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Synopsis Amanda Wingfield was once courted by seventeen gentleman callers in on afternoon. Now she yearns for the days when her daughter Laura will captivate the world. But Laura lives out her own dreams with her cherished collection of glass animals - until the man she has loved from afar arrives at the apartment. The Glass Menagerie is a poignant and intensely moving exploration of a fragile fantasy world - a world that might easily be shattered.
Directed by Rupert Goold, the play tells the story of the Wingfield family, focusing on the son, Tom (Stoppard), who’s torn between the need to break away and his emotional ties with an ageing mother and a frail sister.
Overnight critics enjoyed the performances of the “uniformly excellent” cast, and were particularly impressed with Amanda Hale as Laura, whose hopes of happiness are raised and dashed in tragically quick succession. Although some felt the play took a while to get going, they all said Goold’s production did justice to Williams’ poetic writing, aided by Paul Pyant’s atmospheric lighting.
Michael Coveney on Whatsonstage.com (4 stars) – “As a domestic, poetic drama with a powerful emotional lyricism it is hard to beat Tennessee Williams’s first great success, The Glass Menagerie…. Jessica Lange repeats the touching, fragile performance as Amanda she gave in New York two years ago. She is just as absurdly girlish, but I sense a new element of creeping insanity…. After ceaseless badgering, Tom brings home a ‘Gentlemen Caller’, Jim O'Connor, from work…. Their great scene together, played by candlelight, and containing Laura’s one and only brush with happiness, is the overwhelming climax of Rupert Goold’s fine production. It is played with heart-breaking candour and tenderness by Mark Umbers as Jim and stunning newcomer Amanda Hale… as Laura. Adam Cork’s evocative sound score and Paul Pyant’s quite exceptional lighting… are discreet, perfectly modulated and beautiful.”
Michael Billington in the Guardian (3 stars) – “In Rupert Goold's slowly developing production it takes time to realise where the true focus lies…. Lange has good touches, such as her reflex attempts to smooth down her son's hair, but her Amanda never fully inhabits her own private world. But where the evening takes off is in the celebrated scene where Laura is confronted by a gentleman-caller in the shape of a colleague Tom has brought home to dinner. This is not only Williams at his best: it also brings forth a transcendent piece of acting from Amanda Hale as Laura…. Hale makes the play Laura's story. But she is aided by the subtlety of Goold's direction which paces the climactic scene perfectly. Mark Umbers as the gentleman caller has the right blend of compassion and bruising dynamism. Ed Stoppard conveys the restlessness of the narrating Tom whose obsessive movie-going is clearly a metaphor for something darker. The evening belongs, however, to a relative newcomer who embodies the love Williams felt for his damaged, real-life sister, Rose.
Nicholas de Jongh in the Evening Standard (4 stars) – “Rupert Goold's dream-struck production… finally convinces me this is one of the great, unhappy family-life plays in the modern American repertoire…. The crucial scene between Mark Umbers' handsome but unhappy Jim, the gentleman caller, and Amanda Hale's superlative, bedraggled Laura, eyes downcast and body language all doleful, is played with an overpowering sense of intimacy and delicacy. In Umbers' brilliant, believable reading, the gentleman caller, engaged to a ‘homely’ girl, genuinely falls for Laura, who has long nursed a secret passion for him. She gazes at him transfixed. Having raised the girl's erotic hopes, he then comes to his senses and dashes them to pieces. Hale's face speaks tragic volumes as the might-have-been love affair fades out.… Stoppard's fine, donkey-jacketed narrator haunts the action like some baleful ghost returned home. Tom's beautifully spoken, final lament for Laura and his long-distance loneliness is surely Williams's grief for his own past. Magical.”
