Tennessee Williams 1911-1983 English 42 – Dr. Karen Rose.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Glass Menagerie By Tennessee Williams. About the Author  Born Thomas Williams in Mississippi  Nickname given to him in college because of his Southern.
Advertisements

Study Aids for CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF
Laura Ingalls Wilder was born in February 7, 1867, near the village of Pepin in the Big Woods of Wisconsin. Her Family was one of the first English.
September 16th, 2013 AP Literature.
“The Glass Menagerie”. Thomas Lanier Williams b. Columbus, Mississippi, on March 26, His mother, the former Edwina Dakin, was the puritanical daughter.
Constructed Response Assignment
Emily Dickinson A Rebel Without Applause.
Unit One Assignments The Formal Summary. Portfolio Rubric A Writing Portfolio – Each Unit, Your Portfolio should include: __________ __________ __________.
A child who stood tall, through a rough childhood.
T.S. Eliot By: Irene Sanchez English IV Mr. Rainey.
Anderson and Lewis. 1. Life (1) born in a small town in Ohio; a poor family; no normal education (2) variety of jobs and then joined the army (3) entered.
THE GLASS MENAGERIE TENNESSEE WILLIAMS. BACKGROUND  Tennessee Williams born Thomas Lanier Williams in 1911, Mississippi.  His mother, Edwina Dakin,
"The death of a beautiful woman is unquestionably
Kelso High School English Department. A Streetcar named Desire.
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
SYLVIA PLATH SYLVIA PLATH Born to middle class parents in Massachusetts; Published her first poem when she was eight; Sensitive, intelligent,
By: Morgan Chhima 7h2 March 3, 2010
 Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin was born on August 30, 1797 in London, England.  She was the daughter of philosopher and writer William Godwin and feminist.
PAUL ZINDEL BIO & NOVEL THEMES. PAUL ZINDEL – Early Life  Paul Zindel was born on May 15, 1936, in Staten Island, New York. His father left Paul, his.
E. A. Robinson AMERICA’S FIRST 20 TH CENTURY POET.
By: Eddie Edwards.  Born on March 6 th, 1928 in Aracataca, which is a small town in Northern Colombia.  Was raised in his grandparent’s house, which.
 Dramatist and fiction writer; one of America's major mid-20th-century playwrights.  Tennessee Williams was born Thomas Lanier Williams in Columbus,
«The Glass Menagerie» by Tennessee Williams. The Writer Tennessee Williams ( ) Born in Missouri. His father was a salesman; emotionally absent,
KELSO HIGH SCHOOL English Department. A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE.
Samantha Fink English 121. AFRICAN AMERICAN FEMINISM For centuries African American Women have been discriminated against, being viewed as the non- dominant.
By Virginia Young.  Born Thomas Lanier Williams, March 26, 1911  Born in Columbus, Mississippi  His Mother and Father are Edwina and Cornelius Williams.
Tennessee Williams. Early Life Thomas Lanier Williams III was born on March in Mississippi. When Williams was 8 years old he was diagnosed with.
BY: Brandon Spicuzza Gabriel Garcia Marquez was born on March 6, 1928 in Aracataca,Columbia. He lived with his Maternal Grandparents until.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Author of The Great Gatsby Chronicler of the Jazz Age.
Tennessee Williams and The Glass Menagerie Introduction Notes.
William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying. William Faulkner ( ) “My requirements for writing: paper, tobacco, food, and a little whisky” Grew up in Oxford.
Tennessee Williams. Biography Born on March 26, 1911, in Columbus Mississippi. Real name is Thomas Lanier Williams. He moved to Missouri, where his carefree.
SHAKESPEARE A LIFE OF DRAMA. WHY ARE WE SO IMPRESSED WITH SHAKESPEARE? Many scholars are impressed with Shakespeare because he was considered “revolutionary”
