ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Courses Videos 906 videos
What do you get when the guy who wrote “The Raven” makes a serious effort to write in verse? Poe-try… Now, when you’ve detached your eyes f...
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, abridged. Ready? Go.
Emily Dickinson: Along with Van Gogh, proof that you’re never really famous until you’re dead.
American Literature: Tennessee, the Titan 548 Views
Share It!
Description:
Meet Tennessee Williams. Yes, that's the man's name. You know the guy - he was besties with Oklahoma Smith and Wyoming Johnson. Anyway, he wrote this pretty famous play called A Streetcar Named Desire. So yeah, you might want to get used to hearing some bizarro names.
Transcript
- 00:02
Tennessee, the Titan.....[mumbling]
- 00:17
let's go... it's Mardi Gras New Orleans biggest and wildest celebration and [Woman in fancy dress at Mardi Gras]
- 00:23
that's saying a lot even though the city is best loved for this crazy party its
- 00:28
history and culture draw people to it as well this was the case for early 20th
- 00:33
century playwright Tennessee Williams he loved the culture on everything that
Full Transcript
- 00:37
went along with it Williams was a super successful playwright but Lapp wasn't
- 00:41
always easy for him let's meet this guy shall we Tennessee was born Thomas [Thomas as a baby crying]
- 00:46
Lanier Williams in Mississippi in 1911 the state name came later on his
- 00:52
parents had a tough marriage and childhood with pretty rotten for young [Young thomas hit in face by parents boxing]
- 00:55
Tommy dad traveled a lot for work and when he was home he was critical of and
- 00:59
cruel to his children and his wife to escape from family troubles Tennessee
- 01:03
turned to writing, his mom gave him a typewriter and he was happiest tapping
- 01:07
away while other kids played outside of course this only cost his father to make
- 01:11
fun of him and call him miss nancy which was a big insult back then for some [Thomas's father insulting him while typing]
- 01:16
reason but Tennessee didn't stop writing and his bad family life actually gave
- 01:20
him plenty of writing fodder that showed up in much of his later work after
- 01:24
briefly attended the University of Missouri dad pulled Tennessee from
- 01:27
school and got him a job as a shoe salesman he hated the job but made jokes [Thomas dragged by Dad out of school]
- 01:31
about it when he got older he said he went from shoe biz to showbiz....
- 01:36
in order to keep his cool during this time Tennessee wrote and
- 01:40
wrote and wrote his first play Cairo Shanghai Bombay was produced in Memphis
- 01:46
then he returned to school at the University of Iowa graduated and began
- 01:50
winning awards for his writing, this low level celebrity also got him noticed by
- 01:54
an agent which helped propel him further into commercial success [Agent appears beside Tennessee]
- 01:58
Tennessee moved to New Orleans and loved it one of his most famous plays the one
- 02:02
that will be examined in a few is set in the French Quarter the oldest
- 02:06
neighborhood in the city... though inspired by the city Tennessee
- 02:10
didn't make New Orleans his forever home he travels around the country to put on
- 02:13
plays in New York City and write screen plays in Hollywood in 1944 one of his
- 02:17
best-known plays The Glass Menagerie was a huge success when it opened in Chicago
- 02:22
the story is quite closely based on Williams own family three years after [Williams family appears on stage]
- 02:26
that a streetcar named desire opened on Broadway and introduced the world to a
- 02:31
then-unknown actor named Marlon Brando this guy, the play was made into a film
- 02:36
which one 4 of the 12 Academy Awards it was nominated for yes this pretty
- 02:41
much secured Williams place as a writing God among men he kept right on writing
- 02:47
plays and winning awards throughout his career Tennessee received both mad [Tennessee on stage receiving award]
- 02:50
praise and intense criticism the criticism came from the frank way sex
- 02:55
drug and alcohol use and mental illness were major topics of his plays
- 02:59
additionally Williams had a relationship with a man for more than a decade and
- 03:03
wrote about the topic of homosexuality with canda, in the mid nineteen hundreds
- 03:07
people were like what about this subject even when portrayed and awed back then
- 03:13
being gay in Hollywood was like being a Republican in Hollywood today anyway
- 03:17
Williams work was praised because people were stoked about seeing hot topics like
- 03:21
sex and addiction so genuinely examined and portrayed Tennessee also struggled
