Faculty of Arts,
Chulalongkorn University
The
Glass Menagerie
(1945)
Tennessee Williams
(March 26, 1911–February 25, 1983)
Notes
The Glass Menagerie
premiered at the Civic Theatre, Chicago Illinois, on December 26,
1944.
93 The cat's not out of
the bag:
- let the cat out of the bag (Merriam Webster)
to make known (as information previously kept secret)
Ex. They tried not to let the cat out of the bag about the
surprise party.
- let the cat out of the bag (Cambridge Dictionary)
to allow a secret to be known, usually without intending to:
Ex. I was trying to keep the party a secret, but Mel went and let
the cat out of the bag.
Theater
There is a
duality in my attitude toward an audience now. Of course I want their
approval, I want their understanding and their empathy. But there is much
about them that strikes me as obdurately resistant to my kind of theatre
these days. They seem to be conditioned to a kind of theatre which is
quite different from the kind I wish to practice.
Actually my own theatre is also in a state of revolution: I am quite
through with the kind of play that established my early and popular
reputation. I am doing a different thing which is altogether my own, not
influenced at all by other playwrights at home or abroad or by other
schools of theatre. My thing is what it always was: to express my world
and my experience of it in whatever form seems suitable to the material.
—Tennessee
Williams, "Foreword," Memoirs, Doubleday, 1975, p. xvii.
Life
[...] There
was a real book in there which was titled International Who's Who or
something of the sort. Quite naturally I snatched it out of its case and
turned immediately to the index to see if I had made that scene. [...]
Among the list of my honors and awards was the astonishing announcement
that in a certain year of the early forties I had received a grand of one
thousand dollars, yes, what is called a "big one," from the National
Institute of Arts and Letters. It is the year, not the donor, of the
alleged grant that stands out so prominently in my mind, for that was the
year (several years before my life was changed irrevocably by the success
of The Glass Menagerie) in which I had to hock literally
everything I owned, including including an old borrowed portable
typewriter and everything else old and new and portable, including all
clothes except a dirty flannel shirt, riding breeches and a pair of boots
which were relics of a term in the study of equitation I had taken in
preference to regular R.O.T.C. at the University of Missouri, and it was
the year when I was bounced from lodging to lodging for nonpayment of
rent, which was a minimal rent, and it was the year when I had to go out
on the street to bum a cigarette, that absolutely essential cigarette that
a living and smoking writer must have to start work in the morning and it
was even the year when I usually had what the French call “papillons
d’amour” because I did not have the price of a bottle of Cuprex, the
standard pubic pesticide in those days and when I was once embarrassed by
this outcry on a crowded street corner in daylight, “You bastard, you gave
me crabs last night!”—an outcry which cut short my social season in the
French Quarter of New Orleans and sent me packing—well, packing is hardly
the word, since I had no luggage—on my thumb to Florida, coughing, hawking
and spitting up blood, yes, blood, not catsup, and presenting upon the
highways such a spooky appearance that motorists would push their
accelerators to the floorboards when they sighted me in the light of day
and when I had to try to catch rides mostly at night, and I have journals
to prove these specific recollections of that year when I was supposed to
be the hilarious recipient of that “big one” from the Institute of which I
am now a tolerated member.
My first
years of childhood in Mississippi were the most joyously innocent of my
life, due to the beneficent homelife provided by my beloved Dakin
grandparents, with whom we lived. And to the wild and sweet half-imaginary
world in which my sister and our beautiful black nurse Ozzie existed,
separate, almost invisible to anyone but our little cabalistic circle of
three.
That
world, that charmed time, ended with the abrupt transference of the family
to St. Louis. This move was preceded, for me, by an illness diagnosed by a
small Mississippi town doctor as diphtheria with complications. It lasted
a year, was nearly fatal, and changed my nature as drastically as it did
my physical health. Prior to it, I had been a little boy with a robust,
aggressive, almost bullying nature. During the illness, I learned to play,
alone, games of my own invention.
—Tennessee Williams, chapter 2, Memoirs,
Doubleday, 1975, p. 11.
My
adolescent problems took their most violent form in a shyness of a
pathological degree. Few people realize, now, that I have always been and
even remain in my years as a crocodile an extremely shy creature—in my
crocodile years I compensate for this shyness by the typical Williams
heartiness and bluster and sometimes explosive fury of behavior. In my
high school days I had no disguise, no façade. And it was at University
City High School that I developed the habit of blushing whenever anyone
looked me in the eyes, as if I harbored behind them some quite dreadful or
abominable secret.
[...]
