5/15/12

TENNESSE WILLIAMS: IN MASKS OUTRAGEOUS & AUSTERE


The End of Tennessee Williams: In Masks Outrageous and Austere

b260c8d9dd2a1382a018f72b8be3b118bdd1fa00219491c8f53fd8f68af1a601.jpg
Let’s hand it to Tennessee Williams: he picked some of the best titles for his plays. A Streetcar Named DesireCat on a Hot Tin RoofThe Night of the IguanaSmall Craft WarningsClothes for a Summer Hotel. The very last of his plays, In Masks Outrageous and Austere—it had never been produced prior to this recent Culture Project production, which just closed early due to mixed-to-negative reviews—is no exception; the title comes from a line in an Elinor Wylie poem, and it has both the rhythm Williams generally wanted and the sense, the peacock feathers and the steel. Williams worked on it for fives years, from 1978 to his death in 1983, when it passed into the hands of his friend Gavin Lambert, where it languished until Lambert’s death. Several people, notably Gore Vidal and Peter Bogdanovich, worked to get the play ready for production, and this vital premiere of it at the Culture Project was imaginatively directed by David Schweizer and acted to within an inch of its life by its star, Shirley Knight, for whom Williams wrote A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur.
READ MORE~

1 comment: