the
following fee from the Fund in the most recent fiscal year:

Fund                                                             ABIS Fee(13)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.                                      $11,188,540

The Fund effected brokerage transactions through the Adviser's affiliate,
Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. LLC ("SCB & Co.") and/or its U.K. affiliate, Sanford
C.


(12)  ABI currently inserts the "Advance" in quarterly account statements and
pays the incremental costs associated with the mailing. The incremental cost is
less than what an "independent mailing" would cost.

(13)  The fee disclosed is net of any waivers or any other expense offset
arrangement with ABIS. An expense offset is created by the interest earned on
the positive cash balance that occurs within the transfer agent account as
there is a one day lag with regards to money movement from the shareholder's
account to the transfer agent's account and then from the transfer agent's
account to the Fund's account.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 57


Bernstein Limited ("SCB Ltd."), collectively "SCB," and paid commissions for
such transactions during the Fund's most recently completed fiscal year. The
Adviser represented that SCB's profitability from business conducted with the
Fund is comparable to the profitability of SCB's dealings with other similar
third party clients. In the ordinary course of business, SCB receives and pays
liquidity rebates from electronic communications networks ("ECNs") derived from
trading for its clients, including the Fund. These credits and charges are not
being passed on to any SCB client. The Adviser also receives certain soft
dollar benefits from brokers that execute agency trades for the Fund and other
clients. These soft dollar benefits reduce the Adviser's cost of doing business
and increase its profitability.

V. POSSIBLE ECONOMIES OF SCALE

The Adviser has indicated that the breakpoints in the fee schedule in the
Investment Advisory Agreement reflect a sharing of economies of scale to the
extent the breakpoints are reached. Based on some of the professional
literature that has considered economies of scale in the mutual fund industry
it is thought that to the extent economies of scale exist, they may more often
exist across a fund family as opposed to a specific fund. This is because the
costs incurred by the Adviser, such as investment research or technology for
trading or compliance systems can be spread across a greater asset base as the
fund family increases in size. It is also possible that as the level of
services required to operate a successful investment company has increased over
time, and advisory firms have made such investments in their business to
provide improved services, there may be a sharing of economies of scale without
a reduction in advisory fees.

An independent consultant made a presentation to the Board of Directors and the
Senior Officer regarding possible economies of scale or scope in the mutual
fund industry. Based on the presentation, it was evident that fund management
companies benefit from economies of scale. However, due to lack of cost data,
researchers had to infer facts about the costs from the behavior of fund
expenses; there was a lack of consensus among researchers as to whether
economies of scale were being passed on to the shareholders. It is contemplated
that additional work will be performed to determine if the benefits of
economies of scale or scope are being passed to shareholders by the Adviser. In
the meantime, it is clear that to the extent a fund's assets exceeds its
initial breakpoint its shareholders benefit from a lower fee rate.

VI. NATURE AND QUALITY OF THE ADVISER'S SERVICES INCLUDING THE PERFORMANCE OF
THE FUND.

With assets under management of $635 billion as of April 30, 2006, the Adviser
has the investment experience to manage and provide non-investment services
(described in Section I) to the Fund.


58 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


The information below, prepared by Lipper, shows the 1, 3, 5 and 10 year
performance ranking of the Fund(14) relative to its Lipper Performance
Group(15) and Lipper Performance Universe(16) for the periods ended December
31, 2005:

Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.        Group             Universe
      1 year                        2/12              10/134
      3 year                        4/12              31/120
      5 year                        8/12              64/104
      10 year                        5/8               18/43

Set forth below are the 1, 3, 5, 10 year and since inception performance
returns of the Fund (in bold)(17) versus its benchmark:(18)

                                       Periods Ending December 31, 2005
                                            Annualized Performance
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 1        3        5         10        Since
Fund                           Year     Year      Year      Year     Inception
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.   14.15     14.86     -4.86      7.07       9.39
Russell 1000 Growth Index      5.26     13.23     -3.58      6.73       8.57

CONCLUSION:

Based on the factors discussed above the Senior Officer's conclusion is that
the proposed fee for the Fund is reasonable and within the range of what would
have been negotiated at arms-length in light of all the surrounding
circumstances. This conclusion in respect of the Fund is based on an evaluation
of all of these factors and no single factor was dispositive.

Dated: July 17, 2006


(14)  The performance rankings are for the Class A shares of the Fund.

(15)  The Lipper Performance Group is identical to the Lipper Expense Group.

(16)  For the Lipper Performance Universe, Lipper included the Fund and all of
the funds of the same Lipper Classification/Objective and load type, regardless
of asset size.

(17)  The performance returns shown are for the Class A shares of the Fund.

(18)  The Adviser provided Fund and benchmark performance return information
for periods through December 31, 2005 in order to maintain consistency with
Lipper's performance rankings in the analysis.


