Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh (106 page)

Read Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh Online

Authors: John Lahr

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Literary

BOOK: Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh
13.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
“I like everything”: LOA1, p. 707.
207
“profound unconscious response”: Ibid., p. 702.
207
Serafina: (
from inside the house
): “Aaaaaahhhhhhhh!”: Ibid., p. 729.
207
“the scene should be played”: Ibid., p. 733.
207

Che
bel-la,
che
bel-
la
!”: Ibid., p. 734.
208
“like a great bird”: Ibid.
208
“I don’t know how he got in”: Ibid., p. 736.
208
“abandoning all pretence”: Ibid.
208
“How beautiful”: Ibid., p. 737.
208
“I was very surprised”: Elia Kazan to Williams, undated, WUCA.
208
“The urn is broken”: Williams, “Stornello,” HRC.
208
“quietly and gravely as two children”: Ibid.
208
“It would be a comic Mass”: Elia Kazan to Williams, undated, 1950, WUCA.
209
“might be read as a massive autobiography”:
KAL
, p. 494.
209
“little cave of consciousness”: Williams to Audrey Wood, Aug. 7, 1939,
L1
, p. 193.
209
“forever his”: Gore Vidal, “Tennessee Williams: Someone to Laugh at the Squares With,” in Gore Vidal,
Armageddon? Essays 1983–1987
(London: Andre Deutsch, 1987), p. 59.
209
“A man, when he burns”: Williams, “Stornello,” HRC.
209
“Holding the shirt above her head”: LOA1, p. 738.
209
“Vengo, vengo, amore!”: “I’m coming, I’m coming, my love!”
210
“something that is made to occupy”: Vidal, “Tennessee Williams,” p. 59.
210
“my love-play to the world”:
M
, p. 162.
210
“terribly afraid of critical reactions”: Williams to Cheryl Crawford, July 14, 1950,
L2
, p. 337.
210
“It comes at a point in my life”: Williams to James Laughlin, Oct. 15, 1950, ibid., p. 353.
211
“Critical reactions to the novel”: Williams to Audrey Wood, Nov. 26, 1950, HRC.
211
“at a crucial point”: Williams to Cheryl Crawford, Mar. 3, 1951,
L2
, p. 374.
211
“a gigantic task”: Audrey Wood to Williams, undated, HRC.
211
“He has your aliveness”: Williams to Elia Kazan, undated, WUCA.
211
“ ‘Mood’ is ‘doom’ spelt backwards”: Williams to James Laughlin, Nov. 7, 1950,
L2
, p. 357.
211
“Probably means that I shall have to put”: Ibid.
211
“Would Maureen Stapleton be all right?”: Williams to Cheryl Crawford, Aug. 11, 1950, ibid., p. 342.
211
“Maureen must have been a victim”: Quoted in Maureen Stapleton and Jane Scovell,
A Hell of a Life
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995), p. 82.
212
“a World Series of readings”: Ibid., p. 83. “It was I who found Maureen Stapleton for the part,” Williams claimed in his
Memoirs
(p. 160).
212
“Finally, I assisted her”:
M
, p. 162.
212
“They seemed to want more assurance”: Arthur Gelb, “Frank Talk from an Actress,”
New York
Times
, Feb. 18, 1951.
212
“I don’t care if she turns into a deaf mute”: As quoted in Mike Steen,
A Look at Tennessee Williams
(New York: Hawthorn Books, 1969), p. 284.
212
“The girl playing the lead”: Williams to Edwina Williams and Walter Dakin, Dec. 16, 1950,
L2
, p. 362.
212
“the desire of an artist”:
NSE
, p. 63.
212
“the Caesarean delivery”: Williams to Elia Kazan, Nov. 18, 1950, WUCA.
212
“It was the most miraculous opening”: Ibid.
