Character Analysis: A Streetcar Named Desire

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From amateur theatre to professional broadway and in movies, A Streetcar Named Desire has been performed throughout all types of production. For several people, A Streetcar Name Desire will always be considered close to their hearts due to a single production in particular that struck them deeply. However, the image individuals visualize while reading the script version of a play can differ greatly in comparison to a live or filmed production. Thus, the following will be a personal interpretation of how Benedict Andrews’s 2014 production changed or portrayed the meaning of the original written script of Tennessee Williams 's A Streetcar Named Desire differently than perhaps how readers may have read the play. Within Benedict Andrews’s production, …show more content…

For A Streetcar Named Desire, that issue is Blanch. Immediately when Blanch arrives on set it is possible to see how different she looks in comparison to the other characters. Blanch, in comparison to Stella, is much older in appearance yet still has a similar if not thinner body figure. Blanch also appears as an older washed out version of the infamous Marilyn Monroe with her short blonde curly hair and old Hollywood style of clothing. By representing Blanch as this type of old Hollywood doll and lover Benedict Andrews has immediately set her up as being a heartbreaker and a lady who flirts too much with too many men. Blanch in a sense becomes the idol of lust and want just through her striking physical similarities to Marilyn Monroe. Thus for Benedict Andrews’s audience, it becomes more feasible to excuse Stanley of his deplorable actions towards Blanch. That is because Stanley, being an attractive American dreamboat, has done nothing more but act upon his masculine desires or aggression. Through the use of casting Benedict Andrews’s production creates the interpretation that Blanch, a harlot, deserved the troubles that Stanley, a hunk of a man, brought down upon her. All Blanch’s issues in this production can be tied to her visual appearance, from Mitch leaving Blanch to the rape. By casting people who are attractive to society and those who …show more content…

For example, Blanch is seen as wearing fancy, high-quality dresses that present her as a person of materialistic taste for the upper-class life. In Comparison Stella appears wearing common everyday clothing that does not appear to be brand new or of high value. Stella’s style of clothing presents her character as the common everyday girl who everyone knows. Stella, unlike Blanch, blends into the world of the play. Similar can be stated about Stanley and his clothing. Stanley appears numerous times in casual or work styled clothing that paints him as a working class man doing his part in society, again like Stella he blends into the world of the play. By having characters represent their social status through their clothing it is possible to see that Blanch appearing wealthier and robust with materialistic treasure is the upper class who clashes with the lower class members of the play. Thus creating a battle of the social classes where the upper class, Blanch, is the villain due to her ability to appear better off than the lower class, Stella, and Stanley. Benedict Andrews’s production through the means of costume design altered the way the audience views the characters as being either the antagonist or the

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