Sincerely,
Ms. Kavanagh
December 3, 2009
A Fragile Flower Rooted to the Earth
The lady who lives for illusion has never felt more real. Playing that immortal bruised Southern lily Blanche DuBois, in Liv Ullmann’s heart-stopping production of “A Streetcar Named Desire” at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Cate Blanchett soars spectacularly on the gossamer wings of fantasies that allow her character to live with herself. But you never doubt for a second that this brave, silly, contradictory and endlessly compelling woman is thoroughly and inescapably of this world.
Though it is the place she would least like to be most of the time, Blanche DuBois has been pulled gently and firmly down to earth by Ms. Blanchett and Ms. Ullmann, who guarantee that she stays there. Most interpretations I’ve seen of Blanche, Tennessee Williams’s greatest contribution to dramatic portraiture, ride the glistening surface of the character’s poetry, turning Blanche into a lyric, fading butterfly waiting for the net to descend.
What Ms. Blanchett brings to the character is life itself, a primal survival instinct that keeps her on her feet long after she has been buffeted by blows that would level a heavyweight boxer. This traveling production out of Sydney, Australia, which runs at the Harvey Theater through Dec. 20, features a very creditable adversary for its heroine in Joel Edgerton as Stanley Kowalski, Blanche’s brutish brother-in-law. But the real struggle here is between Blanche and Blanche, which means that nobody wins.
Except, I might add, audiences, who are likely to find themselves identifying with disturbing closeness with a character who has often before seemed too exotic, too anachronistic, too fey to remind you of anyone you knew personally. Ms. Blanchett’s Blanche is always on the verge of falling apart, yet she keeps summoning the strength to wrestle with a world that insists on pushing her away. Blanche’s burden, in existential terms, becomes ours. And a most particular idiosyncratic creature acquires the universality that is the stuff of tragedy.
Blanche DuBois may well be the great part for an actress in the American theater, and I have seen her portrayed by an assortment of formidable stars including Jessica Lange, Glenn Close, Patricia Clarkson and Natasha Richardson. Yet there’s a see-sawing between strength and fragility in Blanche, and too often those who play her fall irrevocably onto one side or another.
Watching such portrayals, I always hear the voice of Vivien Leigh, the magnificent star of Elia Kazan’s 1951 movie, whispering Blanche’s lines along with the actress onstage. But with this “Streetcar,” the ghosts of Leigh — and, for that matter, of Marlon Brando, the original Stanley — remain in the wings. All the baggage that any “Streetcar” usually travels with has been jettisoned. Ms. Ullmann and Ms. Blanchett have performed the play as if it had never been staged before, with the result that, as a friend of mine put it, “you feel like you’re hearing words you thought you knew pronounced correctly for the first time.”
This newly lucid production of a quintessentially American play comes to us via a Norwegian director, best known as an actress in the brooding Swedish films of Ingmar Bergman, and an Australian movie star, famous for impersonating historical figures like Elizabeth I and Katharine Hepburn. Blessed perhaps with an outsider’s distance on an American cultural monument, Ms. Ullmann and Ms. Blanchett have, first of all, restored Blanche to the center of “Streetcar.”
Ever since Brando set Broadway abuzz in the original stage production in 1947, Stanley — the young, ruthless sexual animal who is married to Blanche’s sister, Stella — has usually been presented as Blanche’s equal, in terms of both thematic import and star presence. But Ms. Ullmann’s production makes it clear that in “Streetcar” it is Blanche who evolves, struggles and falls as heroes classically have.
We are achingly aware of just how difficult that struggle will be when we first see Blanche, blank-faced in creased linen, outside the New Orleans apartment building where she knows (and rues) that Stella (Robin McLeavy, in a lovely natural performance) lives. At that moment this pale, spiritless woman might belong to the walking dead. When she rises, she trembles perceptibly, and she speaks often of how raw her nerves are.
During the next three hours Blanche will summon every weapon left in her artillery to keep those nerves under control, to hold herself together, to function in a world where it is all too easy to be lost beyond salvation. At times you feel this Blanche, who was a schoolteacher after all, has the upper hand of a prim martinet. Placing those decorative feminine touches amid the squalor of the two-room apartment shared by Stanley and Stella, she is not merely frivolous; she is remaking the world in her image.
