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Week four, A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) Tennessee Williams.

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1 Week four, A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) Tennessee Williams

2 A Streetcar Named Desire  New Orleans as location within and outwith America; immigration  Postwar America; elemental qualities of the city  Desire and death: the Southern aristocracy in decline

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4  Born in 1911, as Thomas Lanier Williams in Columbus, Mississippi.  With his sister Rose, Williams grows up in various Southern towns.  During the 1920s, Williams writes short stories, poems, articles, and travels around Europe with his grandfather in 1928.  Persuaded to be a playwright by a production of Ibsen’s Ghosts that he sees in 1936.  1937: several plays produced by the Mummers amateur group in St. Louis. Studies playwriting and production at University of Iowa.  1939: lives for a time in French Quarter of New Orleans. Perhaps has first significant homosexual relationship here.  1940: takes a playwriting seminar in New York with John Gassner, and has first lengthy homosexual affair in Provincetown.  Rose is institutionalized in 1943 and treated with lobotomy.  1944: The Glass Menagerie premieres. Has a highly-successful Broadway run in 1945.  Writes Streetcar in one month whilst summering in Key West in 1946.  Streetcar is the first American play to win all three major awards: the Pulitzer Prize, the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, and the Donaldson Award. Tennessee Williams: chronology

5 ‘[P]oor but unlike corresponding sections in other American cities, it has a raffish charm. […] You can almost feel the warm breath of the brown river beyond the river warehouses with their faint redolences of bananas and coffee.’ (Stage directions, p.115.)

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7 ‘As the twentieth century rushed away from it, the South became an aesthetic rather than a social fact.’ (Christopher Bigsby, ‘Tennessee Williams: the theatricalising self’, in Modern American Drama, 1945-1990, p.48.)

8 In Blanche, ‘[t]he barren woman condemned to an asylum becomes a perfect image of the South.’ (Christopher Bigsby, ‘Tennessee Williams: the theatricalising self’, p.50.)

9 Draft titles for Streetcar ‘Blanche’s Chair in the Moon’ ‘The Passion of a Moth’ ‘Go, Said the Bird’ ‘The Moth’ ‘The Primary Colors’ ‘Electric Avenue’ ‘The Paper Lantern’ ‘The Poker Night’

10 Vincent van Gogh, The Night Café (1888) – see Williams’s stage directions for scene 3.

11 A participant in the annual Stanley and Stella shouting contest, in which males try to mimic Marlon Brando’s impassioned wailing, and coax their female down from the balcony.

12 ‘If [Williams] had written plays in the days before the technical development of translucent and transparent scenery, I believe he would have invented it. […] It was a true reflection of the contemporary playwright’s interest in – and at times obsession with – the exploration of the inner man. Williams was writing not only a memory play but a play of influences that were not confined within the walls of one room.’ (Jo Mielziner, quoted in Bigsby, A Critical Introduction to Twentieth- Century American Drama, v.2: Williams/Miller/Albee, pp.49-50.)


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