Monday, January 30, 2012

Tennessee Williams: Streetcar Named Desire

Tennessee Williams "was born Thomas Lanier Williams III in Columbus, Mississippi, in 1911. His friends began calling him Tennessee in college, in honor of his Southern accent and his father's home state. Williams's father, C.C. Williams, was a traveling salesman and a heavy drinker. Williams's mother, Edwina, was a Mississippi clergyman's daughter prone to hysterical attacks. Until Williams was seven, he, his parents, his older sister, Rose, and his younger brother, Dakin, lived with Edwina's parents in Mississippi.

In 1918, the Williams family moved to St. Louis, marking the start of the family's deterioration. C.C.'s drinking increased, the family moved sixteen times in ten years, and the young Williams, always shy and fragile, was ostracized and taunted at school. During these years, he and Rose became extremely close. Edwina and Williams's maternal grandparents also offered the emotional support he required throughout his childhood. Williams loathed his father but grew to appreciate him somewhat after deciding in therapy as an adult that his father had given him his tough survival instinct.

After being bedridden for two years as a child due to severe illness, Williams grew into a withdrawn, effeminate adolescent whose chief solace was writing. At sixteen, Williams won a prize in a national competition that asked for essays answering the question “Can a good wife be a good sport?” His answer was published in Smart Set magazine. The following year, he published a horror story in a magazine called Weird Tales, and the year after that he entered the University of Missouri to study journalism. While in college, he wrote his first plays, which were influenced by members of the southern literary renaissance such as Robert Penn Warren, William Faulkner, Allen Tate, and Thomas Wolfe. Before Williams could receive his degree, however, his father forced him to withdraw from school. Outraged because Williams had failed a required ROTC program course, C.C. Williams made his son go to work at the same shoe company where he himself worked.

After three years at the shoe factory, Williams had a minor nervous breakdown. He then returned to college, this time at Washington University in St. Louis. While he was studying there, a St. Louis theater group produced two of his plays, The Fugitive Kind and Candles to the Sun. Further personal problems led Williams to drop out of Washington University and enroll in the University of Iowa. While he was in Iowa, Rose, who had begun suffering from mental illness later in life, underwent a prefrontal lobotomy (an intensive brain surgery). The event greatly upset Williams, and it left his sister institutionalized for the rest of her life. Despite this trauma, Williams finally managed to graduate in 1938.

In the years following his graduation, Williams lived a bohemian life, working menial jobs and wandering from city to city. He continued to work on drama, however, receiving a Rockefeller grant and studying playwriting at the New School in New York. His literary influences were evolving to include the playwright Anton Chekhov and Williams's lifelong hero, the poet Hart Crane. He officially changed his name to Tennessee Williams upon the publication of his short story “The Field of Blue Children” in 1939. During the early years of World War II, Williams worked in Hollywood as a scriptwriter and also prepared material for what would become The Glass Menagerie.

In 1944, The Glass Menagerie opened in New York and won the prestigious New York Drama Critics' Circle Award, catapulting Williams into the upper echelon of American playwrights. A Streetcar Named Desire premiered three years later at the Barrymore Theater in New York City. The play, set in contemporary times, describes the decline and fall of a fading Southern belle named Blanche DuBois. A Streetcar Named Desire cemented Williams's reputation, garnering another Drama Critics' Circle Award and also a Pulitzer Prize. Williams went on to win another Drama Critics' Circle Award and Pulitzer for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof in 1955.

Much of the pathos found in Williams's drama was mined from the playwright's own life. Alcoholism, depression, thwarted desire, loneliness, and insanity were all part of Williams's world. His experience as a known homosexual in an era unfriendly to homosexuality also informed his work. Williams's most memorable characters, many of them female, contain recognizable elements of their author, Edwina, and Rose. His vulgar, irresponsible male characters, such as Stanley Kowalski, were likely modeled on Williams's own father and other males who tormented Williams during his childhood.

Williams's early plays also connected with the new American taste for realism that emerged following the Depression and World War II. The characters in A Streetcar Named Desire are trying to rebuild their lives in postwar America: Stanley and Mitch served in the military, while Blanche had affairs with young soldiers based near her home.