- 03:26
with addiction he self medicated with pills and booze to help keep his anxiety [Man with head on a table]
- 03:31
at bay in 1963 his partner died from lung cancer which sent Tennessee into a
- 03:35
great depression and made his current addictions even worse he suffered from a
- 03:39
mental breakdown and his brother had him committed to a hospital for treatment [Tennessee in a stray jacket]
- 03:42
Tennessee continued writing during all this time but he had several major flops
- 03:47
which greatly bruised his ego in 1963 Tennessee choked on a medicine bottle
- 03:52
cap and died of suffocation in the hotel in New York City in his lifetime
- 03:56
Tennessee wrote more than 20 plays yes that's a ton of dialogue in his memoir
- 04:02
aptly titled memoirs Tennessee said I've had a wonderful and [Paragraph from Tennessee's memoir appear]
- 04:05
terrible life and I wouldn't cry for myself would you nicely put Mr. Williams
- 04:10
no tear here shifting gears Tennessee is included as a writer who wrote within a
- 04:15
particular genre known as southern gothic yes it does sound
- 04:19
more romantic than it really is the southern gothic school of writing
- 04:22
mostly includes authors and playwrights who were born in the south in the wake
- 04:25
of the Civil War like pretty much every war ever the Civil War completely
- 04:30
wrecked the land homes and lives of the people who lived through it many [Bodies on the floor]
- 04:34
families suffered personal losses and the South was left at economic and
- 04:37
social ruin after losing the war southern gothic writers pondered what it
- 04:42
truly meant to be southern and tackled big questions such as how had the South
- 04:45
become so distorted by the practice of slavery what would life after the war
- 04:49
mean for former slaves why was violence such a major part of southern culture
- 04:54
these are pretty heavy questions and they showed up so often that the
- 04:57
southern gothic genre was born elements of horror on the supernatural world were [Gothic characters appear together]
- 05:02
also commonplace in southern gothic writing... Tennessee Williams is included in
- 05:06
this group of writers since he was both from the south wrote about the south and
- 05:10
created tortured terrible characters who destroyed both themselves in the world
- 05:14
around them in their searches for happiness told you it was heavy all
- 05:18
right I've been stringing you along for long enough it's time to check out a
- 05:21
streetcar named desire in more depth you're going like this a streetcar named
- 05:27
desire......
- 05:31
So this is the story of Blanche DuBois and the Kowalski's Stanley and Stella
- 05:35
Blanche and Stella are sisters the Kowalski's are chillin doing the thing [Kowalski family relaxing at home]
- 05:40
in New Orleans when suddenly Blanche shows up claiming that the family
- 05:43
plantation went belly-up and the sisters are bankrupt
- 05:47
of course this means more to Blanche than Stella since she's single and
- 05:50
Stella's madly in love with the brutish Stanley who throws meat at her literally [Meat hits Stella in the face]
- 05:55
Stanley isn't a Blanche fan which she isn't used to and tries to prove she
- 05:59
lied about the estate and the reason she came to New Orleans in the first place
- 06:03
he discovers that Blanche a former English teacher was accused of having an [Blanche teaching English class]
- 06:07
affair with one of her students and basically prostituting herself before
- 06:11
being run out of town uh-oh Blanche Stella goes into labor and Stanley
- 06:16
rushes her to the hospital when he comes back Blanche is alone and dolled
- 06:20
up entertaining a delusion that some old fling is about to take her on a cruise [Blanche thinking of a cruise]
- 06:24
her craziness makes Stanley even more hot and bothered and he ends up sexually
- 06:30
assaulting her Stella and the baby come home and make
- 06:33
arrangements for Blanche to be taken off to a mental hospital since she's clearly
- 06:37
a wacko the doctor comes to take her away and has to pretend he's a Southern [Doctor escorting Blanche away]
- 06:41
gentleman there to escort Blanche somewhere fabulous so she'll leave with
- 06:45
him which she does the end yep this play is pure scandal and that's
- 06:50
exactly why people both loved and hated it so there's a lot to this play and
- 06:55
we're gonna check out the title the main characters and some of the place themes
- 06:59
since this is a play we'll examine excerpts of both dialogue and stage
- 07:03
directions to get the gist of everything that's going on and why this is a piece
- 07:07
of southern gothic writing... the title of this piece sounds kind of weird when you
- 07:11
just hear it by itself a streetcar named desire [A streetcar named Desire book appears]
- 07:14
Blanche got to the Kowalski's haven't taken a streetcar named desire which is
- 07:19
the literal meaning of the title there's a slightly deeper more figurative
- 07:23
meaning to this title as we can stop to see in this bit of dialogue between
- 07:27
Blanche and Stella what are you talking about this brutal [Dialogue between Blanche and Stella appears]
- 07:30
desire just desire the name of that rattletrap streetcar that bangs through
- 07:34
the quota of one old narrow street and down another haven't you ever ridden on
- 07:39
that streetcar it brought me here while Blanche is saying that she literally
- 07:43
took desire to get to the house we also understand that her desire and life is
- 07:47
what drove her to the place she is at that point in the play Blanche was [Blanche walking down street with a man]
- 07:51
having numerous sexual affairs with men in her home town and was essentially
- 07:55
asked to take a hike... therefore Williams title has both literal and figurative
- 07:59
meaning and shows off his skill with wordplay like I said Blanche and the
- 08:04
Kowalski's are three central players so let's check out all the main details
- 08:07
Blanche DuBois the oldest sister is complex and fascinating as an audience
- 08:13
we love her and hate her which always makes for a good time with a character [Audience cheers and boo's Blanche]
- 08:17
she is a liar but she's delusional she's beautiful but she's flawed she's weak
- 08:22
but she's great at putting up appearances all these contradictory
- 08:26
characteristics make Blanche a compelling protagonist all central
- 08:30
character in this story she's also at least partially aware of her faults
- 08:34
which makes her even more likeable I don't want realism I want magic
- 08:39
yes yes magic I try to give that to people I misrepresent things to them I
- 08:44
don't tell the truth I tell what ought to be true and if that is simple then
- 08:49
let me be damned for it don't turn the light on this passage reveals both
- 08:54
Blanche's acknowledgment of her dishonesty and her desire for what she can't really [Blanche in a stray jacket in a padded room]
- 08:58
have magic since she can't hates it it also shows how concerned she is with
- 09:04
her looks and how scared she is to be thought of as anything less than [Blanche looking at herself in a mirror]
- 09:08
superhot Blanche is trying to be someone she's
- 09:10
not and it can be annoying to both the characters in the play and to the
- 09:14
audience after all the woman's charm is 50%
- 09:17
illusion this bit of dialogue again demonstrates Blanche's odd sense of
- 09:21
self-awareness while going on about the importance of appearances one of the [Blanche falls into a pond]
- 09:25
main themes in this play it seems like every few lines we're hearing Blanche
- 09:29
tells someone to turn the light off so her face is hidden or how a little
- 09:33
weight she's gained blah blah blah as a woman who's grown accustomed to being
- 09:37
appreciated for her looks Blanche's beauty banter can be boring but it makes
- 09:41
her who she is Blanche is also constantly toeing the [Blanche walking alone]
- 09:44
line between sanity and her crazy place.. It's Stanley's assault that eventually
- 09:48
sends her over to the dark side for good though there's nothing remotely funny or
- 09:52
flippant about rape some argue that Blanche's overt sexuality and flirting
- 09:56
with and taunting Stanley led to the inevitable end of this play he tells
- 10:00
Blanche we've had this date with each other from the beginning and as an
- 10:04
audience we know he's right and thus we see the beautiful Blanche bomb hard.... you
- 10:09
know what I shall die of I shall die of eating an unwashed grape one day out on
- 10:14
the ocean I will die with my hand in the hand of some nice-looking ship's doctor
- 10:18
of a young one with a small blonde moustache and a big silver watch and I'll
- 10:23
be buried at sea sewn up in a clean white sack and dropped overboard at noon
- 10:28
in the blaze of summer and into an ocean as blue as my first lovers eyes someone
- 10:34
take her away sex is another prevalent theme in the [Man and woman kissing]
- 10:38
play I'll wait for the giggles to pass all of the characters talk about it
- 10:42
think about it and engage in it to some degree or another heck even the word
- 10:46
desire in the title the play tells us it's gonna be about sex it might even be [Woman reading book]
- 10:51
thought of the downfall of all the characters in a way...