Literally, from that incident on, and almost without remission for the
next four or five years, I would blush whenever a pair of human eyes, male
or female (but mostly female since my life was spent mostly among members
of that gender) would meet mine. I would feel my face burning with a
blush.
—Tennessee Williams, chapter 2, Memoirs,
Doubleday, 1975, p. 17.
[...] Dad announced that he could no longer
afford to keep me in college and that he was getting me a job in a branch
of the International Shoe Company.
This job was to last for three years,
from 1931 to 1934. I received the wage of sixty-five dollars a month—it
was the depression.
Well, truly, I would take nothing for
those three years because I learned, during them, just how disgraceful, to
the corporations, is the fate of the white-collar worker.
I got
the job because Dad had procured for the top boss his position at the
Continental Shoemakers branch. (This was still before the poker game and
the decline and fall of “Big Daddy.”) Of course the bosses were anxious to
find an excuse to get me out. They put me to the most tedious and arduous
jobs. I had to dust off hundreds of shoes in the sample rooms every
morning; then I had to spend several hours typing out factory orders.
Digits, nothing but digits!
—Tennessee Williams, chapter 3, Memoirs,
Doubleday, 1975, p. 36.
There
were years when I was in the shoe company and summers when I was a student
at the State University of Missouri when my sister and I spent nearly all
our evenings together aside from those which I spent with Hazel.
What did we do those evenings, Rose
and I? Well, we strolled about the business streets of University City. It
was a sort of ritual with a pathos that I assure you was never caught in
Menagerie
nor in my story “
Portrait of Girl in Glass,” on which
Menagerie was
based.
—Tennessee Williams, chapter 7, Memoirs,
Doubleday, 1975, p. 120.
d
d
I have known some people who were indifferent
to Tennessee, and some who disliked him, but I have never known anyone who
liked him and did not feel the need to protect him. A great deal of the
time in those unsuccessful days he was literally punch-drunk from writing.
No one I have encountered any place, at any time, in any field of
endeavor, labored as intently as he did; and the desire to prevent his
walking straight into the wall when he got up from his typewriter, the
longing to remind him of some of the meals he was forgetting, was
irresistible.
—Donald Windham, Introduction, Tennessee
Williams' Letters to Donald Windham 1940–1965, Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1977, p. v.
The Glass Menagerie
[53 Arundel Place, Clayton, Mo.]
[April 22, 1943]
Dear Donnie:
I am out
of cigarettes and very nervous so I can not write much of a letter. i have
been writing with tigerish intensity on "The Gentleman Caller" every day,
and today I felt like I was going to just blow up, so I quit. What I am
doing to that quiet little play I don't know.
—Tennessee Williams' Letters to Donald
Windham 1940–1965, edited by Donald Windham, Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1977, p. 60.
On the
Broadway opening night of Menagerie, the performers took bow after
bow, and finally they tried to get me up on the stage. I was sitting in
the fourth row, and somebody extended a hand to me and I went up on the
stage. And I felt embarrassed; I don’t think I felt any great sense of
triumph. I think writing is continually a pursuit of a very evasive
quarry, and you never quite catch it.
In the essay that accompanies one of
the printed editions of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, I talk very
honestly about my goal in writing, what I want to do. That goal is just
somehow to capture the constantly evanescent quality of existence. When I
do that, then I have accomplished something, but I have done it, I think,
relatively few times compared to the times I have attempted it. I don’t
have any sense of being a fulfilled artist. And when I was writing Menagerie,
I did not know that I was capturing it, and I agree with Brooks Atkinson
that the narrations are not up to the play. I didn’t feel they were at the
time, either. Thank God, in the 1973 television version of it, they cut
the narrations down. There was too much of them. And the play itself holds
without much narration.
Mother
came up to Chicago for the opening there of Menagerie in the late
December of 1944. I don’t recall her precise reaction to the play but it
was probably favorable, for Mother was very concerned with my long-delayed
success. I do recall her coming backstage after the performance which she
attended and paying her respects to Laurette.
“Well, Mrs. Williams,” said Laurette,
briefly scrutinizing Edwina Williams in her dressing-room mirror, “how did
you like yourself?”
“Myself?” said Mother innocently.
[...]
In
Chicago the first night, no one knew how to take Menagerie, it was
something of an innovation in the theatre and even though Laurette gave an
incredibly luminous, electrifying performance, and people observed it. But
people are people, and most of them went home afterward to take at least
equal pleasure in their usual entertainments. It took that lovely lady,
Claudia Cassidy, the drama critic of the Chicago Tribune, a lot of
time to sell it to them, to tell them it was special.