Alice Jones in the Independent (4 stars) – “Lange is suitably striking in the role, flitting, with little bird-like movements of her hand, from mollycoddling mother to self-obsessed old crone and, most memorably, a girlish coquette in the company of the gentleman caller. She is not, though, the standout performance in a uniformly excellent cast. Ed Stoppard is convincing as the narrator through whose tortured memory the action is filtered. Amanda Hale's nervy performance as Laura is as delicate as the glass animals she treasures, and beautifully contrasts with Mark Umbers' robust, strong-jawed, good-natured charm as the long-awaited gentleman caller. Rupert Goold's production takes time to get going, but once the caller's arrival is imminent it clicks into gear and builds slowly to its tragic climax…. Paul Pyant's lighting… is exquisite throughout…. As Laura blows out the candles, the feeling that all hope has been extinguished is deliciously overwhelming.”
As a domestic, poetic drama with a powerful emotional lyricism it is hard to beat Tennessee Williams’s first great success, The Glass Menagerie. In a small family apartment in a tenement building down an alley in St Louis, Tom Wingfield presents a memory play of his own departure and the night a Gentleman Caller visited his shy and crippled sister.
Tom, of course, represents Williams himself, and Laura the playwright’s own sister, Rose, the true love of his life. Their mother, Amanda, is one of the great roles of modern American drama, a fussing, repressive, ecstatically nostalgic Southern lady living on past dreams of gentility and romance while suffocating her own children with expectation.
Jessica Lange repeats the touching, fragile performance as Amanda she gave in New York two years ago. She is just as absurdly girlish, but I sense a new element of creeping insanity. Amanda is one of those mothers who want to reinvent their lives in their children. Tom is worn down by his job at the shoe factory; Laura has failed to complete a business course and has no professional or personal prospects.
After ceaseless badgering, Tom brings home a “Gentlemen Caller,” Jim O’Connor, from work. He turns out to be the sports hero who never lived up to his own idea of himself. Laura remembers him from high school, where she was ill with pleurisy (she called the illness “pleurosis”; he called her “Blue Roses”.) Their great scene together, played by candlelight, and containing Laura’s one and only brush with happiness, is the overwhelming climax of Rupert Goold’s fine production.
It is played with heart-breaking candour and tenderness by Mark Umbers as Jim and stunning newcomer Amanda Hale (first noted as the teenage disabled “holiness lesbian” in Catherine Treischmann’s Crooked at the Bush last year) as Laura. Adam Cork’s evocative sound score and Paul Pyant’s quite exceptional lighting – the whole play is a symphony of light, shadow, silhouette and fleeting echoes of the dance hall across the street – are discreet, perfectly modulated and beautiful.
Hale is a Laura not yet lost to the world – arch and striking in her buckled movement – yet already succumbing to the muffled years ahead. She and Ed Stoppard as Tom are also convincing siblings, both dark with slightly long faces. Stoppard gives Tom an urgency and inner fire that fully explains his bursting from the chrysalis at the end in his extraordinary speech about going further than the moon. How moving it is to remember, too, that the actor’s own father, Tom Stoppard, was the son of a shoe salesman who escaped into literature and the theatre. Tom Wingfield is sacked for writing a poem on the lid of a shoebox.
Matthew Wright’s superb design supplies a fire escape going to the roof of the theatre, right out of the apartment, and a cage-like gantry where Tom can perch and elaborate his story. We marvel again at how Williams pitches the memorial power of the play-within-a-play at exactly the right level of harsh and truthful sentimentality. In this context, Lange’s butterfly-like Amanda, fluttering her arms and crashing her right fist into her left palm when boiling to a temper, is like an exotic specimen of a vanished life, an endangered species, a brittle relic. One serious and pedantic point: I wish she’d discard the dreadful wig that shrivels under lights and hangs lank and curly at its extremities. Call for a hair stylist!
