Title: American Drama:
1American Drama The Glass Menagerie by
Tennessee Williams
- English III
- US Literature
2Drama
- A drama, or play, is a narrative meant to be
performed. - A play is a written script brought to life by
actors, producers and directors. - A script for a drama contains traditional
narrative elements like plot, setting,
characters, dialogue and theme. - The script also contains stage directions, which
inform the actors how to move, how to react, and
when and where to enter and exit. Stage
directions may even include how to interpret a
characters motives. Directors and other
behind-the-scenes producers of drama refer to
them for information on sound effects, lighting,
props and costumes, etc.
3Reading Drama
- When you watch a drama, or play, you hear the
dialogue and see the staging. - However, when you read a drama, you must envision
the action and staging. Therefore, you must read
the stage directions.
4Basic Drama Vocabulary
- Drama a serious play
- Comedy humorous play
- Protagonist the principal character around whom
the action of the play revolves - Antagonist the person or force working against
the protagonist in the play - Monologue a story, speech or scene performed by
one actor - Cast group of actors in a play
- Downstage acting area closest to the audience
- Upstage acting area furthest from the audience
- Objective a characters goal or intention
(motive)
5Memory Play
- Tennessee Williams The Glass Menagerie is a
memory play. - The memory play is a non-linear structural
pattern in modern American drama. Post-World War
II, many playwrights began to tap into the power
of memory as a narrative device. The action is
conveyed by an involved narrator recalling the
incident(s).
6Tennessee Williams
- Born Thomas Lainer Williams in Columbus,
Mississippi in 1911 - Lived with his grandparents, sister (Rose) and
mother while his father travelled for a telephone
company - Father took a job and moved the family to St.
Louis, away from the grandparents
7Tennessee Williams Biography
- The change was very traumatic, especially for
Rose, who began to slip into a make-believe
world. - In 1937, Williams parents were convinced to
allow doctors to perform an operation on Roses
brain to correct her erratic behavior. After the
surgery, she was forever a childlike woman.
8Tennessee Williams Biography
- Williams began writing in high school.
- He won his first prize at sixteen years old for
an essay entitled Can a Good Wife Be a Good
Sport? - He went to the University of Missouri as a
journalism major, though his passion was writing
poetry. - Because his grades were poor, his father pulled
him out of school and sent him to work at a shoe
company.
9Tennessee Williams The Writer
- Williams was miserable at the shoe company, quit
and went to stay with his grandparents, now
living in Tennessee. - It was during this four months of recuperation,
that Tom changed his name to Tennessee and
decided to become a writer.
10Tennessee Williams
- He began to travel with a friend around the
country and ended up in California and then New
Orleans. - He entered a playwriting contest, won and moved
to New York. Shortly thereafter, he began writing
screenplays for MGM Studios, though he despised
it. - He submitted a screenplay called The Gentleman
Caller. It was rejected by MGM, yet became one
of the most beloved American plays, The Glass
Menagerie.
11Tennessee Williams Super Star
- Williams disliked the fame and attention. He
fled to Mexico and continued to write. - In Mexico, he wrote his next most famous American
Drama, A Streetcar Named Desire which won him
the Pulitzer Prize and a New York Drama Critics
Circle Award.
12I hope I have been able to contribute an
understanding about people Tennessee Williams
- Williams continued to turn out plays for the next
thirty years. - In later years, he had various health problems,
including difficulties with alcohol and
addiction. - On the night of February 24, 1983, he choked on a
plastic bottle cap and died, alone, at the Hotel
Elysee in New York City.
13The Glass Menagerie Summary
- The Wingfield's live in a small tenement
apartment. Amanda, the mother, heads the
household, after her husband abandoned the
family. Now, Tom, the son, financially supports
the family by working in a shoe factory. He longs
to leave his unsatisfying job and join the
Merchant Marines. Laura, a shy daughter and
sister, retreats from friends and school into her
own fantasy world. Determined to find a husband
for her daughter and guarantee the familys
future, Amanda urges Tom to find a nice young man
to introduce to his sister.
14The Glass Menagerie Setting
- Set between World War I and World War II in St.
Louis, Missouri. - After World War I came the Roaring Twenties, a
decade of unrestrained behavior on the part of
both people and government, which brought about
the stock market crash of 1929 and sent the
nation into The Great Depression. - Formerly well-to-do families found themselves
poor, and the poor seemed to get even poorer. - The story of the Wingfield family is a close-up
look at how people dealt in various ways with
their impoverished circumstances.
15The Glass Menagerie Structure
- Two Acts
- Seven Scenes
- Non-linear does not follow a logical straight
line of development moves in and out of
sequenced time
16The Glass Menagerie Characters
- AMANDA WINGFIELD
- Mother of Tom and Laura
- Her husband deserted her years ago leaving her to
raise her children alone. - She escapes the realities of the real world by
living partially in the world of her youth and
gentleman callers.
17The Glass Menagerie Characters
- TOM WINGFIELD
- narrator
- Amandas son and Lauras brother
- Supports the family by working in a shoe
warehouse - He feels suffocated by his home and work and that
his creative abilities are being destroyed by his
circumstances.
18The Glass Menagerie Characters
- Amandas daughter and Toms sister
- Slightly physically disabled one leg is
slightly shorter than the other - Laura has retreated from reality and surrounds
herself with old phonograph records and her glass
menagerie (little glass animals)
19The Glass Menagerie Characters
- JIM OCONNOR
- The gentleman caller
- Nice, ordinary, young man
- Works with Tom at the shoe warehouse
- Hes the only person in the play who is able to
exist successfully in the real (normal) world
20The Glass Menagerie Symbols
Unicorn
Movies
Fire Escape
Blue Roses
Candlelight
21The Glass Menagerie Symbols
Fathers Photograph
Glass Menagerie
22The Glass Menagerie Themes
- Reality vs. Memory
- Tradition vs. Progression
- Conformity vs. Individualism
- Family Loyalty
- One must follow ones dreams no matter what
23Now lets read
- Reading Schedule
- Day 1 Act I, sc. 1 2
- Day 2 Act I, sc. 3 4
- Day 3 Act II, sc. 5 6
- Day 4 Act II, sc. 7