Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Saint Tennessee: An Introduction
- 1 T- shirt Modernism and Performed Masculinities: The Theatrical Refashionings of Tennessee Williams and William Inge
- 2 “Intense Honesty”: Race, Sex and Cross-Cultural Perspectives
- 3 Becoming Samuel Beckett: Tennessee Williams and Theatrical Change on the Post– World War II World Stage
- 4 Reframing Tennessee: A Short Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - “Intense Honesty”: Race, Sex and Cross-Cultural Perspectives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2022
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Saint Tennessee: An Introduction
- 1 T- shirt Modernism and Performed Masculinities: The Theatrical Refashionings of Tennessee Williams and William Inge
- 2 “Intense Honesty”: Race, Sex and Cross-Cultural Perspectives
- 3 Becoming Samuel Beckett: Tennessee Williams and Theatrical Change on the Post– World War II World Stage
- 4 Reframing Tennessee: A Short Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
For the first time in its history, English theatre has been swayed and shaped by America.
— Kenneth Tynan, 1948Reviewing a series of productions for the New York Times on December 15, 1988, under the title, “In London: Taking Williams Seriously,” Frank Rich makes an insightful comment about America's most influential playwright five years after his freakish, accidental death in 1983:
In death Tennessee Williams is more often regarded by the American theater as a tragic icon than as a playwright worthy of further artistic investigation. The reverse is true in London, where the Williams canon, neglected by the major companies during the writer's lifetime, is suddenly being rediscovered. (Rich, Section C, p. 15)
Rich's observation could be extended to the better part of Europe, of course, where the most serious rediscoveries of Williams's work seem centered. Much of the neglect of Williams in the United States has indeed been fueled by preoccupations with the playwright's biography, his tempestuous life and sensational, even clownish public and media appearances, all of which often overshadowed his art. His Memoirs in particular, published in 1975 and admittedly written for the cash advance, was exceptionally candid about his sexuality and love life and so did little to redeem his falling reputation. On the other side of the Atlantic, Williams's early plays were quickly performed by allies and in newly liberated European countries, including the European premiere of The Glass Menagerie in Stockholm in 1946 (although Sweden was nominally neutral during World War II) then in London in 1948; A Streetcar Named Desire opened in most major European capitals, including Rome, London and Paris, by 1949.1 These were subsequently followed by “the critically controversial yet financially successful Paris production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof a decade later” (Gindt, 2013, 19). In a Britain still struggling to emerge from its Victorian legacy, Williams's more sexually charged work often appeared in heavily censored productions, and early publications tended to follow those sanitized versions of his work.
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- Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2021