—Tennessee Williams, chapter 3, Memoirs,
Doubleday, 1975, p. 84, 85.
Comprehension Check
Scene 1
- Why does Tom say "I know what's
coming!" when Amanda says "Why, I remember one Sunday
afternoon in Blue Mountain—" (7)?
Scene
2
- Where does Amanda think Laura
has been going "every day for the past six weeks" (13)?
- Why does Jim call Laura Blue
Roses (17)?
Scene
3
- Who is "that insane Mr.
Lawrence" whose "hideous book" Amanda confiscated from Tom
and returned to the Library (21)?
- Does Tom go every night to the
movies? What is the evidence?
|
Study Questions
-
What is the difference between “a
stage magician” (4), stage magic and/or Tom?
-
What deceptions occur in the play?
- Symbols and
symbolism
- Tom, "the
narrator of the play, and also a character in it" (5),
declares in his opening monologue that he has "a poet's
weakness for symbols" as he explains the gentleman
caller: "I am using this character also as a symbol; he
is the long-delayed but always expected something that
we live for." Examine the symbolic use of Jim and other
things in this play. What resonances do they have when
read in connection to other elements and to the play's
themes and preoccupations? Look at some of the
following:
- The
Wingfield apartment
- The
fire escape
- The
portieres
- The
thirties ("that quaint period, the thirties, when the
huge middle class of America was matriculating in a
school for the blind. Their eyes had failed them, or
they had failed their eyes, and so they were having
their fingers pressed forcibly down on the fiery
Braille alphabet of a dissolving economy" 5)
- "A
blown-up photograph of the father" (4)
- Laura;
Laura's being crippled (xviii, 17, 81)
- Tom;
Shakespeare; clerk
- Jim;
the gentleman caller
- Amanda
- Telephone
- Books,
novels; poems, poetry
- The
movies
- Continental
Shoemakers (23); warehouse
- Cigarette;
smoking
- Glass;
colored glass; the glass animals
- The
Victrola
- Music
- Dance,
dancing; the Paradise Dance Hall
- Moon
- Electricity;
fluorescent light
- Candle(s)
- Racism
- How do
you explain the presence (or absence?) of black people
in this play? Consider, for example, these lines:
- AMANDA
[rising]. No, sister, no, sister—you be the
lady this time and I’ll be the darky. (7)
- We
had to send the nigger over to bring in folding chairs
from the parish house. (8)
- Is
Amanda racist?
- What
are the benefits or drawbacks of reading racial issues
in this play historically versus ahistorically?
- What
tricks does Tom have in his pocket and what things does he
have up his sleeve (4)?
- Tennessee
Williams mentions the play's "considerably delicate or
tenuous material" (xix). What might these be?
- Nonrealism
- The
play's nonrealism is emphasized frequently, sometimes
overtly, at others more subtly through various means in
the reading text. What effect do these unrealistic and
often self-reflexive elements have on the reading and/or
theatrical experience? Look at how the following could
be staged and with what impact.
- Expressionism
and all other unconventional techniques in drama have
only one valid aim, and that is a closer approach to
truth. (xix)
- The
lighting in the play is not realistic. (xxi)
- The
scene is memory and is therefore nonrealistic.
Memory takes a lot of poetic license. It omits some
details; others are exaggerated, according to the
emotional value of the articles it touches, for
memory is seated predominantly in the heart. (3)
- Being
a memory play, it is dimly lighted, it is sentimental,
it is not realistic. In memory everything seems to
happen to music. That explains the fiddle in the
wings. (5)
- [She
addresses Tom as though he were seated in the vacant
chair at the table though he remains by the
portieres. He plays this scene as though reading
from a script.]
- Why
is the play divided into only scenes rather than acts and
scenes as is common?
|
Review
Sheet
Characters
Amanda
Wingfield –
"A little woman of great but confused vitality clinging frantically to
another time and place. Her characterization must be carefully created,
not copied from type. She is not paranoiac, but her life is paranoia.
