Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Program Notes: A Streetcar Named Desire

Tennessee Williams was one of the most influential playwrights from the 20th century, known for tackling with unconventional and taboo subjects.  William’s honest and raw portrayal of his characters in his plays helped him garner praise, but also drew criticism by mostly conservative critics.  He was honored by President Jimmy Carter with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980.  William’s also is known for his personal life being strongly reflected in his work; alcoholism, homosexuality, and mental instability all correlate with his life and plays.  His most famous plays include The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, The Rose Tattoo, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and The Night of the Iguana. A Streetcar Named Desire is one of William’s most renowned plays; it first opened in Broadway on December 3, 1947 and was first adapted to film in 1951.  Throughout the years, the play has won several awards, including the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1948.
            In A Streetcar Named Desire, the theme of social and gender class struggle can be mirrored to America’ s social, political, and gender struggle following World War II.  Although World War II had ended, it prompted the beginning of the Cold War.  The Cold War was the ideological battle between communism and capitalism, the war between the Soviet Union and the West.  The Jim Crow laws were in effect during this time period in America, which instituted racial segregation in all public facilities up until 1965.  These laws promoted violence in the white working class homeowners, who attacked any African American who tried to use their facilities or move into their neighborhoods.  Women’s roles were also affected after and during World War II.  Since more women were employed during the war and thus temporarily had more freedom, after the war ended they reverted back into their more oppressed roles of the household.  The media and the government had encouraged this form of domestic repression and patriarchy.  The gender and racial oppression eventually led to the women’s rights movement and civil rights movement, which were still active during this time lapse. 
            New Orleans was one of Tennessee Williams most favorite cities.  This may be because of its’ more nonjudgmental and fun atmosphere, and rich history and diversity.  It was kind of like Las Vegas, but without the history.  New Orleans is a great example of America’s melting pot, having been initially founded as a French outpost, then temporarily controlled by the Spanish, to being ceded back to the French.  Finally, under the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, New Orleans was bought by the United States.  The city’s population steadily increased as immigrants came to the city, including French, Americans, Creoles, Germans, Mexicans, Asians, and Africans.  New Orleanians would live in mixed neighborhoods since black servants and workers often lived close to their wealthy white employers. The city’s historical diversity bred a certain level of ease of intermingling among races, although African Americans were still kept as slaves until slavery was abolished, but they were still considered inferior.  The Jim Crow laws, however, came into effect, which excluded African American of the new neighborhoods that were being constructed in artificial land that became available in the 1920’s.  As whites moved into these suburbs, the makeup of the neighborhoods changed and segregation became more evident.
            As mentioned earlier, William’s has used recurrent controversial topics throughout his work, such as mental instability, homosexuality, and violence.  Specifically, in A Streetcar Named Desire, he addresses alcoholism, rape, violence, suicide, and homosexuality.  He portrays these topics realistically without glorifying them.   Most of the characters in the play seem to have fallen a victim of either of these in some way; they have become prey to a world that controls them and are confined to that role.  Even the aggressor in this play seems to show a vulnerable side, but it is clear that he is the one who gets to call the shots and pull the strings. William’s overall theme in this play is that casualties and dysfunction are inevitable in a world that breeds chaos, the fragile only get broken and are forced to be brought down to the oppressor’s level.  This seems to be reflective of William’s life, who struggled through his own personal demons and tragedy.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Producing the Play

One of the major problems of the script stems from the ambiguity of the play, which would make it even more important for the director to  pay close attention to detail since they are more choices to be made.  While more choices could mean more flexibility, in this case, a wrong choice could overturn the entire production.  issue to consider is whether the play should be played as a period piece, as it seems to be intended as such.  A Streetcar Named Desire would not make as much sense if it were in a contemporary setting, as the play’s characters have set gender roles and social class struggles reflective of the 1940’s period in America.  The other issues, perhaps the hardest to tackle with, would be the staging of the play with possible uncomfortable scenes for the audience.  Among these include domestic violence, when Stanley beats Stella,  and when Stanley rapes Blanche, and the depiction of homosexuality. 
           