The genteel belle, the imperious English teacher, the hungry sensualist, the manipulative flirt: no matter which of these aspects is in ascendancy, Ms. Blanchett keeps them all before us, in a range of voices that seem to come from different compartments of the soul. The layers that she packs into single words are astonishing: “He-e-y,” for example, stretched into several syllables of longing as she speaks to a confounded young man, or “Eureka” as a cry not of discovery but defeat.
This Blanche is no passive victim. She knows herself painfully well, which makes her both funnier and sadder than most Blanches. Always, though, we are aware of her knowing that standing up and staying sane are merely provisional; she could topple over at any second. That delicate balance assumes its most wrenching form in her climactic face-off with Stanley, as Blanche tries to defy not only her predatory brother-in-law but also the drunkenness that keeps pulling her to the floor. Gravity is not on her side.
The supporting cast members are excellent. Mr. Edgerton brings out the childlike side of Stanley, both its simple joyousness and thoughtlessness, and it has rarely been clearer that Stella’s husband has the winning strength of youth. Ms. Ullmann, as befits a veteran of Bergman films, arranges her men and women in fleeting tableaus that speak resonantly of sexual relationships. Two early moments between Stanley and Blanche — one in which he tries to button a dress, another in which they silently battle for control for the radio — say everything about “the date,” as Stanley puts it, that awaits them. But there are also tender pietas with Stella and Blanche, Stella and Stanley and Blanche and Mitch (Tim Richards), Stanley’s pal, who courts Blanche with the giddiness of a boy who has been allowed access to a carnival of wonders.
It has become the fashion with “Streetcar” productions to bring the whirl of New Orleans street life to the stage. This interpretation — meticulously designed by Ralph Myers (set), Tess Schofield (costumes) and Nick Schlieper (lighting) — confines us to the Kowalskis’ apartment, with glimpses through windows of other lives. Thus framed, these lives have the loneliness of figures in Edward Hopper paintings, whose cool, compassionate bleakness is deliberately evoked here.
No one, of course, is lonelier than Blanche, and her valiant battle against that condition lends this “Streetcar” a poignancy that, by the end, slides into full pathos. Our last vision of this Blanche is, like our first, of a ghost, if by ghost we mean someone defeated by life. But an image of warmth remains, like the afterglow of an extinguished flame, of the life poured into one woman’s last stand against a fate that is uniquely her own and somehow ours as well.
My first impression of the play it contains many issues that, even though the play is set in a time much earlier then 2009, are still present in today’s world. One issue is physical abuse from a husband to his wife in reaction to the consumption of alcohol. Which is shown in Stanley and Stella’s situation, where he abuses and strikes her and she continues to come back believing it to be ok. Even the issue of older women not being able to accept the fact that with years comes lose of youngness, and in turn making them live their older years in lies so they can feel younger. Just as was shown by Blanche in the play, where she couldn’t truly accept that she was not young anymore and tried to make it seem like she was to others. Through the whole book there are also many other issues that can be found in today’s society.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the claims made by the review especially the ones about Blanche because she is defiantly, “ brave, silly, contradictory and endlessly compelling.” that needs to grasp the reality in this world that is going to get older. Ben Brantley was able to nail the character Blanche on the head, well at least he had very similar ideas that I her on her. Such as, how she could be exotic and have life but still have so much past memories full of hurt and death and sin. She would have to be one the most complex characters, along with Stanley, in the play.
Leilani Jefferson
Period 2
When I was reading the book I tried to keep the idea of a relationship between passion, and the human experience in my head. This helped me to grasp what the author was trying to portray to the audience, and in my opinion the main message the author described is that passion and desire can lead to a negative human experience. Everything bad in the book, in one way or another, can be attributed to the passion or desire the characters had for something. From Blanche’s desire to be accepted and look affluent, to Stanley’s desire to remain in control over situations, the moral of the story is that one’s ill placed desire can lead to a negative situations.