Williams set his plays in the South, but the compelling manner in which he rendered his themes made them universal, winning him an international audience and worldwide acclaim. However, most critics agree that the quality of Williams's work diminished as he grew older. He suffered a long period of depression following the death of his longtime partner, Frank Merlo, in 1963. His popularity during these years also declined due to changed interests in the theater world. During the radical 1960s and 1970s, nostalgia no longer drew crowds, and Williams's explorations of sexual mores came across as tired and old-fashioned.

Williams died in 1983 when he choked on a medicine-bottle cap in an alcohol-related incident at the Elysée Hotel in New York City. He was one month short of his seventy-second birthday. In his long career he wrote twenty-five full-length plays (five made into movies), five screenplays, over seventy one-act plays, hundreds of short stories, two novels, poetry, and a memoir. The mark he left on the tradition of realism in American drama is incredible.

Streetcar Named Desire is one of those standard classics that you can use on a Regents exam, as well as learn good playwriting from Williams. What follows is a little help in unlocking the enigma of the play.

A Streetcar Named Desire can be described as an elegy, or poetic expression of mourning, for an Old South that died in the first part of the twentieth century.
The plot of A Streetcar Named Desire is driven by the dueling personalities of Blanche and Stanley (protagonist and antagonist).
1. Light is used as a motif and symbol in the play. Consider what its presence or absence indicates. Particularly, what does it mean as a personal symbol for Blanche?
2. Williams uses sound as a dramatic device. When and what does Blanche hear music? Look for this sort of symbolism throughout the play. Music helps create tone, as well.
3. Mitch is different from the other men in the play. He is a contrast to Stanley's brutishness. Williams uses Mitch as a complication for Blanche, and a contrast to Stanley.
4. Likewise Stella contrasts her sister Blanche.

Crimes of the Heart & Southern Playwrights

Please post a forum comment on the blog about the play. Compare the play with the .Miss Firecracker Contest.

Crimes of the Heart
Crimes of the Heart (amateur production)

Friday, January 20, 2012

10-Minute Play, Crimes of the Heart

Please pick up Crimes of the Heart by Beth Henley from our library. Please read this play next week during our class absence (and your mid-terms).

Beth Henley is a contemporary American playwright best known for her quirky colloquial plays. She has been compared to the Southern writers Flannery o'Connor and Eudora Welty. She carries the dramatic torch of the South in the tradition of Tennessee Williams (more on him soon). 

Her plays are often set in the South (she grew up in Mississippi) and depict the people and settings she grew up with--just another example of a writer writing about what she knows.

Please complete your 10-minute play script today.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

10-Minute Play & Miss Firecracker Response

Please continue to work on your 10-Minute play projects. Additionally, please remember to post a forum response to The Miss Firecracker Contest. The post is due today. The 10-minute play script is due Friday, Jan. 20.

Feel free to read (if you need to) in class. Plays were meant to be read aloud, so working in small groups (if all students in the group are in this situation) is permissible. 

Friday, January 13, 2012

10 Minute Play & Character Tips

Please continue to work on your 10-Minute Play Project. If you work hard today, you may find yourself almost finishing.

Some tricks of the trade to make your plays interesting:
1. Give your characters a time limit. This heightens the dramatic potential of the scene.
2. A protagonist (major character) should change in some way by the end of the play.
3. Give your character a reason to talk to other characters. A character without a purpose should never enter the stage. If a character achieves his/her goal, that character can leave (unless there's a reason why they stay).
4. Don't interrupt the flow of your story by making the story too long or too short by moving the action of the plot to different scenes. Keep a unity of time, place, and action. A 10-minute play, for example, should cover about 10 minutes worth of time.
5. Start your play close to your climax.

HOMEWORK: Please read and complete the Miss Firecracker Contest and respond to the forum question for Wednesday, Jan. 18.

And for Caleb: Faust

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

10 Minute Script Project

Your play script idea should be long enough and short enough to hold only 6-9 pages of dialogue. Your 10th page (or 7th) should be your title page and you should also include a cast list as per usual.