There is much to admire in Amanda, and as much to love and pity as there
is to laugh at. Certainly she has endurance and a kind of heroism, and
though her foolishness makes her unwittingly cruel at times, there is
tenderness in her slight person" (xviii); "my [Tom's] mother, Amanda"
(5); "One Sunday afternoon in Blue Mountain—your mother received—seventeen!—gentlemen
callers!" (8); "When I was a girl in Blue Mountain" (45)
Laura Wingfield – "A childhood illness has left her crippled, one
leg slightly shorter than the other, and held in a brace. This defect
need not be more than suggested on the stage. Stemming from this,
Laura’s separation increases till she is like a piece of her own glass
collection, too exquisitely fragile to move from the shelf" (xviii); "my
[Tom's] sister, Laura" (5); "Resume your seat, little sister—I want you
to stay fresh and pretty—for gentlemen callers!" (7); "I said
pleurosis—he [Jim] thought that I said Blue Roses! So that's what he
walways called me after that" (17)
Tom Wingfield – "A poet with a job in a warehouse. His nature
is not remorseless, but to escape from a trap he has to act without
pity" (xviii); "Tom enters, dressed as a merchant sailor" (4); "I
am the narrator of the play, and also a character in it" (5); "I'm
getting a cigarette" (7); "You think I'm crazy about the warehouse?
[...] You [Amanda] think I'm in love with the Continental Shoemakers?
You think I want to spend fifty-five years down there in that—celotex
interior! with—fluorescent—tubes!" (23); "I was
fired for writing a poem on the lid of a shoe-box" (96)
Jim, James Delaney O'Connor, the gentleman
caller – "A nice, ordinary, young man" (xviii); "He is
the most realistic character in the play, being an emissary from a world
of reality that we were somehow set apart from [...] I [Tom] am using
this character also as a symbol; he is the long-delayed but always
expected something that we live for" (5); "When I [Laura] had that
attack of pleurosis—he asked me what was the matter when I came back"
(17); "This young man's position is that of a shipping clerk, Mother"
(44); "[salary] approximately eighty-five dollars a month" (45); "James
D. O'Connor. The D. is for Delaney" (45)
father – "A blown-up photograph of the father hangs
on the wall of the living room [...] It is the face of a very
handsome young man in a doughboy's First World War cap. he is
gallantly smiling, ineluctably smiling, as if to say 'I will be
smiling forever'" (4); "There is a fifth character in the play who
doesn't appear except in this larger-than-life-size photograph over the
mantel. This is our father who left us a long time ago He was a
telephone man who fell in love with long distances; he gave up his job
with the telephone company and skipped the light fantastic out of
town...The last we heard of him was a picture postcard from Mazatlan, on
the Pacific coast of Mexico, containing a message of two words:
'Hello—Goodbye!" and no address" (5)
Setting
Time – "Now and in the Past"
(xvii)
Place
St. Louis, Missouri – "Scene: An alley in St. Louis" (xvii)
Wingfield apartment – "The Wingfield apartment is in
the rear of the building, one of those vast hive-like conglomerations of
cellular living-units that flower as warty growths in overcrowded urban
centers of lower-middle-class populations and are symptomatic of the
impulse of this largest and fundamentally enslaved section of American
society to avoid fluidity and differentiation and to exist and function as
one interfused mass of automatism" (3); "The scene is memory and is
therefore nonrealistic. Memory takes a lot of poetic license. It omits
some details; others are exaggerated, according to the emotional value of
the articles it touches, for memory is seated predominantly in the heart.
The interior is therefore rather dim and poetic" (3)
living room – "Nearest the
audience is the living room, which also serves as a sleeping room for
Laura, the sofa unfolding to make her bed" (3–4); "In an
old-fashioned whatnot in the living room are seen scores of transparent
glass animals. A blown-up photograph of the father hangs on the wall of
the living room" (4); "Also hanging on the wall, near the
photograph, are a typewriter keyboard chart and a Gregg shorthand diagram.
An upright typewriter on a small table stands beneath the charts" (4)
dining room – "Just beyond,
separated from the living room by a wide arch or second proscenium with
transparent faded portieres (or second curtain), is the
dining room" (4); "Amanda and Laura are seated at a drop-leaf
table. Eating is indicated by gestures without food or utensils" (6)
kitchenette
Vocabulary
stage
directions
scene
stage
curtain
set
expressionism
setting
props
dialogue
syntax
diction;
denotation, connotation
repetition
literal
language
figurative
language
trope; device
metaphor
simile
overstatement
understatement
image
imagery
- visual imagery
- auditory imagery
- tactile imagery
- olfactory imagery
- gustatory imagery
- kinesthetic imagery
- thermal imagery
allegory, allegorical
symbol,
symbolic, symbolism
gesture
facial
expressions
mood
tone
theme
memory
American
dream and reality
family
relationships
guilt
freedom
theater
arts
difference
modern
economy
individualism
Character,
Characterization
major characters
minor characters
protagonist
antagonist
stock or type characters
stereotypes
foil
personality
direct presentation of character
indirect presentation of character; indirect characterization
show v. tell
consistency in character behavior
motivation
plausibility of character: is the character credible? convincing?