ReplyDeleteI disagree with the review, because I feel like that review cast Blanche in a positive light she doesn’t deserve. To me Blanche is a woman who fell prey to her own out of control passions, and is far from a heroine, or a brave woman. In my opinion Blanche is a woman who fell prey to her own out of control passions, and is responsible for all her actions.
-Jamil
When I began to read the play I began to believe that all of the primary characters were victims of passion. Their passionate attitudes led them to the brink of destruction and subtracted and added to their human experience. One great example of this is through Stella who, despite the physical and verbal abuse of her husband Stanley still remains with him. This takes away from her human experience because Stanley has to constantly make up for what he has done and adds to the experience because it makes their marriage stronger. In addition to this I felt that the narrator creates this persona for Blanche is someone from high class who makes mistakes but at same time seems so realistic because of minor lies that the reader does not that she is totally fake.
ReplyDeleteThe review on the hand casts Blanche in a too positive light because is not that great of a person. Blanche even knows this, that is why she chooses to lie about all that is true in her in order to avoid the debauchery of the past that her so. That is the reason for her leaving her native Laurel and using her visit with Stella and Stanley as a scapegoat for the mistakes that she can no longer to erase.
The title in itself is a symbol of the themes represented in the book. A streetcar is very common and since its name is desire this makes desire a common trait for not just the characters in the book but to society; because desire and passion go hand in hand. I am sure that there is something that everyone is this world very passionate about; and is you're not passionate about something what is there for you to give to life?
DaVeon
My first impression of the play is that it adressed issues that were present in that time period, issues that are still present in todays socitety but not talked about like they are not talked abolut today. The issues are abuse,denial,mental illness, and fear. The characters are relatable cause they go through real trails and tribulations that can happen to anyone in society today. The issues such as fear and acceptance of abuse and fear of growing older and trying to maintain your youth are issues people in todays world go through and some are the same solutions they use to comfort themselves in their problems.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the review and how each charater was described and portrayed. Especially Blanche how she is described as a lonely,brave, and contradictory character in search of love and enternal youth in her own mind and her own "world" . At times you begin to think that Blanche lives in a fantasy world of her mind but in reality at times we all live in a fantasy world of how we see life and how we predict life should be .
Devin NeShay Davis
AP English Literature and Composition
Period 2 .
My first impression of the book was that it was incredibly pointless. Now I feel as though you can relate the book to modern times. Domestic violence, alcholism, love and love loss, or simply just being there for a friend or sibling. I also felt as though one of the themes of the book is lying to oneself as well as others. Blanche lies to herself and everyone else in the book the entire time. Overall, her lying and self-deception lead to bad situations and her moral decline.
ReplyDeleteI do not entirely agree with the review, because it makes Blanche look better than she should. Everything that Blanche does is because of herself. Her uncontrolable passion and addiction to lying and liqour are what caused her to do everything. It was all her choice though, so she is responsible for everything she does.
-- Devyn Anderson-Stover
My first reaction to “A Street Car Name Desire” was that, I know this play; The Simpson’s did a parody on it, so I knew what this play was going to be talking about and I had already found it to be interesting. This play captures a realist description of the type of hardships and situations shown in modern society. The issues of abuse, denial, and mental illness dealt in this time period in new Orland’s is similar to issues that people go through today. One of the issues displayed in this play is lying, which is display mostly by Blanche. She insists on lie to make it seem like she is doing better then what she actually is.
ReplyDeleteI feel like the stage play portrays a great description of how the characters act. I agree with DeVeon when he says that the title is a symbol of the theme that shows a streetcar, which is common and a desire, which is what most people have. Most people have desire for passion and love. After have read this play I found it to be recommend it to any that hasn’t read it or seen the play
J.T.