What this means is that you have to consider what SINGLE action in the lives of your characters you want to focus on. Again, it is important to start a short play very close to the climax. When writing longer pieces, you have more time to build and may move your POINT OF ATTACK earlier.
  • Using your brainstorming from last class (or coming here today with your brainstorming), write a 10-minute play that weighs in at about 6-9 pages in length. You should not have more than five characters. Remember that if you bring a character into the play, this character should be developed fully by the end of the play. In such short plays, it is better to have only 2-3 characters. Limit your minor characters to one or two at most. 
  • Consider that minor characters have to be cast by real live people who are busy. If your part is not important to the story or has no reason to be on stage, omit or remove this character. Downsize your cast. 
  • The lines you are giving the characters to say should be well written, specific, and full of potential. Characterization is driven by dialogue in a play. Allow characters to talk about what they want to achieve at this given moment on stage.
  • Having trouble getting started? Have a character finish this line prompt: I want...
  • Plays are called plays for a reason. Your play should be interesting and creative. Try to think outside the box. People go to the theater to see things they couldn't see on TV or in film. Keep this important pointer in the back of your mind for the rest of your script-writing life.
After the quiz on play formatting from your reading homework last class, please begin working on your 10-minute play.

We will be getting and reading The Miss Firecracker Contest from the library.

Monday, January 9, 2012

How to Start a Play: Getting Ideas

“Creativity is 1/10 inspiration, 9/10 perspiration.”
  • Your writing doesn’t just spring up from the ground
  • No muse waves a magic wand and inspires you--
  • Writing is work. Period.
Successful writers write. Unsuccessful writers talk about writing or want to write, but never do.

How to start: Brainstorming!

1. Start with a situation.

Describe an event, an action, or thing happening. Plays require that you start just before the most interesting event and go from there. This is called in media res. The point you start your story is called your Point of Attack.

Ask the question “What if…?” or “What happens when…?”

Think of a setting, and an action or happening in that setting. Complicate the simple action with a problem (a but, whoops, suddenly, or uh oh!)

Take the time to brainstorm. Think about the situation and how it started, how it continued, how it ended. Take notes in your journal. Outline your situation before writing the script.
As you think about your situation, you will also find you are thinking about character and what the action means (theme). Jot those ideas down!

2. Start with a character.

Begin with a fictional, real, or historical person. Envision who this person is and what this person WANTS (his/her goal). It is essential in all writing (poetry, fiction, plays) that a character has a goal or motivation to act in your story. Give your characters a purpose!

Steal a composite of various people you know, have read about, even yourself.
Create situations and/or other characters to STOP your character from achieving their goal – this is your conflict.

In your journal jot down overheard conversations, quotes, and what you imagine your character saying and doing.

3. Start with a theme.

Some plays start with a germinal idea.
Pick a personal belief about the world, or an issue that you are interested in finding more about – jot down your feelings and thoughts about the topic.

Start with a statement… “This I believe__________”

Research your theme so that you confirm or deepen your understanding of the subject.
Think about characters who might share your vision. Write about them and what opposes them.

4. Cheat
Borrow ideas from other writers, books, newspapers, etc. Read interviews or biographies of writers. Look for writing advice on line. Find out what advice the professionals give. You might be able to use this advice to your advantage -- it might even lead to an idea for a play!

A few DON’T’s
--Don’t judge your play until it’s written and/or performed.

--Don’t search for originality. Shakespeare stole his ideas, you can too! What’s important is CHARACTER!

--Don’t forget to use your notes and journal as a starting place to brainstorm.

LAB/HOMEWORK: Come up with an idea for a 10-minute play. Use one (or more) of the techniques to brainstorm an idea for this project. Please read the HANDOUT "Looking Good" and expect a quiz next class on the information found there and today's two blog posts.

Play Script Tips

Some tips regarding play script writing:
  • All plays should have a beginning, middle, and end. They can begin or end just like a poem or story (i.e., ending with a circular, surprise, summary, or open-ending, etc.)
  • All plays are written for the stage (not to just be read); they are meant to be performed live by live actors. To get good at this reading and watching plays is essential.
  • All plays are written in present tense (not past); all plays use a specific and distinct format
  • All plays are more powerful if they are tightly written. To be "tightly written" you should avoid using broad-sweeping plots, with many cinematic scene changes.
Our short plays should adhere to what are called the unities:
1. The unity of time (plays should not span many years)
2. The unity of place (plays should concentrate action in one or few settings)
3. The unity of action (plays should limit their plots so they are not confusing)

All plays require conflict
Conflict should be balanced (in other words the struggle between protagonist and antagonist should be a fair fight); it is often better to have an antagonist who is slightly more powerful.
Characters often are antagonists to each other in plays.