          An important aspect to be considered if A Streetcar Named Desire were to be produced at SHSU or anywhere else, as mentioned earlier, would be for the audience to comprehend the play since it is not very literal.  The other issues would also apply here, from the setting of the play, to the staging of awkward scenes of rape and violence, and dealing with uncomfortable topics.  A balance has to be struck in the production as to not make these awkward scenes as offensive to a possible conservative audience or anyone else, but to demonstrate the  raw humanity of the characters who are dysfunctional and that this was their reality.  Another issue for this play on campus would be the length of it; it is close to three hours long.  Casting would also be important to consider, especially the casting for Blanche, Stanley, and Stella.  If they are miscast, it could impair the dynamics of the play.

Typically the set and lighting in past productions have complimented the script and the performance to help the audience grasp the symbolism and figurativeness of the play.  For example, in most productions, the set is made to be confined and claustrophobic to show how Blanche is invading Stella’s and Stanley’s relationship, and how conflict arises more easily by their close proximity to each other.  Also, it could show how entrapped these characters into their set roles.  Some productions have also made the set appear decayed, to  show Blanche’s downward spiral into instability as circumstances further push her down into ruin.  The lighting in productions has also mostly been pretty dim, since Blanche is always trying to hide who she really is as a self-defense mechanism.  Some productions of Streetcar, especially the first ones, did not show the scene where Stanley rapes Blanche, it was rather implied as it is in the script.  Other productions have shown this scene, but do not usually emphasize the brutality of the scene and rather downplay it. 

          Generally, the critics have responded positively to Streetcar throughout the years, and in the process winning several awards.  It has been one of Tennessee William’s most acclaimed work, a provocative play for the time period that garnered mostly praise, but also raised criticism from conservative reviewers due to the unconventional nature of the play.  Critics have mostly admired the complexity, figurativeness, and intensity of the play, which can make it a more challenging but interesting production.  Critics have also mostly focused on the casting of Stanley, Blanche, and Stella.  Usually it is Blanche and Stanley are given the most criticism since they are the hardest characters to play, especially Blanche.  Blanche is supposed to be fragile yet strong, delusional but not completely crazy.  Stanley can be seen as a monster, yet he still is supposed to show a certain boyishness, vulnerability, and charisma that will help the audience understand why Stella puts up with his abuse.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

New Repertory Theatre 2007

New Repertory Theatre
Watertown, Massachusetts
September-October 2007

Director: Rick Lombardo
Scenery: Janie Howland
Costumes: Frances McSherry
Lighting: John Malinowski
Sound: Haddon Kime













Possessed herself by her fantasies of the lost past, Blanche takes over every corner of her sister Stella's tiny, grimy New Orleans flat with her tattered finery and paper lanterns [...] a set...dingily realistic in its details, dreamily abstract in its structure - and underscored by Haddon Kime's mournful streetcar moans and saxophone wails...

Louise Kennedy, Boston Globe
http://articles.boston.com/2007-09-18/ae/29231545_1_stella-ghost-spirits


upstairs neighbors Steve and Eunice Hubbell and Luis Negron as poker buddy Pablo not only milk every bit of comedy possible out of Williams’ dark script, but also help director Rick Lombardo create the seedy atmosphere of the bad side of New Orleans’ French Quarter [...] perfectly squalid set and John Malinowski’s film noir lighting (although the red-lit background at the top of the show seems cliche, particularly when mixed with bluesy music)...

Jennifer Bubriski, Edge Boston
http://www.edgeboston.com/index.php?ch=entertainment&sc=theatre&sc2=reviews&sc3=performance&id=7310

Sydney Theatre Company 2009

Sydney Theatre Company
Sydney, Australia
September-October 2009

Director: Liv Ullmann
Scenery: Ralph Myers
Costumes: Tess Shofield
Lighting: Nick Schlieper
Sound: Paul Charlier




But the real struggle here is between Blanche and Blanche, which means that nobody wins [...]
Yet there’s a see-sawing between strength and fragility in Blanche, and too often those who play her fall irrevocably onto one side or another [...] confines us to the Kowalskis’ apartment, with glimpses through windows of other lives


Ben Brantley, The New York  Times
http://theater.nytimes.com/2009/12/03/theater/reviews/03streetcar.html