213
“For some time I have suspected”: Ibid.
214
“Four days now”:
N
, Jan. 30, 1951, p. 519.
CHAPTER 4: FUGITIVE MIND
215
“Once Kazan and I”: Williams to Bill Barnes, Dec. 23, 1973, LLC.
215
“Now that the waiting is over”: Williams to Brooks Atkinson, Feb. 5, 1951,
L2
, p. 369.
215
“intermittently satisfactory”: Richard Watts Jr., “Mr. Williams among the Sicilians,”
New York Post
, Feb. 5, 1951.
215
“Play Isn’t Worthy of the Fine Acting”: John McClain, “Play Isn’t Worthy of the Fine Acting,”
New York Journal-American
, Feb. 5, 1951.
215
“We believe that the world today”: Robert Coleman, “ ‘Rose Tattoo’ Is Thorny, Much Too Earthy,”
New York
Daily Mirror
, Feb. 5, 1951.
215
“His folk comedy about a Sicilian family”: Brooks Atkinson, “The Rose Tattoo,”
New York
Time
s, Feb. 5, 1951.
215
“Behind the fury and uproar”: Brooks Atkinson, “Tattooing,”
New York Times
, June 3, 1951.
216
“If I keep working on it”: Arthur Gelb, “Frank Talk from an Actress,”
New York
Times
, Feb. 18, 1951.
217
“Paw”: Maureen Stapleton and Jane Scovell,
A Hell of a Life
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995), p. 86. In an opening-night note, Williams wrote to Stapleton, “Dearest Maureen, I do not say fuck the drama critics because fucking is too good for them. Love, Paw.” (Ibid., p. 87.)
217
“improvements”: Tennessee Williams to Maureen Stapleton, Feb. 19, 1951, HRC.
217
“You are good at public relations”: Ibid.
217
“happiest experience in the theatre”: Williams to Cheryl Crawford, Mar. 3, 1951,
L2
, pp. 373–74.
217
“the first time I have ever felt at home”: Ibid.
217
“I am a little vexed”: Williams to Audrey Wood, Mar. 14, 1951,
L2
, p. 375. The play closed on October 27, 1951, after 306 performances; two days later, the tour began with Stapleton and Wallach in the leads.
218
“This play
was
a radical departure”: Williams to Brooks Atkinson, Feb. 5, 1951,
L2
, p. 369.
218
“Modern creative theatre”: Williams to Theatre Musicians Union, Aug. 3, 1951, ibid., p. 393.
218
“only the barest glimpse”:
NSE
, p. 206.
218
“Consequently many people missed”: Ibid.
218
“If it had been a smash hit”: Williams to Irene Selznick, Feb. 27, 1951,
L2
, p. 370.
219
“The big Chinese Red offensive”:
CS
, “Two on a Party,” p. 287.
219
“lit by lightning”: LOA1, p. 465.
219
“Dakin, my brother’s, number”: Williams to Maureen Stapleton, Feb. 19, 1951, HRC.
219
“game”:
KAL
, p. 454.
219
“It is part of Nixon’s job”: Williams to Elia Kazan, Aug. 23, 1952, WUCA.
220
“the bright idea of property”: J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur,
Letters from an American Farmer
(Carlisle, Mass.: Applewood Books, 2007), p. 27.
220
increase in consumption: David Halberstam,
The Fifties
(New York: Villard, 1993), p. 186.
220
“Radio was abandoned”: Fred Allen,
Treadmill to Oblivion
(Rockville, Md.: Wildside Press, 2009), p. 239.
221
“It was a bad time”: Nora Sayre,
Previous Convictions: A Journey through the 1950s
(New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1995), p. 112.
221
“Do you realize”: Williams to Margo Jones, Dec. 1950,
L2
, p. 363.
221
“A lizardic dormancy”: Arthur Miller, “Many Writers, Few Plays,”
New York Times
, Aug. 10, 1952.
221
“a never-ending contest”:
CS
, “Two on a Party,” p. 292.
221
