Topic: A Streetcar Named Desire

Mataya

Date: 2015-10-11 10:32 EST
Cast

Stanley Kowalski - Aristotle Kruger Allen Blanche Du Bois - Carina Cox Stella Kowalski - Annabeth Caldwell Harold "Mitch" Mitchell - Jonathan Granger Steve Hubbell - Byron Warren Pablo Gonzales - Cary Lyons

Mataya

Date: 2015-10-11 10:32 EST
Synopsis

After the loss of her family home, Belle Reve, to creditors, Blanche DuBois travels from the small town of Laurel, Mississippi to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger, married sister, Stella, and brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski. Blanche is in her thirties, and with no money, she has nowhere else to go.

Blanche tells Stella that she has taken a leave of absence from her English teaching position because of her nerves. Blanche laments the shabbiness of her sister's two-room flat. She finds Stanley loud and rough, eventually referring to him as "common". Stanley, in return, does not care for Blanche's manners and dislikes her presence.

Stanley later questions Blanche about her earlier marriage. Blanche had married when she was very young, but her husband died, leaving her widowed and alone. The memory of her dead husband causes Blanche some obvious distress. Stanley, worried that he has been cheated out of an inheritance, demands to know what happened to Belle Reve, once a large plantation and the DuBois family home. Blanche hands over all the documents pertaining to Belle Reve. While looking at the papers, Stanley notices a bundle of letters that Blanche emotionally proclaims are personal love letters from her dead husband. For a moment, Stanley seems caught off guard over her proclaimed feelings. Afterwards, he informs Blanche that Stella is going to have a baby.

The night after Blanche's arrival, during one of Stanley's poker parties, Blanche meets Mitch, one of Stanley's poker player buddies. His courteous manner sets him apart from the other men. Their chat becomes flirtatious and friendly, and Blanche easily charms him; they like each other. Suddenly becoming upset over multiple interruptions, Stanley explodes in a drunken rage and strikes Stella. Blanche and Stella take refuge with the upstairs neighbor, Eunice. When Stanley recovers, he cries out from the courtyard below for Stella to come back by repeatedly calling her name until she comes down and allows herself to be carried off to bed. After Stella returns to Stanley, Blanche and Mitch sit at the bottom of the steps in the courtyard, where Mitch apologizes for Stanley's coarse behavior.

Blanche is bewildered that Stella would go back with him after such violence. The next morning, Blanche rushes to Stella and describes Stanley as a subhuman animal, though Stella assures Blanche that she and Stanley are fine. Stanley overhears the conversation but keeps silent. When Stanley comes in, Stella hugs and kisses him, letting Blanche know that her low opinion of Stanley does not matter.

As the weeks pass, Blanche and Stanley continue to not get along. Blanche has hope in Mitch, and tells Stella that she wants to go away with him and not be anyone's problem. During a meeting between the two, Blanche confesses to Mitch that once she was married to a young man, Allan Grey, whom she later discovered in a sexual encounter with an older man. Grey later committed suicide when Blanche told him she was disgusted with him. The story touches Mitch, who tells Blanche that they need each other. It seems certain that they will get married.

Later on, Stanley repeats gossip to Stella that he has gathered on Blanche, telling her that Blanche was fired from her teaching job for having sex with a student and that she lived at a hotel known for prostitutes. Stella erupts in anger over Stanley's cruelty after he states that he has also told Mitch about the rumors, but the fight is cut short as she goes into labor and is sent to the hospital.

As Blanche waits at home alone, Mitch arrives and confronts Blanche with the stories that Stanley has told him. At first she denies everything, but eventually confesses that the stories are true. She pleads for forgiveness, but an angry and humiliated Mitch rejects her. He then advances towards her as though to rape her; in response, Blanche screams "fire", and he runs away in fright.

When Stella has the baby, Stanley and Blanche are left alone in the apartment. In their final confrontation, it is strongly implied that Stanley rapes Blanche, imminently resulting in her psychotic crisis.