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND o 59


THIS PAGE IS NOT PART OF THE SHAREHOLDER REPORT OR THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN FAMILY OF FUNDS

- --------------------------------------------
Wealth Strategies Funds
- --------------------------------------------
Balanced Wealth Strategy
Wealth Appreciation Strategy
Wealth Preservation Strategy
Tax-Managed Balanced Wealth Strategy
Tax-Managed Wealth Appreciation Strategy
Tax-Managed Wealth Preservation Strategy

- --------------------------------------------
Blended Style Funds
- --------------------------------------------
U.S. Large Cap Portfolio
International Portfolio
Tax-Managed International Portfolio

- --------------------------------------------
Growth Funds
- --------------------------------------------
Domestic

Growth Fund
Mid-Cap Growth Fund
Large Cap Growth Fund
Small Cap Growth Portfolio

Global & International

Global Health Care Fund
Global Research Growth Fund
Global Technology Fund
Greater China '97 Fund
International Growth Fund
International Research Growth Fund

- --------------------------------------------
Value Funds
- --------------------------------------------
Domestic

Balanced Shares
Focused Growth & Income Fund
Growth & Income Fund
Real Estate Investment Fund
Small/Mid-Cap Value Fund
Utility Income Fund
Value Fund

Global & International

Global Value Fund
International Value Fund

- --------------------------------------------
Taxable Bond Funds
- --------------------------------------------
Global Government Income Trust*
Corporate Bond Portfolio
Emerging Market Debt Fund
Global Strategic Income Trust
High Yield Fund
Intermediate Bond Portfolio*
Short Duration Portfolio
U.S. Government Portfolio

- --------------------------------------------
Municipal Bond Funds
- --------------------------------------------
National                   Michigan
Insured National           Minnesota
Arizona                    New Jersey
California                 New York
Insured California         Ohio
Florida                    Pennsylvania
Massachusetts              Virginia

- --------------------------------------------
Intermediate Municipal Bond Funds
- --------------------------------------------
Intermediate California
Intermediate Diversified
Intermediate New York

- --------------------------------------------
Closed-End Funds
- --------------------------------------------
All-Market Advantage Fund
ACM Income Fund
ACM Government Opportunity Fund
ACM Managed Dollar Income Fund
ACM Managed Income Fund
ACM Municipal Securities Income Fund
California Municipal Income Fund
National Municipal Income Fund
New York Municipal Income Fund
The Spain Fund
World Dollar Government Fund
World Dollar Government Fund II

- --------------------------------------------
Retirement Strategies Funds
- --------------------------------------------
2000 Retirement Strategy
2005 Retirement Strategy
2010 Retirement Strategy
2015 Retirement Strategy
2020 Retirement Strategy
2025 Retirement Strategy
2030 Retirement Strategy
2035 Retirement Strategy
2040 Retirement Strategy
2045 Retirement Strategy


We also offer Exchange Reserves,** which serves as the money market fund
exchange vehicle for the AllianceBernstein mutual funds.

For more complete information on any AllianceBernstein mutual fund, including
investment objectives and policies, sales charges, expenses, risks and other
matters of importance to prospective investors, visit our website at
www.alliancebernstein.com or call us at 800.227.4618 for a current prospectus.
You should read the prospectus carefully before you invest.

*  Prior to February 1, 2006, Global Government Income Trust was named Americas
Government Income Trust and Intermediate Bond Portfolio was named Quality Bond
Portfolio.

**  An investment in the Fund is not a deposit in a bank and is not insured or
guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government
agency. Although the Fund seeks to preserve the value of your investment at
$1.00 per share, it is possible to lose money by investing in the Fund.


60 o ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND


ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN LARGE CAP GROWTH FUND
1345 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10105
(800) 221-5672


     [LOGO]
ALLIANCEBERNSTEIN
   INVESTMENTS


LCG-0151-0706




ITEM 2.   CODE OF ETHICS.

(a)   The registrant has adopted a code of ethics that applies to its principal
executive officer, principal financial officer and principal accounting
officer.
A copy of the registrant's code of ethics is filed herewith as Exhibit 12(a)(1).

(b)   During the period covered by this report, no material amendments were
made to the provisions of the code of ethics adopted in 2(a) above.

(c)   During the period covered by this report, no implicit or explicit waivers
to the provisions of the code of ethics adopted in 2(a) above were granted.

ITEM 3.   AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT.

The registrant's Board of Directors has determined that independent directors
David H. Dievler and William H. Foulk, Jr. qualify as audit committee financial
experts.

ITEM 4.   PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES.