Meaning (theme) in a play is tied to the action and conflict being presented on stage

All plays should be entertaining (and written to be performed)

All plays should communicate an idea (or belief about the human condition)

All plays are REPRESENTATIVE of real life. They are NOT real life.

Plays are NOT movies. The best way to learn how to write scripts is to read them and see play productions whenever possible.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Brainstorming & Picking up where we were

 LAB: In the lab, take a look at any of the 10 minute or short plays by David Ives, Christopher Durang, or John Guare. Watch at least one and post a response to the forum. THIS IS A GRADED REQUIREMENT. You may respond to more than one play for extra credit. One response is due by the end of this class. The extra credit responses are due by the end of the weekend (Jan. 9).

When you have completed your viewing, please brainstorm the following in your journal (do this as homework if you do not complete it in the lab):

1. Write a list of names. You do not have to describe these characters yet, just spend some time gathering names. You may find it helpful (and fun) to create 2 columns (one for a first name and one for a surname) so that you can mix & match.

2. Write a list of places. You do not have to describe these places yet, just indicate where action MIGHT take place. Ex. The bleachers of a ballpark, the back seat of a hearse, on a boardwalk, a forest at night, in a tack room at a stable, in line at a store, etc. Try to be somewhat specific as to identifying the space.

After completing 1 & 2, move on to steps 3 & 4.

3.  Write a one-minute play (only 1 page of dialogue) between two or more characters. Select names (1) and places (2) from your exercises.

4. Write a monologue of at least 10 sentences or more (no longer than 1 page). Select a character and setting from your lists and allow your character to speak for a while for a reason.

DUE AT END OF LAB TODAY: I will be collecting the following today at the end of lab.
1. 1 minute play (1 page of dialogue) see #3 above
2. 1 monologue (1 monologue) see #4 above
3. Watch and respond to one of the plays (Ives, Durang, or Guare) and comment on the forum

HOMEWORK: Complete work and turn in late for partial credit.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Drama: Preparing to Write

Welcome to script writing! Last year we read a few plays (The Zoo Story, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Fences, etc.) and wrote sketches, a one-minute play, and a 10-minute play. Since then a few of you have probably read or seen a few more stage productions and had to read a few more plays in your English classes.

Before we get on too far, take a moment and think of what you've learned about writing plays (either by writing them, seeing them, or reading them). Jot down a list and then share the list with your partner. After our chat, we'll take a look or read at a few short (10-minute) plays by David Ives. Please take notes as we read about effective playwriting strategies that I give you.

LAB: In the lab, take a look at any of the 10 minute or short plays by David Ives, Christopher Durang, or John Guare. Watch at least one and post a response to the forum. THIS IS A GRADED REQUIREMENT. You may respond to more than one play for extra credit. One response is due by the end of this class. The extra credit responses are due by the end of this week (Jan. 6).

When you have completed your viewing, please brainstorm the following in your journal (do this as homework if you do not complete it in the lab):

1. Write a list of names. You do not have to describe these characters yet, just spend some time gathering names. You may find it helpful (and fun) to create 2 columns (one for a first name and one for a surname) so that you can mix & match.

2. Write a list of places. You do not have to describe these places yet, just indicate where action MIGHT take place. Ex. The bleachers of a ballpark, the back seat of a hearse, on a boardwalk, a forest at night, in a tack room at a stable, in line at a store, etc. Try to be somewhat specific as to identifying the space.

HOMEWORK: Complete lab work if not yet completed.

Please remember to turn in your short story draft if you have not yet done so. This is due today.

About this course!

This course stresses understanding the characteristics & techniques in the literary genres of fiction, poetry, and dramatic writing. This course will continue to build on students’ reading and writing skills begun in previous creative writing classes. Readings and discussions of works by major writers in the field will be examined as inspiration and models of fine writing. This educational blog is designed for the use of the students at the School of the Arts in Rochester, NY.