At first I wasn't too interested in reading the play but then I forced myself to read the book and was surprised at how quickly I fell in love with it. The book had domestic violence, rape, alcoholism and insanity all wrapped around lies; including self-deception. At first I didn’t understand Blanche’s actions until it became clear that she was still dealing with the death of her husband. It became clear that Blanche was trying to hide her feelings and because of this it has led to her to become an alcoholic and suffer from insanity. All of this is something that a person in modern day can go through.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the review that describes each character as it is accurate in its characterization. Blanche is lonely due to the fact that she never got over the death of her husband but how she still tries to put on the façade that she is happy. However due to her loneliness she has tried to recreate her past in an attempt to make herself appear young since she was only happy when she was younger. Blanche does indeed live in a fantasy world where she hears voices and believes that people love her. This fantasy life causes her to have relationships with younger men in order to be closer to her late husband. The way Blanche handles the death of her husband is unacceptable but relatable in a way that all of us need an escape from reality every now and then.
After reading the first three scenes I figured that the author would be shinning light on people’s love for themselves and for others. He introduces to the readers sisters who have their own ideal definition of love. Stella, the younger sister, seemed to believe that desire played a large part in her loving her sometimes ill-mannered husband, but Blanche, the eldest sister, believed that wealth had class was a necessity in order for her or her sister to be truly in love with someone. Stella didn’t want money from her husband she simply wanted his love and as long as she knew he loved her she could love and live with him in any condition.
ReplyDeleteI don’t agree with the review. The author of the article made Blanche look like the victim in the story, but in reality she was definitely not that great of a person. Most of the events that occurred in the play involving her were a result to her actions. She was self conscious because of her ideal definition of beauty, not because anyone was telling her that she was ugly. She was uncomfortable living with Stella because she didn’t like the conditions that she had to live in. She wanted to stay in a nice luxurious house, not in a rundown apartment that didn’t even have a door separating the only two rooms. Blanche was making her own life difficult.
My first Impression of the book is that it related to society today. The domestic violence, drinking, rape, and insanity. At first it was confusing of how Blanche actted towards her sister, but shes just suffering from the deaths she has seen and the lost of the family land. Self-decption is portrayed in the play.
ReplyDeletedenesha age
per 2
Blanche is a victim with in herself. She is not over her late husbands death, causes her to be in denial about her self. Painfully in-love with the life she had before she is forced to bring all her prized possentions with her to her sisters house. She made everything difficult from the otherpoint of view, but in her mine, it was crstyal clear
My first impression of the book was that it would be similar to "The Great Gatsby". After I read it, even though I understood the book, I thought that I was a confusing story. I felt like the story's ending was abrupt and that Blanche wasn't really showing signs of insanity until the last 5 pages of the book.
ReplyDeleteWilliam Rhodes
per. 2
My first impression with Streetcar was that it would be boring. I thought I was going to have trouble reading it because of how much I disliked the book. Except once I started reading the book, I realized how wrong I was. No I do not because I did not kow that Blanche was insane until the last couple [ages at the end of tje book.
ReplyDeleteMy first impression of the book was " ugh another love story". But it wasn't like that at all. I was surprised at how much it reminded me of Fences. The story was filled with violence, lies, rape, and things that you wouldnt expect in that time period. I was very surprised at the actions of Stanley, and even Blanche. Blanche was just an all around fake person in my eyes. She rarely told the truth and when she did no one believed her. I felt bad for her towards the end of the play because she ended up going insane. The play captures a lifestyle that were not used to this day in age. Its not everyday that your sister becomes insane because she caused her gay husband to kill himself.
ReplyDeleteI agree with the review because Blanche's life was ruiend due to the death of a loved one. Its not her fault that she has trouble finding love. She looked for love in all the wrong places and it eventually caused her to go insane. The character who played Blanche portrayed her perfectly, because that exactly how I would have pictured her.
The play itself sparks me as a breath of fresh air because it illustrates the struggle between a woman and not only herself but her past. It shows how she has to live when life and those around her wish to see her fail. The review is beautifully accurate because uses figurative language to bring across the meaning and purpose of the play.
ReplyDeleteKumari Iboko
Period 2
AP Lit
My first impression of a street car named desire was that it would be interesting, from the first five pages in the book I could tell that there was something wrong with Blanche, thus making believe that the book would be the best we've read thus far . I was absolutely right, the book had so many twist and turns, I was inthralled through out its entirety. I agree with the review because there were signs that Blanche was insane from the beginning of the book
ReplyDeleteTellis Joseph Frank III
Advanced Placement Literature
Period 2