Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie


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The Glass menagerie

Tennessee Williams The Glass Menagerie


Birth
Born Thomas Lanier Williams
  • Columbus, Ohio
  • 1911
  • Lived with grandparents, mother, and sister for
  • many of his early years since father worked and
  • traveled for a telephone company
  • Grandfather = Episcopalian town rector

Tennessee Williams, The Glass Menagerie

  • Plays deal with universal human longing for an ideal order of being, denied by the harsh realities of life and time
  • His interest lay more in character, mood and condition than plot
  • Essential condition of a Williams character: sensitive creature who has no home in an alien world
  • “memory plays”

The Glass Menagerie

The Glass Menagerie

  • “Memory Play” structure:
  • Seven memory scenes framed by present day monologues of Tom Wingfield, divided into two parts:

    • (1) Preparation for Gentleman Caller
    • (2) The Gentleman Caller
  • Williams’s interests lay more in character, mood and condition rather than plot

Tennessee Williams’s philosophy

  • The point of reference for the characters’ lives is always the past, rarely the present and hardly ever the future.
  • Life, according to Williams, is a series of losses, beginning with high expectations and momentary fulfilment, but ultimately ending either in confrontation with its limitations, denial, or everlasting regret
  • But the dreams are always filled with images of separation, loss, loneliness, humiliation and pain.

Main characters

  • Amanda Wingfield—
    • Mother of Tom and Laura
    • Often digressed back to memories of her former days on the Southern plantation farm and her night with 17 gentlemen callers
    • Her pervasive memories of her Southern girlhood transport the play’s events to evoke an ideal world of romance

Main characters

  • Laura Wingfield—
    • Amanda’s daughter
    • Crippled and shy
    • Under mother’s constant pressure to find a husband

Main characters

  • Tom Wingfield—
    • Amanda’s son
    • Under mother’s constant pressure to find Laura a gentleman caller and to keep the job at the shoe factory to support the family

Main characters

  • Jim O’Conner
    • Friend of Tom’s from the factory who Tom invites to dinner and Amanda treats as Laura’s first gentleman caller

Minor character

  • Mr. Wingfield
    • Amanda’s husband who deserted the family about 16 years ago
    • Only seen in the play as a large photograph hung on the wall, but he is often referred to
    • The pattern of initial excited anticipation and ultimate loss is summarized particularly well in the father’s scornful postcard: “Hello—Goodbye.”

Symbols

  • Victrola—
    • Laura’s escape and private world
  • Jonquils—
    • A reminder of Amanda’s glorious past

Symbols

  • Magic show—
  • Candelabrum--
    • Tom’s relationship (or lack thereof) with his family

Symbols

  • Scarf—
    • Tom’s attempt to share his magic and desire for escape with Laura

Symbols

  • Fire escape—
    • The escape from Amanda’s world
    • Tom seeks to leave it, but Amanda stumbles whenever she does

Symbols

  • Glass Menagerie—
  • Gentleman caller—
    • The real world as opposed to Amanda’s imagined one

Symbols

  • Unicorn—
    • Laura’s singularity, her return to reality, and her return to her retreat back into her world

Thank you
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