Directed with a superb eye for detail and nuance by celebrated actress Liv Ullmann, this tautly paced staging benefits not only from Blanchett's mesmerizing performance, but also strongly etched portrayals by a finely tuned ensemble cast [...] Ralph Myers designed the starkly atmospheric set , a place where the sound of a passing streetcar or the sight of a curtain-rustling breeze is heavy with menace. Music is used to keen effect...Tim Smith, The Sun
http://infoweb.newsbank.com.ezproxy.shsu.edu/iw-search/we/InfoWeb?p_product=AWNB&p_theme=aggregated5&p_action=doc&p_docid=12BC62BF976E3EC8&p_docnum=2&p_queryname=1

Walnut Street Theatre 2009

Walnut Street Theatre
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
January-March 2009

Director: Malcolm Black
Scenery: Paul Wonsek
Costumes: Ellis Tillman
Lighting: Paul Wonsek
Sound: Christopher Colluci





long poetic speeches tucked into an old fashioned set design, the play now on the Walnut's stage is very evocative of the forties [...] Dominating the stage is the facade of a perhaps once elegant, but now decaying building in the old part of New Orleans.  The production's texture includes rich lighting, although a tad on the bright side [...]something in the direction is amiss when characters are out of balance...

Kathryn Osenlund, CurtainUp
http://www.curtainup.com/streetcarphila09.html


When Stella challenges Stanley in defense of her sister, he explodes, shattering dishes, pounding walls, and punching his wife [...] expect a director to stage Streetcar as a period piece [...] Malcolm Black’s production strips the dark pathos that emanates from sexual desire and almost turns the play into a work more resembling a comedy of sexual manners...
Jim Rutter, Blogger
http://jimruttersreviews.blogspot.com/2009/02/review-of-streetcar-named-desire-at.html

Writer's Theatre 2010

Writer's Theatre
Glencoe, Illinois
May - August 2010

Director: David Cromer
Scenery: Collette Pollard
Costumes: Janice Pytel
Lighting: Heather Gilbert
Sound: Josh Schmidt



This confined space ...cannot house both the damaged, delicate Blanche and the insensitive, egoistic Stanley without a decisive conflagration. [...] with the screech of the streetcar lines in our ears [...]  Performed in dim candlelight — Heather Gilbert’s lighting design is extraordinary throughout — the scene includes a third character, the ghost of Blanche’s early love, who rises in her vision as she recalls the fateful night by the lake.

Charles Isherwood, The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/19/theater/reviews/19streetcar.html


...some of the seats in this configuration are little more than inches away from the bed [...] Memories float. Cats howl. Beds creak. Punches are thrown. Fiery jazz stabs the air. Such is the attention to the most precise little details [...] Cromer stages the shadows that dance in Blanche's head — her unfortunate affair with a fellow who turned out to be a “degenerate” [...] the crucial progression after the fight, when violent Stanley has smacked his wife...

Chris Jones, Chicago Tribune
http://leisureblogs.chicagotribune.com/the_theater_loop/2010/05/streetcar-named-desire-cromer-review-writers-theatre-glencoe.html

Donmar Warehouse 2009

Donmar Warehouse Theatre
Donmar, London
23 July-3 October 2009

Director: Rob Ashford
Designer: Christopher Oram
Lighting: Neil Austin
Sound: Adam Cork






Christopher Oram's loftily elegant New Orleans set makes much use of wrought iron and features a particularly glamorous spiral fire escape. Although the Donmar offers airy vertical space, the set still manages to be appropriately claustrophobic [...] One of [Ashford's] most successful innovations is in allowing Blanche to see visions of her young husband, her teenage sweetheart - a homosexual who shot himself. He appears, in evening dress, with his older lover and the sightings have the quality of awkward snapshots...
Kate Kellaway, The Guardian
http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2009/aug/02/streetcar-named-desire-review


The production doesn't paper over the fact that Stanley commits a brutal crime and Blanche is his victim. Weisz's repeated cries, as flutteringly helpless [...] The last line of the play [is] actually a throwaway remark by one of Stanley's poker buddies: "The game is seven-card stud." The pun must be intentionalthis is a game that the stud has won and the demented, discarded Blanche has devastatingly lost.  Weisz understands Blanche's spiritual longing, and so does the director, who brings down the curtain on the line, "Sometimesthere's Godso quickly!"

Huntley Dent, The Berkshire Review
http://berkshirereview.net/2009/08/streetcar-named-desire-tennessee-williams-donmar-warehouse-london/