Title: The Glass Menagerie
1The Glass Menagerie
- Efforts, Failure and Grace
- Scenes VI-VII
2Outline
- Review of the Issues Covered
- Starting Questions
- Efforts Doomed
- Amandas Efforts and Responses to Failure
- Lauras Fears and Responses
- Tom and Jim
- Jims Efforts and Failures
- Toms Escape
- Conclusion
3Review
- Scenes 1-II Memory, Dream and Family Relations
- The Setting vs. Dreams (fire escape vs. porch),
- The narrator as a magician
- Amandas past vs. Lauras.
- The first fiasco
- Scenes III-V Escape, Pressure, and Efforts
- Toms escape from and conflicts with Amanda
- Lauras efforts in keeping peace.
- Amandas efforts
4Scenes VI and VII Questions
- Amanda's efforts
- Describe what she has done--to the house, to
herself and to Laura. Does she do all for Laura?
(1463-65) - How does she behave in front of Jim? (1469-70)
When the electricity is cut? (1471-72) When
knowing about Jim's engagement with Betty? () - Why is she afraid of Jim at one moment? (1470)
- Laura
- Why is she so afraid of Jim at first?
- What does the unicorn glass figurine signify?
How does Laura look at "him"? And the breaking
of its horn? Why does Laura give it to Jim at
the end?
5Scenes VI and VII Questions (2)
- Jim
- Why is he called a "high school hero"? Is he
still a hero? - Is he successful in helping Laura overcome her
"inferiority complex"? Or in overcoming his own?
What drives Jim to kiss Laura? - Is Jim right to say that democracy is built on
Money, Power and Knowledge? - Tom
- How is Jim a contrast to Tom? What does Tom
reveal to him? And him to Tom? Are they good
friends? - Is he irresponsible?
6Ending
- 1. Laura's and Amanda's responses How does
Amanda, like Laura, maintain her dignity when
realizing the truth about Jim? - 2. What do you think about Amanda's scolding of
Tom? Is Amanda the one to drive away Tom? - 3. Ending Does Tom escape successfully? What do
you think about Tom's concluding speech? What
does "blowing out" the candles mean?
7Efforts Doomed to Fail
- Laura cannot fit in this society
- Tom does not have any friend in the warehouse
- Amanda limited understanding
- Jim not really a hero
8Sound DevelopmentMerry Music to Doom
- Music Ou sont les neiges 'ALL THE WORLD IS
WAITING FOR THE SUNRISE !' - Music to accompany the Annunciation
- When Tom says that Laura is peculiar THE
DANCE-HALL MUSIC CHANGES TO A TANGO THAT HAS A
MINOR AND SOMEWHAT OMINOUS TONE. - When Laura knows Jim is the caller MUSIC
OMINOUS. (1463) - End of Scene 6 (Laura sick) A clap of thunder
(1470) - Lauras walking clumping like thunder for her
- When Amanda hears about Betty There is an
ominous cracking sound in the sky ? The sky
falls. (1482) - Ending nowadays the world is lit by lightning!
Blow out your candles, Laura.
9Amanda Her Efforts
- (1463-65)
- New pieces of furniture
- Gay deceiver for Laura (Laura as a a pretty
trap) - (1464) Relives her past She wears a girlish
frock of yellowed voile with a blue silk sash.
She carries a bunch of jonquils - the legend of
her youth is nearly revived.
