Tennessee Williams and The Glass Menagerie Introduction Notes.

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Tennessee Williams and The Glass Menagerie Introductio n Notes

Transcript of Tennessee Williams and The Glass Menagerie Introduction Notes.

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Tennessee Williams and

The Glass Menagerie

Introduction Notes

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Thomas Lanier Williams

•Born March 26, 1911 in Columbus, Mississippi

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Thomas Lanier Williams

•Lived for several years in Clarksdale, Mississippi•Moved to St. Louis in 1918

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Family Life•Mother was a controlling woman• Father was abusive and hard on him

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Family Life•Father assumed he was raising a homosexual

•Williams always felt rejected by his father

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Family Life•His sister Rose became mentally ill and was lobotomized and committed to a mental institution

•Williams remained close to his sister

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Education•Attended the University of Missouri, but his father pulled him out and put him to work

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Education•Eventually went back to school and graduated from the University of Iowa

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A Legend Begins•Changed his name to “Tennessee” and began to write controversial plays

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A Legend Begins•First hit was Glass Menagerie

•Originally titled The Gentleman Caller•Story based partially on William’s home life

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A Legend Begins

•Glass Menagerie was an instant success and the pressure began to surmount for Williams

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The Legend Continues

•Williams found that New Orleans was an inspirational city to write in

•He also spent time in Key West and New York

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The Legend Continues

•Williams won his first Pulitzer Prize in 1948 for A Streetcar Named Desire•It was made into a movie in 1951

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The Legend Continues

•Cat on a Hot Tin Roof gave Williams his second Pulitzer Prize in 1955

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The Legend Continues

Other instant successes were:

•The Rose Tattoo•Baby Doll

•The Night of the Iguana

•Sweet Bird of Youth

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The Legend Continues

•All of William’s plays touched on some controversial issue that had never been introduced in plays/movies before

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The Legend Continues•Sexual frustration

•Homosexuality•Mental illness•Emasculation•Cannibalism•Nymphomania•Alcohol abuse

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The Legend Changes

•Williams began to drink and take pills more frequently

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The Legend Changes

•His partner died in 1963 and this event was the true turning point for Williams

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The Legend Changes

•His drinking and drug use quickly heightened

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The Legend Changes

•His work in New York/ Hollywood began to receive poor reviews

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The Legend Changes

•Just like he had been rejected by his father years before, critics were now rejecting him

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The Legend Changes

•Williams’ alcoholism took control and he became paranoid

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The Legend Changes•Tennessee’s brother Dakin had him committed in 1969 to a mental institution because he suffered from alcohol poisoning and paranoia

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The Legend Changes

•He began to drink and pop pills again after his three-month stay

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The Legend Changes•Throughout these difficult times, Tennessee remained true to himself and never lost faith in his ability to write decent plays (despite the reviews)

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The Legend Ends•Eventually Tennessee’s abusive behavior caught up with him and he died a lonely death at the age of 71 in a New York hotel room

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The Legend Ends•The coroner’s report revealed that Williams died of asphyxia by choking on a top from a medicine bottle

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The Legend Ends•In 1996, Rose Williams died in the mental institution that had become her home

•Her tombstone reads “Blow out your candle, Laura”, a famous line from The Glass Menagerie

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The Legend Lives On•Williams’ plays continue to awe audiences everywhere both on stage and the big screen

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The Glass Menagerie•Originally titled A Gentleman Caller

•Had a successful run in 1944 in Chicago •Debuted on Broadway in 1945

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The Glass Menagerie•Williams’ first popular success•Williams received the New York Drama Critics’ Circle award as the best play of the season•Was called play of the century

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The Glass Menagerie•It has become one of the most performed plays in

the repertory of American

community theaters

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The Glass Menagerie•The movie version of the 1950’s starred the unknown actor Marlon Brando

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The Glass Menagerie

•An updated version was filmed in 1987 and directed by Paul Newman

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The Glass Menagerie•Play largely based on William’s own family - in particular his sister, Rose

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The Glass Menagerie•One act play with seven scenes and only four characters

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The Glass Menagerie•Play is full of negative emotion