Weeks later, at another poker game at the Kowalski apartment, Stella and her neighbor, Eunice, are packing Blanche's belongings. Blanche has suffered a complete mental breakdown and is to be committed to a mental hospital. Although Blanche has told Stella about Stanley's assault, Stella cannot bring herself to believe her sister's story. When a doctor and a nurse arrive to take Blanche to the hospital, she initially resists them and collapses on the floor in confusion. Mitch, present at the poker game, breaks down in tears. When the doctor helps Blanche up, she goes willingly, with him, saying, "whoever you are, I have always depended upon the kindness of strangers." The play ends with Stanley continuing to comfort Stella while the poker game continues uninterrupted.

((There we have it, lovelies, the Shanachie's new Rep production! As always, respect the setting and have fun with it!))

Lirssa Sarengrave

Date: 2015-10-14 13:55 EST
A ticket for opening night was simply not to be had. But Lirssa was not thwarted. She had talked to the stage manager and together they set up a chair on the scaffolding in the wings. Lirssa had still paid for a ticket. "It is simply timing," she whispered to one of the nearby lighting crew. She spared him the details of her scheduled contest flight.

She had promised Annabeth she would attend. On top of that, she wanted to see the play — supporting her new acquaintance just heightened the anticipation.

From curtain rise to curtain close, Lirssa leaned in, engaged with the story and the pains of the characters portrayed below. From the dramatic to the visceral, Lirssa could see shadows of people she knew in the characters. In those glimmers of sadness, she looked out to delight in seeing the audience's reaction to the play. For her own part, it took several minutes at the end, joined in the applause with the audience, before Lirssa could draw herself away from the characters brought to life by the cast.

Making her way across the scaffolding, she headed to the dressing rooms to leave a note on Annabeth's dressing mirror praising the performance and wishing her best with the rest of the play's run.

Lirssa had her own run to contend with starting early the next day, so she did not linger but dashed out the stage door exit.

Annabeth Caldwell

Date: 2015-10-16 04:19 EST
Annabeth closed her eyes and let her lines flow through her one last time before the curtain raised. She knew her lines, her cues, blocking, everything. The last rehearsal had went fine and that's probably what was making her nervous. Bad rehearsal great performance and all that jazz.

If she was honest with herself though; she was always nervous. She loved to act. She felt positively alive on stage. No matter what happened she was performing, and giving her all for the audience. It was those terrifying moments before it started that trampled over her nerves like a bison stampede.

She ran through all the calming techniques, and waited for the curtain to raise, that would be the point when the buffalo butterflies hit the climax of their frenzied dance. But then Carina would begin, and soon her cue would float into her ears, and she'd step into Stella's shoes.

She had this.

She hoped.

Jonathan Granger

Date: 2015-10-16 11:42 EST
It might have surprised some to find Jonathan Granger playing a supporting, rather than a leading role, in the first of the repertory company's productions for the new season, but it was no mistake, nor was it any slight from Ludo or Mataya made during casting.

As much as Jon loved the theater, with all the responsibilities he was shouldering these days, including coaching STARS, helping run Maple Grove, and raising a family, he had specifically asked for supporting, rather than starring roles for the upcoming season. He simply did not have enough time to devote to a starring role right now, and he felt it was time to let some of the other actors share in the spotlight.

And so, it was Aris who was playing the lead role of Stanley Kowalski, while Jon took on the smaller, but equally important role of Mitch Mitchell, which presented its own set of challenges. Like the other talented actors at the Shanachie, Carina was easy to work with, and though she was nothing like Blanche, she played the part so convincingly, it was easy for him to imagine himself in Mitch's shoes.

There were no real heroes in this play and no happy ending, and if you took the work too seriously, Jon knew you could easily find yourself drained long before the play's run was over.

He had been supportive of his fellow actors, offering them advice when it was asked for, but never condescendingly. He was patient and understanding, especially with the less experienced actors, though he didn't remember what it was like to be new to the stage. It seemed almost as though he had been doing this all his life, his memory only going as far back as a few years.

And now at the ripe old age of nearly thirty, here he was teaching and coaching and encouraging his fellow actors, and wondering if perhaps there was something more in his future than just acting. This was, in part, why he had asked Mataya to give him supporting roles, not only so that he could sink his teeth into the meatier parts without worrying about carrying the lead, but so that he could be supportive of his fellow actors to help them be the best they could be.

Because in the end, the theater wasn't about one actor or actress - it was about the company as a whole, all of them working as a team to bring the very best in dramatic and comedic entertainment to the city of Rhy'Din.