(a) - (c)  The following table sets forth the aggregate fees billed by the
independent registered public accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP for
the Fund's 2005 fiscal year and KPMG LLP for the Fund's 2006 fiscal year for
professional services rendered for: (i) the audit of the Fund's annual
financial statements included in the Fund's annual report to stockholders; (ii)
assurance and related services that are reasonably related to the performance
of the audit of the Fund's financial statements and are not reported under (i),
which include advice and education related to accounting and auditing issues
and quarterly press release review (for those Funds which issue press
releases), and preferred stock maintenance testing (for those Funds that issue
preferred stock); and (iii) tax compliance, tax advice and tax return
preparation.

                                              Audit-Related
                              Audit Fees           Fees             Tax Fees
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               2005            $42,000            $3,680            $ 6,100
               2006            $32,500            $    0            $ 7,500


(d) Not applicable.

(e) (1) Beginning with audit and non-audit service contracts entered into on or
after May 6, 2003, the Fund's Audit Committee policies and procedures require
the pre-approval of all audit and non-audit services provided to the Fund by
the Fund's independent registered public accounting firm.  The Fund's Audit
Committee policies and procedures also require pre-approval of all audit and
non-audit services provided to the Adviser and Service Affiliates to the extent
that these services are directly related to the operations or financial
reporting of the Fund.

(e) (2) All of the amounts for Audit Fees, Audit-Related Fees and Tax Fees in
the table under Item 4 (a) - (c) are for services pre-approved by the Fund's
Audit Committee.

(f) Not applicable.

(g) The following table sets forth the aggregate non-audit services provided to
the Fund, the Fund's Adviser and entities that control, are controlled by or
under common control with the Adviser that provide ongoing services to the
Fund, ("Service Affiliates"):

                                                            Total Amount of
                                                         Foregoing Column Pre-
                                                         approved by the Audit
                                    All Fees for              Committee
                                 Non-Audit Services      (Portion Comprised of
                                  Provided to the         Audit Related Fees)
                              Portfolio, the Adviser    (Portion Comprised of
                              and Service Affiliates           Tax Fees)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   2005             $  812,555                  [ $9,780 ]
                                                                ( $3,680 )
                                                                ( $6,100 )
                   2006*            $6,471,203                  [ $7,500 ]
                                                                ( $    0 )
                                                                ( $7,500 )


*On June 14, 2006, the Fund engaged KPMG LLP as independent accountants for
fiscal year 2006.

(h) The Audit Committee of the Fund has considered whether the provision of any
non-audit services not pre-approved by the Audit Committee provided by the
Fund's independent registered public accounting firm to the Adviser and Service
Affiliates is compatible with maintaining the auditor's independence.

ITEM 5.   AUDIT COMMITTEE OF LISTED REGISTRANTS.

Not applicable to the registrant.

ITEM 6.   SCHEDULE OF INVESTMENTS.

Please see Schedule of Investments contained in the Report to Shareholders
included under Item 1 of this Form N-CSR.

ITEM 7.   DISCLOSURE OF PROXY VOTING POLICIES AND PROCEDURES FOR CLOSED-END
MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

Not applicable to the registrant.

TEM 8.    PORTFOLIO MANAGERS OF CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES.

Not applicable to the registrant.

ITEM 9.   PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY CLOSED-END MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT
COMPANY AND AFFILIATED PURCHASERS.

Not applicable to the registrant.

ITEM 10.   SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS.

There have been no material changes to the procedures by which shareholders may
recommend nominees to the Fund's Board of Directors since the Fund last
provided disclosure in response to this item.

ITEM 11.   CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

(a) The registrant's principal executive officer and principal financial
officer have concluded that the registrant's disclosure controls and procedures
(as defined in Rule 30a-2(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended) are effective at the reasonable assurance level based on their
evaluation of these controls and procedures as of a date within 90 days of the
filing date of this document.

(b) There were no changes in the registrant's internal controls over financial
reporting that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period that has
materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the
registrant's internal control over financial reporting.

ITEM 12.   EXHIBITS.

The following exhibits are attached to this Form N-CSR:

EXHIBIT NO.   DESCRIPTION OF EXHIBIT
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
12 (a) (1)    Code of Ethics that is subject to the disclosure of Item 2 hereof

12 (b) (1)    Certification of Principal Executive Officer Pursuant to
              Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

12 (b) (2)    Certification of Principal Financial Officer Pursuant to
              Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

12 (c)        Certification of Principal Executive Officer and Principal
              Financial Officer Pursuant to Section 906 of the
              Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002


SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to
be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

(Registrant):  AllianceBernstein Large Cap Growth Fund, Inc.

By:           /s/ Marc O. Mayer
              Marc O. Mayer
              President

Date:         September 28, 2006

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the
following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the
dates indicated.

By:           /s/ Marc O. Mayer
              Marc O. Mayer
              President

Date:         September 28, 2006


By:           /s/ Joseph J. Mantineo
              Joseph J. Mantineo
              Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer

Date:         September 28, 2006