- 10:53
Blanche's sexuality led her to the Kowalski's her flirtin with Stanley made
- 10:57
her situation with him even more horrible..Stella's attraction to Stanley
- 11:01
keeps her in an abusive relationship and controlled to an extent she's in labor
- 11:05
at the hospital when Stanley attacks Blanche which could be viewed as a time
- 11:09
that Stanley used sex to control both Stella and Blanche it kept Stella out of
- 11:13
the picture and opened the door for Stanley's brute force to spring for and [Stanley yells and face turns red]
- 11:17
Stanley's sexuality well let's let Williams description of Stanley do the
- 11:21
talking animal joy in his being is implicit in all his movements and
- 11:26
attitude since earliest manhood the center of his life has been pleasure
- 11:31
with women the giving and taken of it, not with weak indulgence dependently but
- 11:36
with the power and pride of a richly feathered male bird among hens he sizes
- 11:41
women up with a glance with sexual clarifications crude images flashing
- 11:46
into his mind and determining the way he smiles at them
- 11:49
yikes that sounds almost like a predator foreshadowing alluding to events to come
- 11:54
anyone Stanley Kowalski is not all that lovable but he's got an animalistic [Stanley's head transforms into a wolf head]
- 11:59
quality that draws women to him from the beginning of the play we see him in a
- 12:03
very basic masculine way Stanley carries his bowling jacket and a red stained
- 12:07
package from a butcher's....1 guess what that red stain is mm-hmm
- 12:12
Stanley is the very essence of a man's man he orders his wife around takes her to [Stanley working out at a gym]
- 12:16
bed and plays poker with the boys Stanley Steve Mitch and Pablo wear
- 12:20
colored shirts solid blues a purple a red and white check, a light green and they
- 12:25
are men at the peak of their physical manhood as coarse and direct and powerful
- 12:29
as the primary colors there are vivid slices of watermelon on the table
- 12:33
whiskey bottles and glasses in these stage directions Williams is showcasing
- 12:38
the men's manliness by talking about their bright and bold color schemes this
- 12:42
is a direct contrast to Blanche who's constantly being shown in white as the [Blanche wearing white fanning herself]
- 12:47
very face of femininity hanging with his boys is one way that Stanley exerts his
- 12:52
manliness and when Blanche starts flirting with his friends and
- 12:55
playing her music while the guys are playing poker he snaps drunk - drunk
- 13:00
animal thing you you lay your hands on me and... that's not good
- 13:05
still even when he's drunk and violent Stella the doting wife can't stay away [Stanley punches Stella]
- 13:10
from him which brings us to the character of Stella Kowalski
- 13:14
poor sweet Stella is somewhat more likable than her sister and husband but
- 13:17
is also kind of a pushover from the Kowalski's relationship the theme of
- 13:21
marriage is portrayed as well awkward... for instance Stella's so gaga over her
- 13:26
hubby and she doesn't see his faults and talks him up whenever she can I can
- 13:30
hardly stand it when he is away for a night, when he's away for a week I nearly
- 13:34
go wild and when he comes back I cry on his lap like a baby.... whoa that's love
- 13:40
after Stanley strikes Stella at the poker game she allows Blanche to take her
- 13:45
away but only until Stanley comes crawling back begging for forgiveness [Stanley yelling for forgiveness]
- 13:49
One wail from Stanley sent Stella right back into his arms it's
- 13:56
apparent that these two are madly passionate about each other but the
- 14:00
relationship doesn't exactly seem healthy of course if Blanche hadn't come
- 14:04
along and shaken things up maybe the Kowalski's would have been just fine the
- 14:08
world will never know that's the full story of Tennessee Williams and his
- 14:12
southern gothic masterpiece a streetcar named desire or at least all we've got
- 14:16
time for for today if you're into scandalous behavior breakdown of the [Man speaking with psychiatrist]
- 14:20
human psyche and a dash of supernatural here and there you're going to be a huge
- 14:24
fan of Williams plays and his life... it's no wonder that he's drawn to New
- 14:28
Orleans this city is chock-full of weird and
- 14:31
creepy history gorgeous people and lots of fun but if you'll excuse me I've got
- 14:36
some beads to get before tonight's big events [Woman in fancy dress walks away]
Related Videos
“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...
Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?
¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...
Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...