flat character
round character, multidimensional character
static character, unchanged
developing character, dynamic character, active character
direct methods of revealing character:
- characterization through the use of names
- characterization through physical appearance
- characterization through editorial comments by the author, interrupts
narrative to provide information
- characterization through dialog: what is said, who says it, under what
circumstances, who is listening, how the conversation flows, how the
speaker speaks (ex. tone, stress, dialect, diction/word choice)
- characterization through action
character flaw(s)
Plot
Freytag's Pyramid
linear, nonlinear, linearity
beginning, middle, end
inciting incident
chance, coincidence
plot, main plot, minor plot,
subplot, underplot, double plot,
story
conflict, internal conflict, external conflict, clash of actions, clash of
ideas, clash of desires, clash of wills, major, minor, emotional, physical
- man v. self
- man v. man
- man v. society
- man v. nature
- man v. the supernatural
- man v. machine/technology
suspense (suspenseful)
mystery (mysterious,
mysteriously, mysteriousness)
dilemma
surprise (surprising, surprised)
plot twist
ending
- happy ending
- unhappy ending
- indeterminate ending (ambiguous)
- surprise ending (unexpected)
artistic unity (unified)
time sequence
exposition
in
medias res
complication (complicate)
rising action
falling action
crisis
climax
anti-climax (anti-climactic)
conclusion (conclude, conclusive)
resolution (resolve, resolving)
denouement
flashback, retrospect
back-story
foreshadowing
causality
plot structure
initiating incident
epiphany
recognition
reversal
catastrophe
disclosure, discovery
movement, shape of movement
trajectory
change
focus
Sample Student
Responses to Tennessee Williams's The Glass Menagerie
Response 1:
Kanokwan
Surapornchai
2202234
Introduction to the Study of English Literature
Acharn Puckpan
Tipayamontri
June 10, 2009
Reading
Response 1
Title
Text
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|
Media
|
|
- "I Remember One Sunday Afternoon in
Blue Mountain," The Glass Menagerie, directed by
John Tiffany, performed by Cherry Jones, Celia
Keenan-Bolger, and Zachary Quinto, The Glass Menagerie
Broadway (2014; 1:18 min.)
|
|
- "Blue Roses," The Glass Menagerie,
directed by John Tiffany, performed by Cherry Jones, Celia
Keenan-Bolger, and Zachary Quinto, The Glass Menagerie
Broadway (2014; 1:30 min.)
|
|
- The Glass Menagerie, directed by
Julia Sandra Rand, performed by Julia Sandra Rand, Michael
Gurrieri, Lindsay Adkins, Bradley Beach Arts Council
(2016; 1 hr. 44:00 min.)
|
|
- The Glass Menagerie, directed by
Michael Elliott, performed by Shirley Booth, Hal Holbrook,
and Barbara Loden, CBS Playhouse (1966; 1 hr.
44:00 min.)
|
|
- The
Glass Menagerie, directed by Paul Newman, performed
by Joanne Woodward, John Malkovich, and Karen Allen Cineplex
Odeon Films (1981; 2 hr. 8:48 min.)
|
|
- The Glass Menagerie, directed by
Christopher Scott, performed by Saundra Santiago, Richard
Prioleau, and Olivia Washington, Masterworks Theatre
Company (2015; 2 hr. 20:27 min.)
|
|
- "The 1930s," America in Color, Smithsonian
(2017; 48:15 min.)
|
|
- "Tennessee Williams: No Refuge But
Writing," The Morgan Library and Museum (2018;
3:44 min.)
|
|
- "Tennessee Williams," The Dick Cavett
Show, KCBS TV Los Angeles (1974 interview; 45:44 min.)
|
|
- Christopher
Bigsby, "Tennessee Williams: Radical of the Heart," Center
for Advanced Study, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign (2005 lecture; 1 hr. 3:04 min.)
|
Reference
Williams,
Tennessee. The Glass Menagerie. Introduction by Robert Bray, New
Directions, 1945.
Williams,
Tennessee. Tennessee Williams' Letters to Donald Windham 1940–1965.
Edited by Donald Windham, Hold, Rinehart and Winston, 1977.
Williams,
Tennessee. Memoirs. Doubleday, 1975.
Further
Reading
Spoto, Donald. The Kindness of Strangers: The Life of Tennessee
Williams. Little, Brown, 1985.
Williams, Tennessee. "Portrait of a Girl in Glass." One Arm and Other
Stories, New Directions, 1967, pp. 97–112.
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Last updated November 28, 2020