10Amandas Responses
- In front of Jim gay and humorous, she repeats
the past. - When the power is cut (1471-72)Still
good-mannered, her problems revealed. - Her joke Moses in the dark
- Her words on electricity a mysterious thing
- Lives in the 19th century
- Gives Jim an old candelabrum used in a church
burned-down by lightening. - She is frightened (1470) over thunder and
Lauras repeated sickness. - Maintains her grace when hearing about Betty
(1483) giving good wishes, and bravely
grimacing
11Laura Her Fears
- Amandas excessive preparation
- Her secret love of Jim OConnor her past
failure (1465)? the moment the climax of her
secret life (1472) - Afraid of social contact, and lives with
collectible - figurines treating them as living things (more
later) - Victrola 1) when Amanda finds out about her
absences from the business schoolL crosses to
the victrola (1446) - 2) When asked to open to door for Jim, Darts to
the victrola and winds it franticallly and turns
it on (1466) - 3) After knowing about Betty and giving Jim her
unicorn, She rises unsteadily and crouches
beside the victrola to wind it up. (1481)
12Lauras Responses --Sharing
- Opens up to Jim (1473- )
- Talks about his and her past (1474)
- In between Jims two speeches (on everybodys
having problems and Ls inferiority complex), her
shyness is dissolved by Jims warmness who
smiles at LAURA with a warmth and charm which
lights her inwardly with altar candles. (1476) - Uses
- The annual to establish connections with Jim.
- the glass figurines to disguise her tumult
(1476), and then as her interest to share with
Jim. - Her wonder at Jims self-importance and
expectation of success(1478).
13Lauras Responses Grace
- Accepts the first accident gracefully (1479)
- Nervous but not carried away (1480)--
- abashed beyond speech nearly faint with the
novelty of her emotions - Ask questions blue roses pretty?
- After the kiss bright, dazed look she
looks at it the unicorn with a tender,
bewildered expression. (--as if looking at
herself) - After the revelation1. She bites her lip which
was trembling and then bravely smiles. (1481) - 2. Gives the unicorn (without a horn) to him as a
souvenir a symbol of good will, of her self
normalized, and, maybe, of self-distanciation.
14Tom and Jim
- Is Jims visit helpful? Is Jim considerate or
self-centered? - Is Tom selfish? Does he have to leave?
15Jim Not Successful, But More Sociable than Tom
- Past High school hero always under the
spotlight (1462) - Present -- more sociable than Tom
- -- a man of action, interested in public
speaking, radio engineering and sports. - -- Believes in social poise gains confidence
with public speaking skills. (1467) - -- practical, asks Tom to wake up.(1468)
- -- Charming, sociable, and worldly
- Thrown off the beam, and won over by Amandas
charms (69) - Accepts candlelight (72)
- classical music vs. hot swing music (67)
- Believes in making fortune, science and progress
("The Century of Progress exhibition held in
Chicago, 1933-43 p. 1473) - Believes in television (mass media), Money,
knowledge and power
16Jim His Efforts and Failures
- Believes he has social poise ? chewing gum (1473,
1477) and cigarette, mint, life saver (1480) as
self-protection - Their conversation, started by Lauras raising
the question about his singing in the past (73) - Speaks to Laura but actually about or to himself
- about everybodys problems and disappointment
(? his not being discouraged) 1475-76 - About her inferiority complex ? the others
ordinariness (see next page) - after breaking the unicorn He tries to
encourage Laura by praising her and kissing her?
only to reveal his engagement. (1481) - lacking in inner substance or understanding of
Lauras - Asks about the music (From the Paradise Dance
Hall) ? dance a wrong move
17Jims Self-Centeredness attention shifted to
himself in his speeches
- 2nd speech (1477) I understand it inferiority
complex because I had it, too. - Which of them has one-tenth of your good
points! Or mine ! Or anyone else's, as far as
that goes - Gosh ! - Everybody excels in some one thing. Some in many
! - Unconsciously glances at himself in the mirror.
- All you've got to do is discover in what! Take
me, for instance. - He adjusts his tie at the mirror.
- Pumping himself up think of yourself as
superior (77) Well, well, well, well Look how
big my shadow is when I stretch ! (1478) before
the dance
18Jim Kind but Impulsive, Honest but still
self-centered
- 3rd speech and the kiss (1480-1481) Why? To
make up for his error, or to shows his genuine
concern? - His voice become soft and hesitant with a
genuine feeling - I wish that you were my sister. I'd teach you to
have some confidence in yourself. - gets carried away Somebody needs to build your
confidence up and make you proud instead of shy
and turning away and - blushing - Somebody -ought
to - Ought to - kiss you, Laura! - Cigarette ? Stumble-john!
