Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh (22 page)

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Authors: John Lahr

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BOOK: Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh
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In his dealings with Pancho, however, Williams’s maternal performance—liberal, measured, un-intrusive, forgiving—allowed Pancho to have the mother he never had. “Life is hard,” Williams wrote to Pancho in November 1947. “As Amanda said, ‘It calls for Spartan endurance.’ But more than that, it calls for understanding, one person understanding another person, and for some measure of sacrifice, too.” He went on, “I feel concerned for you, worried over your lack of purpose. You have so much more than I have in so many ways. Your youth, your health and energy, your many social graces which I do not have. Life can hold a great deal for you, it can be very rich and abundant if you are willing to make some effort and to stop thinking and acting altogether selfishly. In this world the key to happiness is giving, more than getting.” The paternal voice was harder for Williams to muster; he didn’t know how to be properly assertive or how to lay down the law. After the hurly-burly of Pancho’s rambunctious reentry into his life, Williams claimed in
Memoirs
that he took refuge in a hotel, where he stayed until Pancho “had been persuaded that I could not be induced to resume residence with him or willingly see him again.” In fact, Williams couldn’t bring himself to break so cleanly. For a while, Pancho moved back in with him.
By the time Williams saw his rewritten last scene mounted for the first time in rehearsal, he was once again, like his characters, colluding in the preserving lie of relationship. “My feeling for P. has more or less definitely fallen from desire to custom though my affection is not lost,” he wrote on October 27 in his notebook. “I don’t think it was time or repetition. It was partly that but other things, a spiritual disappointment, was the more important factor.” Williams continued, “He is incapable of reason. Violence belongs to his nature as completely as it is abhorrent to mine. Most of all, I want and now must have—simple peace. The problem is to act kindly and still strongly; for now I know that my manhood is sacrificed in submitting to such a relationship. Oh well—it will work out somehow.”
On October 30, at
Streetcar
’s first-night tryout in New Haven, far from being Williams’s “ex-valiant ex-companion,” Pancho had the seat of honor beside Williams in a row that included Kazan, Selznick, Cole Porter, and Thornton Wilder. Later, at a party, Wilder complained that an aristocrat like Stella would never have fallen for a vulgarian like Stanley. “I thought, privately, this character has never had a good lay,” Williams said. Wilder also opined that Blanche was too complex. “But people are complex, Thorn,” Williams said.
For sexual and emotional complexity, nothing on stage approached Williams and Pancho off it. At the New Haven opening, the crowd adored Brando—“a performance miracle in the making,” according to Kazan. His characterization of Stanley was so strong that it threatened to overpower Tandy and to throw the play off kilter. “Because it was out of balance, people laughed at me at several points in the play, turning Blanche into a foolish character,” Brando recalled. “I didn’t try to make Stanley funny. People simply laughed, and Jessica was furious because of this, so angry that she asked Gadg to fix it somehow, which he never did. I saw a flash of resentment in her every time the audience laughed at me. She really disliked me for it.” Kazan was worried. “I looked to my authority, Tennessee,” he said. “He was no help, he seemed enraptured by the boy. ‘The son of a bitch is riding a crush,’ I said to myself.”
Flanked by Irene Selznick and Elia Kazan on the set of
A Streetcar Named Desire
“If Tennessee was Blanche, Pancho was Stanley,” Kazan said. He went on, “Wasn’t he attracted to the Stanleys of the world? Sailors? Rough trade? Danger itself? Yes, and wilder. The violence in that boy, always on a trigger edge, attracted Williams at the very time it frightened him.” In Kazan’s analysis, Blanche “is attracted to a murderer, Stanley. . . . That’s the source of ambivalence in the play. Blanche wants the very thing that’s going to crush her. The only way she can deal with this threatening force is to give herself to it. . . . That’s the way Williams was. He was attracted to trash—rough, male homosexuals who were threatening him. . . . Part of the sexuality that Williams wrote into the play is the menace of it.”
Even as Kazan worked to get this sense of sexual menace on stage; off it, he saw Williams living the threat. In Boston, during the tryout between November 3 and 15, Kazan and Williams stayed at the Ritz-Carlton on the same floor. One night, coming from Williams’s room, Kazan heard a “fearsome commotion . . . curses in Spanish, threats to kill, the sound of breaking china (a large vase smashed) and a crash (the ornamental light fixture in the center of the room torn down).” Kazan continued, “As I rushed out into the corridor, Tennessee burst through his door, looking terrified, and dashed into my room. Pancho followed, but when I blocked my door, he turned to the elevator, still cursing, and was gone. Tennessee slept on the twin bed in my room that night. The next morning . . . we heard Pancho returning, and Williams went back into his suite. He didn’t look frightened, dismayed or disapproving, but happy that Pancho was back and eager to see the man who’d made such a terrible scene the night before.”
“I left New York two or three weeks before the play opened,” Rodriguez recalled, whose hotel escapade proved the last straw. “Tennessee felt that I would be better at home. We would get together after the play opened. He promised me that, but he never came back.” Even though Pancho had packed many bags and made many dramatic exits—“I used to try and hurt him by telling him that he was uncouth and unmannered, and that he should be with Rose in an institution,” Pancho said—gratitude dominated regret in Williams’s final elegiac farewell:
. . . I have never said an untrue thing to you all the times that I have been with you except in those few blind panicky moments when it seemed, perhaps unreasonably, that you had never cared for me at all and that I had been just a matter of convenience for whom you held contempt. To explain those things you have to go back through the entire history of a life, all its loneliness, its disappointments, its hunger for understanding and love. No, there is no point in talking about it any further. I don’t ask anything of you, Pancho, this is not to ask anything, not even your pardon. I only want to tell you that I am your friend and will remain so regardless of how you may feel toward me. I offered you more of my heart than I have anybody in the last five years, which you may not have wanted and may now despise but believe me it is still full of the truest affection for you. Wherever you are I want you to have happiness.—salud amor y pesados!
To the end of his days, Rodriguez clung to a sentence from Williams’s valedictory note. “I knew that he loved me as much as I loved him,” Rodriguez said. “He wrote me a letter saying that ‘no one suffers alone’.” Williams’s letter tried to see both of them clearly; it imposed the kind of humane detachment with which he’d written
Streetcar
, “as if a ghost sat over the affairs of men and made a true record.” “When you see that someone needs peace more than anything else, needs quietness and a sense of security, you cannot expect to involve that person in continual turmoil and tension and anxiety and still have him cherishing your companionship all the time,” Williams wrote Pancho, cutting him loose. He continued, “No, for his own protection if he wishes to go on living and working, he must withdraw sometime from these exhausting conditions. One does not suffer alone. It is nearly always two who suffer, but sometimes one places all the blame on the other. . . . You know that my affection for you and my loyalty to you as a friend remain unalterable and that while I am alive you will have my true friendship always with you.”
BY THE TIME
Streetcar
moved to Philadelphia and its last out-of-town tryout, most of the hurdles that had caused Kazan initial anxiety had been cleared. Tandy had risen to the challenge of Brando’s performance; Brando had deepened his role as much from his observation of the director—his posture, his glances, his swagger—as from his notes. He had psyched out Kazan, who in his
Streetcar
journal at least noted a parallel in their psyches: “Stanley (M.B.) like E.K. is self absorbed to the point of fascination.” Even Kim Hunter, who played Stella and who Williams worried was “the lame duck in the line-up,” raised her game. Selznick, despite her occasional jejune gesture, like handing Kazan pages of single-spaced typewritten notes, over time won his grudging affection. Privately, Kazan told Williams that the show smelled like a hit; to the cast and crew, however, he played down the buzz. “What we’ve got here is oysters. Not everyone has a taste for oysters. Just do the play and hope for the best,” Kazan told his cast before the New York opening. In his first-night telegram to Brando, Williams began:
RIDE OUT BOY AND SEND IT SOLID . . .
“Streetcar opened last night to tumultuous approval,” Williams wrote to his publisher James Laughlin on December 4, 1947. “Never witnessed such an exciting evening. So much better than New Haven you wouldn’t believe it; N.H. was just a reading of the play. Much more warmth, range, intelligence, interpretation, etc.—a lot of it because of better details in direction, timing.” Williams gushed on, “Packed house, of the usual first-night decorations—Cecil Beaton, Valentina, D. Parker, the Selznicks, the others and so on—and with a slow warm-up for first act, and comments like ‘Well, of course, it isn’t a
play
,’ the second act (it’s in 3 now) sent the audience zowing to mad heights, and the final one left them—and me—wilted, gasping, weak, befoozled, drained (see reviews for more words) and then an uproar of applause which went on and on. Almost no one rose from a seat till many curtains went up on the whole cast, the 4 principles, then Tandy, who was greeted by a great howl of ‘Bravo!’ from truly all over the house. Then repeat of the whole curtain schedule to Tandy again and finally . . . . . . . . . . 10 Wms crept on stage, after calls for Author! and took bows with Tandy. All was great,
great
, GREAT!”
Streetcar
, as Arthur Miller said, planted “the flag of beauty on the shores of commercial theatre.” Miller added, “The play cannot be disparaged.” Nonetheless, in the first wave of reviews, some tried. George Jean Nathan, for instance, dubbed Williams a “Southern genital-man.” “The play might well have been titled ‘The Glans Menagerie,’ ” he quipped in his review. Among the play’s many narrative sensations was the first sighting on the American stage of a sexual male. “In 1947, when Marlon Brando appeared on stage in a torn sweaty T-shirt, there was an earthquake,” Gore Vidal wrote. Vidal also contended that “Stanley Kowalski changed the concept of sex in America. Before him, no male was considered erotic. Some were handsomer than others, some had charm. A man was essentially a suit, he wasn’t a body.” Vidal went on, “Johnny Weissmuller would have been the closest thing, and he was basically sort of androgynous looking. His body had no sex attached to it, whereas Marlon played with his cock onstage and that excited people. The mutation was the Williams effect. The male is his obsession, and male sexuality the benchmark. Females are principal characters in his plays because it’s through them that you’re going to view the male, which is the playwright’s objective.”
Part of Stanley’s sexual charge is the wallop of his selfishness, which registered the spiritual shift after America’s return to normalcy. “He builds a hedonistic life, and fights to the death to defend it,” Kazan wrote about him in his notebooks. Liberated from duty, from sacrifice, from class restrictions—all the emotional baggage that Blanche brings with her, represented by the loss of the family plantation, the well-named Belle Reve—each character pursues his own creaturely self-interest. When Stanley roars to his wife and to his intruding, neurasthenic sister-in-law, “I am the king around here,” that kingdom of self is, in a way, what all three are trying to claim. In their stage-managed battle Williams found a perfect metaphor of the era’s dynamic survival and of his own “divided nature.”
Marlon Brando and Jessica Tandy, the rape scene from
A Streetcar Named Desire

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