At this year`s Provincetown Tennessee Williams Theater Festival, the

Transcription

At this year`s Provincetown Tennessee Williams Theater Festival, the
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LIFE’S CANVAS
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veiled power
At this year’s Provincetown Tennessee
Williams Theater Festival, the art of feminine
illusion in the playwright’s famous—and little
known—plays takes center stage.
by Debbie Forman
the intriguing female characters in Tennessee Williams’ plays
take center stage in this year’s Provincetown Tennessee Williams Theater
Festival. Developing the theme “Tennessee Williams and Women: 50%
Illusion,” David Kaplan, curator of the festival, has selected several plays,
from very early ones to the Pulitzer Prize-winning Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,
to illustrate the playwright’s view of women and how they use illusion to
make their way in the world.
Kaplan is particularly interested in showcasing the early plays, which the
playwright wrote in his 20s under the moniker of Tom Williams, before
he adopted the name “Tennessee.” Billed as The Chorus Girl Plays, the
lineup includes Curtains for the Gentleman, Cairo! Shanghai! Bombay!, and
At Liberty. Framed in a burlesque revue of chorus-line dancers, the plays
will be presented by Danszloop Chicago with choreography by Paula
Frasz.
ABOVE: Elizabeth Taylor and Paul
Newman in the film version of
Kaplan notes that he is fascinated by these somewhat obscure works, surmising that the plays are “the building blocks of Williams’ later work.”
The curator says that with The Chorus Girl Plays, “We see how Williams
develops as a writer.”
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.
“A recurring role in these plays is the chorus girl,” Kaplan goes on to explain. “We see the character as a gun moll in Curtains and as a girl picking
up sailors in Cairo! Shanghai! Bombay!. In At Liberty, the chorus girl becomes ill and goes home to Mississippi.” Unlike Williams’ later plays that
often featured relationships with women from his own life, The Chorus
Girl Plays were based on “a received idea from films,” says Kaplan. The curator cites Hollywood actresses, Mae West and Joan Blondell, who played
the roles of women “and had to use their intelligence as a survival tactic.”
charcoal drawing by Bill Evaul.
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photo
couresty of hollywood fashion vault
OPPOSITE PAGE:
TOP: The Chorus Girl Plays,
BOTTOM: Mia Dillon will star as
Big Mama in the 2013 festival’s
production of Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof.
With such a woman, he notes, “her sexuality is applied in that way. She is not
someone who can be preyed upon. She is someone aware of [her sexuality] and
how to use it to her own advantage.”
Kaplan feels that women in Williams’ plays were not victims, as some reviewers
and commentators have contended. Williams’ women frequently used illusion,
whether it be as part of their sexuality, or their personal style to make their way
in a society dominated by men.
The overall theme for this year’s 8th annual festival is “Tennessee Williams
and Women: 50% Illusion.” The name of the event is taken from a line in one
of Williams’ best-known dramas, A Streetcar Named Desire. In this Pulitzer
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on. [He included] in his later plays more humor, especially self-aware
humor. Fragile grace got replaced with powerful grace, often combined
with powerful laughter.”
“In creating women’s roles,” Kaplan says, “Williams understood that women
leading real lives, as Blanche points out in Streetcar, have had to create illusions for themselves—and for others—in order to survive.”
In Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, produced on Broadway in 1955, the central female character of Maggie is a resourceful, determined, charismatic character
that relies on her sexuality and her intelligence to win back a wayward husband. In his book Memoirs, Williams indicates that Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
was his favorite play. “The play comes closest to being both a work of art and
a work of craft,” Williams wrote.
The upcoming production of Cat at the Provincetown festival was recently
presented at Wellfleet Harbor Actors Theater. The production stars wellknown actor Keir Dullea as Big Daddy, Mia Dillon as Big Mama, Steven
DeMarco as Brick, and Madeleine Lambert as Maggie.
“In all his plays,” Kaplan says, “Williams celebrates illusion, the making of
illusion, and the makers of illusion.” He adds: “Williams lived long enough
to see the roles of women change in society, and [his] strategies for creating
the illusion of a woman onstage changed as well, especially as time went
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ABOVE: Monteagle, Tennesse
Williams.
florida keys--public
libraries the heritage house
collection, donated by the campbell,
poirier and pound families
BELOW: The Mutilated’s Celeste
(played by Penny Arcade) and
Trinket (played by Mink Stole)
engage in a friendly rivalry as
they compete for the attention
of sailor Jack Dilday, pictured in
the background.
photo by antonis
achileos. twp festival 2013.
Slapstick Tragedy: The Mutilated, also being performed at this year’s
festival, is an example of Williams’ plays likely to evoke laughter. Produced on Broadway in 1966, The Mutilated was the first of a double
bill. Cosmin Chivu, who directs this production, considers it one of
the funniest of Williams’ later plays. Presented by Beth Bartley Productions the show stars Mink Stole, the cult favorite of John Waters’
films, and Penny Arcade, the avant-garde performance artist of Andy
Warhol’s Factory.
Another work included in the 2013 Provincetown festival is Kingdom
of Earth—first showcased on Broadway in 1968—which has had few
productions since its creation. The Abrahamse & Meyer production
from Cape Town, South Africa, which was part of last year’s festival,
returns to Provincetown this year. The play is set in a dilapidated farmhouse during a Mississippi storm; the torrent inside is as dramatic as
the weather outside as two half-brothers and a bride deal with conflicts
related to gender and race.
Abrahamse & Meyer will also present The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here
Anymore, a show about a wealthy woman long past her beautiful days,
writing her memoirs in a villa on the Italian coast. When she meets a
handsome young man, she begins to believe—although it is only an
illusion—that he loves her.
A Neo-Benshi performance by poet Roxi Power will accompany the
screening of sections of the 1951 film version of A Streetcar Named
Desire. A performance art implemented by San Francisco poets in 2003,
“Neo-Benshi” relates to a tradition that developed when silent movies first came to Japan; the benshi, a Japanese storyteller, stood by the
screen, acting out roles. In the festival production, Power will lip-synch
the dialogue while giving a humorous alternative interpretation of the
narrative.
In addition to the works by Tennessee Williams, Jane Bowles’ In the
Summer House—a play focusing on a woman trying to break free from
a possessive mother—will also be featured. Following this workshop
production, a discussion led by Kaplan will explore the play’s connections to Williams’ work.
photo by joshua andrus
Prize-winning play, Blanche DuBois is trapped in a fantasy world reflective of women’s position in Southern belle culture. In a famous scene from
the drama, Blanche says, “A woman’s charm is 50 percent illusion,” as she
struggles to withstand the brutal reality of modern society.
LIFE’S CANVAS
“TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
AND WOMEN: 50%
ILLUSION .”
PRESENTED BY:
Provincetown Tennessee
Williams Theater Festival
WHEN: September 26–29
WHERE: Various locations in
Provincetown
INFORMATION AND
TICKETS: 866-789-TENN
(8366); online: twptown.org
Singling out three Williams plays that will provide special understanding of his oeuvre, Kaplan especially recommends the early—The Chorus
Girl Plays, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof—and the late—The Mutilated. Seeing
these plays, he says, “would be like following a waltz from a late Strauss
to [one by] Shostakovich.”
Debbie Forman writes about the arts for Cape Cod LIFE Publications.
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