Born Thomas Lanier Williams Father- Cornelius Williams was a shoe salesmen that was an absent and emotionally abusive father Mother- Edwina was a loving.
TENNESSEE WILLIAMS THE GLASS MENAGERIE. BACKGROUND Tennessee Williams born Thomas Lanier Williams in 1911, Mississippi Very close to his sister Rose who.
Sept 25, 1897 – July 6, 1962 唐涛 李余方. childhoo d Adulthoo d As a young man The end of his life.
21 Class Days Before Exams! Computer lab working on research paper You may have to work on the paper some at home in order to finish on time Today’s Class.
The Life of John Milton By : Olga Kaziyeva.
F. Scott Fitzgerald  September 24, 1896: Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minnesota  His father, Edward Fitzgerald failed as a manufacturer.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee An introduction to the novel and the author.
Dates to Remember. Tuberculosis (TB) is an infection, primarily in the lungs. TB can remain in an inactive (dormant) state for years without causing symptoms.
Edna Ferber Ferber was Born on August in Kalamazoo Michigan Her parents were Jacob Ferber and Neumann Ferber. (this was Edna ferber as a child)
The Glass Menagerie a play by Tennessee Williams menagerie: a collection of animals.
Elizabeth Bishop
Mark Twain He was born November 30 th 1835 in Florida, Missouri to John Marshall Clemens and Jane Lampton Clemens.
A Street Car Named Desire Tennessee Williams. Background Info Born Thomas Lanier Williams in 1911 in Mississippi Father-traveling salesman and heavy drinker.
Tennessee Williams “The Glass Menagerie”. Tennessee Williams Troubled and self-destructive, an abuser of alcohol and drugs. He was awarded four.
American Theater Beg, borrow, and steal. The Puritans were so much fun… Under strict Puritanical control for much of their youth, theatrical performances.
Week four, A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) Tennessee Williams.
Tennessee Williams Born Thomas Lanier Williams III in Columbus, Mississippi Tennessee-nickname from college because of southern accent Father- salesman;
THE GLASS MENAGERIE TENNESSEE WILLIAMS.
Elizabeth Bowen ( ).  Born in Dublin on June 7, 1899 to wealthy parents.  lived in Ireland until the age of seven when father suffered a breakdown.
Nationalism Era-(Mid Romantic) The Mighty Handful, also known as The Five, The Balakirev Circle, and The New Russian School, refers to a group of prominent.
POSTMODERNISM. WHAT IS ART? INTRO TO POSTMODERNISM What do you think postmodernism is? What themes do you think will be shown through this literature?
Tennessee Williams: A Biography enotes.com. A Streetcar Named Desire. Summary and Study Guide, enotes.com, Inc., n.d. Web. 21 Feb A Streetcar Named.
Words review break out record symbol victory spirit Jew go into hiding Nazi 爆发 n. 记录 n. 象征 n. 胜利 n. 精神;幽灵;灵魂 n. 犹太人 躲藏起来 adj. 纳粹的.
Tennessee Williams The Wounded Genius. Early Years Born Thomas Lanier Williams in Columbus, Mississippi but later changed his name to Tennessee during.
Background information for A Raisin in the Sun. The Harlem Renaissance  The Harlem Renaissance was a literary, artistic, and intellectual movement that.
Tennessee Williams. Born Thomas Lanier Williams March 26, 1911 Birthplace: Columbus, Mississippi Parents: Cornelius and Edwina Williams One of three kids.
Writing About Context A03
THE GLASS MENAGERIE TENNESSEE WILLIAMS.
Elie Wiesel Night A-7713 “I d.
Passion Lust DESIRE Hot! Hot! Hot!.
THE GLASS MENAGERIE TENNESSEE WILLIAMS.
Begin a new bellringer page!
“Enthusiasm is the most important thing in life.”
The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams
The Glass Menagerie By Tennessee Williams.
Tennessee Williams By: Kendra Robinette
The Glass Menagerie Intro
Presentation transcript:

Tennessee Williams English 42 – Dr. Karen Rose

Thomas Lanier Williams III was born in Mississippi in His mother, Edwina Dakin Williams, was the daughter of a prominent local minister and she thought of herself as a Southern Belle. His father, Cornelius Williams, was a hard-drinking traveling salesman for a shoe company.

From early childhood, Williams was close to his sister Rose, two years his elder. A shy, sickly child, he was an avid reader. He also engaged in imaginative play with his sister, who he considered his best friend. When Williams was ten, his brother, Dakin, was born. According to Williams’s Memoir (1975), they were never close.

In 1918 the family moved from Mississippi to St. Louis, where Williams’s father became a sales manager for the shoe company. The family was used to living in small, southern towns, and St. Louis seemed both crowded and unfriendly. The family’s situation deteriorated. Williams’s father’s alcoholism worsened; he often drank or gambled away his paycheck. The family moved sixteen times during the next ten years. The lack of stability was unsettling and had a negative effect on the family. Williams was introverted and, with all the moving, he had difficulties forming friendships. His closest friend remained his sister, Rose.

When Williams’s mother gave him a typewriter for his eleventh birthday, he began to write – and he continued to write, with only intermittent lapses, for the rest of his life. Williams later explained that as an adolescent, he looked inward and he wrote — “because I found life unsatisfactory.” Writing was his form of escape from the outside world.

During three years at the University of Missouri, young Thomas Williams received the nickname “Tennessee” because of his southern accent. He was a good student, and he won prizes for verse and fiction. Although he had seen little live theater, he wrote a few dramatic pieces for which he received praise. His father was intolerant of his son’s writing, and seizing upon his failure in the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) -- a college-based program for training commissioned officers of the United States armed forces -- declined further support for his son. Williams’s father criticized him for being a “sissy.”

Back in St. Louis, at his father’s insistence, Williams went to work in a shoe warehouse. He worked there for three long years, all the while writing at night. He later called this his “season in hell.” Williams hated the job so much that he suffered a nervous breakdown and went to live with his grandparents in Memphis to recover.

While recuperating at the home of his maternal grandparents in Memphis, Williams was strengthened in his determination to be a writer. After winning a Theater Guild contest, he enrolled in the playwriting program at the University of Iowa, where he received his B.A. degree in In the mid 1930s, Williams also became aware of his homosexuality.

While Williams was completing his degree, his beloved sister, Rose, was not doing well. She began to experience mental imbalances and was diagnosed with schizophrenia. Rose was committed to the Missouri State Asylum, and in 1938, she had a prefrontal lobotomy. She was institutionalized for the rest of her life.

After her lobotomy, Rose was never the same. This tragedy devastated Williams and further strengthened his commitment to creative expression through writing. In 1944, when writing The Glass Menagerie, Rose was the inspiration for his character, Laura. Like Laura, his sister collected glass ornaments, was very sensitive and self conscious. When Rose died in 1996, the final line of The Glass Menagerie was inscribed on her gravestone.

Rejected by the Armed Forces during World War II, Williams drifted through a variety of odd jobs to support his writing. First produced in Chicago in late December 1944, The Glass Menagerie opened on Broadway on March 31, 1945 and ran for 561 performances, winning the prestigious New York Drama Critics Circle Award.

Williams adapted the play from one of his own short stories, “Portrait of a Girl in the Glass.” The Glass Menagerie is viewed as Williams’s most autobiographical play. After the Chicago opening, the actress playing Amanda greeted Williams’s mother by saying that she was pleased to meet the real-life model for her role. His mother was shocked and appalled. Williams assigned one-half the royalty payments to his mother, which kept her living comfortably until her death.

Between 1945 and 1961, when Williams won his fourth New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award, he was adored on Broadway, where he opened a new play bi-annually.

Williams personal life was, however, far from ideal. He depended increasingly on alcohol and drugs to help him sleep and wake. His condition deteriorated further after his lover, Frank Merlo, died of lung cancer in While Williams continued to write plays, poems, fiction, and essays, nothing achieved the critical acclaim of his earlier works. Tennessee Williams called Frank Merlo “the love of my life.”

In 1969 Williams followed his younger brother, Dakin, into the Catholic Church. So distraught was Williams by the end of the year that Dakin had him committed to Barnes Hospital in St. Louis where he underwent detoxification. Williams never forgave Dakin, and Williams’s behavior became even more troubling and self-destructive. He was suffering from severe depression and living in a downward spiral.

On February 25, 1983, Tennessee Williams’s dead body was found in a two-room suite filled with half-finished bottles of wine and prescription drugs at the Hotel Elysee in New York. He had choked to death on the plastic top of a bottle of nose spray, which some speculate he was using as a spoon for pills. The cause of death was determined to be asphyxia. He was 71 years old.

Williams received four Drama Critic Circle Awards, two Pulitzer Prizes and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He was honored by the U.S. Postal Service on a stamp in Williams left his literary rights to The University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, in honor of his grandfather, an alumnus of the university. The funds support a creative writing program. When his sister Rose died in 1996, she bequeathed $7 million from her part of the Williams estate to The University of the South.

The End!!