“calling the pack to follow”:
CP
, “Cried the Fox,” p. 7.
221
“Nothing can kill the beauty”: Williams to Oliver Evans, Mar. 31, 1951,
L2
, p. 378.
221
“One of the very few advantages”: Ibid.
222
“a fermenting new world”: Gore Vidal,
The Golden Age
(New York: Doubleday, 2000), p. 317.
222
“The town has changed much”: Williams to Cheryl Crawford, Nov. 1950,
L2
, p. 359.
222
Strange things were happening: David Aaronovitch,
Voodoo Histories
(New York: Riverhead, 2010), p. 111.
222
“to investigate links”: Sayre,
Previous Convictions
, p. 274.
222
“If you want to be against McCarthy”: Halberstam,
Fifties
, p. 54.
222
“The anti-fag battalions”: Gore Vidal,
The Essential Gore Vidal
, ed. Fred Kaplan (New York: Random House, 1999), p. 964.
222
“limp-wristers”: Michael S. Sherry,
Gay Artists in Modern American Culture: An Imagined Conspiracy
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007), p. 29.
222
“time for TV”: Ibid., p. 30.
222
“feminized”: Ibid.
223
“was prudish enough”: Halberstam,
Fifties
, p. 273.
223
Homophobia extended: Michael Paller,
Gentleman Callers: Tennessee Williams, Homosexuality, and Mid-Twentieth-Century Drama
(New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005), p. 62.
223
“Fortunately property values”: Williams to Cheryl Crawford, Nov. 1950,
L2
, p. 359.
223
“You can’t run a Puritan”: Williams to Josephine Healy, Feb. 27, 1951, Columbia.
223
“the unmentionable article”: Williams to Brooks Atkinson, June 12, 1951,
L2
, p. 384.
224
“I must tell you that I have lived”: Williams to Brooks Atkinson, Apr. 3, 1953, ibid., pp. 469–70.
225
“Insensitivity”: Mervyn Rothstein, “Remembering Tennessee Williams as a Gentle Genius of Empathy,”
New York Times
, May 30, 1990.
225
“Oh Laura, Laura”: LOA1, p. 465.
226
“the foul-minded and utterly stupid tyranny”: Williams to Jack Warner, Jerry Wald, and Charles K. Feldman, May 6, 1950,
L2
, p. 317.
226
“to trace the visionary company of love”: LOA1, p. 467.
226
“correct standards of life”: R. Barton Palmer and William Robert Bray,
Hollywood’s Tennessee: The Williams Films in Postwar America
(Austin: University of Texas Press, 2009), p. 64.
226
“sordid and morbid”:
KAL
, p. 433.
226
“this story and this script”: Palmer and Bray,
Hollywood’s Tennessee
, p. 87.
226
“The device by which he proves himself”: Ibid., p. 83.
226
“The results were highly unsatisfactory”: Ibid.
227
“I only want to do”: Ibid.
227
“If Mr. Kazan’s solution was one”: Ibid., p. 86.
227
“In effect, Breen was asking Kazan”: Ibid.
227
“The rape of Blanche by Stanley”: Williams to Joseph Ignatius Breen, Oct. 29, 1950,
L2
, pp. 355–56.
228
“The thing that makes this piece”: Palmer and Bray,
Hollywood’s Tennessee
, p. 87.
229
“Stanley would be ‘punished’ ”: Ibid., p. 84.
229
“Now, honey. Now, love”: LOA1, p. 564.
229
“This game is seven-card stud”: Ibid.
229
“Don’t you touch me”: Tennessee Williams,
A Streetcar Named Desire
(screenplay), HRC.
229
“the primacy of moral order”: Palmer and Bray,
Hollywood’s Tennessee
, p. 91.
230
“Joe, a very strange thing”: Ibid.
230

Other books

Alice Fantastic by Maggie Estep
His Soul to Take by C.M. Torrens
Summer House by Nancy Thayer
Reserved for the Cat by Mercedes Lackey
Along for the Ride by Sarah Dessen
Looking for Julie by Jackie Calhoun