- gets carried away Well - right away from the
start it was - love ! - (LEGEND 'LOVE!)
- LAURA sways slightly forward and grips the arm of
the sofa. He fails to notice, now enrapt in his
own comfortable being.
19Toms Escape Planned, Bound to Happen but
Directionless at First
- Amandas accusation as the catalyst You don't
know things anywhere ! You live in a dream you
manufacture illusions! (1483) - something boiling inside Like Jim and his
father, he is one on the move. (1468-69) - Toms final escape (1484)
- Frustration and attraction Images of the rail
dance-hall music - Futile actions caught writing a poem on a
shoe-box being a sailor? - Directionless, unsettled in his father's
footsteps, attempting to find in motion what was
lost in space traveling as escape, cities
sweeping about him like dead leaves (no genuine
contact or achievement) - Haunted by the image of Laura
- Wishes for Laura to blow out the candle, so that
Tom can move onward without the guilty past. (and
maybe Laura can move on, too?)
20Conclusion
- Memory and Family
- as Constraints?
21Memory Haunting Tom?
- Haunted The whole play is a memory play with
legends showing the changes of Toms moods and
tones as he remembers the past - Even when he gentleman caller wasn't mentioned,
his presence hung in Mother's preoccupied look
and in my sister's frightened, apologetic manner
- hung like a sentence passed upon the Wingfields
- Writing as distanciation the ironies and
sympathy expressed the final blowing out of the
candles. - Broader understanding Setting the context
Depression and an industrial city - The use of symbols (Tom has become a poet)
22Screen Device Changes of Tone
- (1463-64)
- Emphasis of the atmosphere (tension) -- 'THE
ACCENT OF A COMING FOOT' Terror! The Opening
of a Door - Ironic Emphasis -- A PRETTY TRAP (1464) (LEGEND
'LOVE! at Jims speech 1481) - sympathy e.g. Laura in a pool of light
(1449)Laura turns away from THIS IS MY SISTER
CELEBRATE HER WITH STRINGS!' MUSIC. (1464)
Souvenir (1471, 1480) - Self-Irony sailing vessel with Jolly Roger
(1455) When power is cut, and Amanda asks about
the notices--LEGEND 'HA!' (1471)
23Symbols
- The fathers portrait
- Glass menagerie
- What else?
- Of the world
- fire escape and dark alleys
- Glossy magazine
- Movies, rainbow scarf, coffin trick
- the Paradise Dance Hall and the a large glass
sphere which filter the dusk with rainbow colors.
- Radio engineering and TV
- Thunder and lightening
24Characters all Constrained
- By a Self-Image which they could not attain
- Amanda as a girl (Southern belle)
- Laura unicorn or blue roses
- Jim Executive at Desk (1467)
- Tom a poet
- But
- Laura and Amanda show genuine concern for each
other (e.g. scene 4 Amanda So quiet but - still
water runs deep! scene 7 ending ) - Tom makes it, and he expresses infinite sympathy
to those struggling without success (presenting
the mother and sister as dignified 1484)
25Extensions
- A psychoanalytic reading (ref.
http//courses.nus.edu.sg/course/elltankw/theatre/
week3.htm ) - What Tennessee Williams tries to do.
- Williams sister suffers from schizophrenia and
later, paranoia. The parents allowed a
prefrontal lobotomy (??????) operated on her,
which left her incapacitated all her life. - A New Critical Study of its use of symbols,
tensions, and irony - Stylistic study of the use of simile, hyperbole,
etc. (ref. A Tentative Study of Linguistic
Deviation in The Glass Menagerie )