I have to agree with all the praise. This is so good it ought to be the toast of the town. Part of the problem's got to be poor advance publicity and a poster that trades on the un-box-office name of Jessica Lange as though it's ever going to put bums on seats. She's a fine actress, but a pull-'em-in star? I think not. The poster's the only wrong-headed thing about this production: it betrays Tennessee Williams (they do all but splash it with 'Jessica "Tootsie" Lange', à la 'Frazer "Emmerdale" Hines' of naff regional tours) and it doesn't have a hope of drawing in any punters who aren't already familiar with the play.
Amanda Hale as Laura was magnificent. The best new talent I've seen since Kelly Reilly in Three Sisters. In fact all four actors were class acts, although their voices did not carry well across the Apollo. I was only in Row M, and my hearing is 20/20ish, but I strained to catch the dialogue at times, and I shouldn't have had to do that. (This show feels as though it directed for a smaller space than a prosc arch west end house; I'd love to have seen it at the Donmar.) After the interval I moved forward a few rows and matters improved a tad, but it still wasn't perfect - and for such a long, wordy show this was a drawback. But everything else was outstanding, and Rupert Goold caught the dream-like quality of the play better than any other version I've seen. Bravo. - Job
12 Apr 07
It takes a while to take off, but when it does you are enthralled - the second half, in particular, is a masterclass in staging. All of the performances are first class and it's great to see the wonderful Jessica Lange back in London. With this and the magnificent Tempest in the West End at the same time, the talented Rupert Gould has certainly arrived ! Gareth - Gareth James
08 Mar 07
This is a lovely if imperfect production of Williams' gently upsetting dream-like play. It looks fabulous although the family home being so far upstage does create a certain sense of alienation; the lighting and music score are wonderful.
Jessica Lange's Amanda is slightly muted at first but grows in stature as the evening progresses, and she is hugely amusing yet touching when trying to impress the Gentleman Caller, and very moving at the end. Ed Stoppard is a decent if unexciting Tom, but no complaints at all about the Laura & Jim of Amanda Hale and Mark Umbers. Both performances are utterly perfect and their candle lit scene in the last act is one of the finest things on the London stage....the Stalls were awash with tears. Overall, this isn't quite as good as the Donmar version of over a decade ago, but I would still heartily recommend it. - ajh
02 Mar 07
21.2.07. This is a very impressive production, directed by Rupert Goold, of a play which, in lesser hands, could probably feel quite tedious. He is greatly assisted by an excellent set design and dim lighting which creates the claustrophobic atmosphere of the cramped city apartment that the Wingfield family have been reduced to.
Jessica Lange seems born to play Tennessee Williams heroines. In the second act she recreates Amanda as a coquettish Southern belle, managing to conjour out of the St. Louis alleyway senses from the plantation she believes should have been her destiny. The long romantic scene between laura and Jim is beautifully played by Amanda Hale and Mark Umbers setting up the painful closing scenes of loneliness and loss. - David Baxter
22 Feb 07
I was new to this particular play, but I know what to expect from Williams: languidity, a heightened and relentless sense of repression, and a huge melodrama eked from an essentially everyday story. And certainly you can tick all these off as you watch Menagerie. What's so special about this show is that the production is perfectly attuned to Williams' style. His story unfolds in an extraordinary design - both set and lighting evoking a dark, smouldering mess of fire escapes within which the little apartment with its tired, retro furniture nestles quite pathetically. The four actors are all excellent, with Lange coming into her own when it's finally time to welcome the 'gentleman caller' she has arranged for her daughter. In a decades-old party dress she briefly becomes the girl she once was - and wants her daughter to be. The irony lost on her is that, as she herself shows, putting your entire hopes on a success with a handsome young man doesn't necessecarily promise a fulfilled life. Amanda hale give the most touching performance as her daughter, slowly revealing warmth, humour, sheer potential - I haven't felt for a stage character in that way in a long time. Must mention, too, the beautiful, wistful score. - Jon
14 Feb 07
The best production I've seen of this play (in 40 years.Stoppard good,Lange superb but the revelation is Amanda Hale who gives a searing and heartrending performance. A new star is born. Take a hankie. - 83.67.120.237)
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