THE GLASS
MENAGERIE,
by
Tennessee Williams, 1944
SCENE 1
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The
Wingfield apartment is in the rear of the building, one of those vast hive-like
conglomerations of cellular living-units that flower as warty growths in
overcrowded urban centres of lower-middle-class population and are symptomatic
of the impulse of this largest and fundamentally enslaved section of American
society to avoid fluidity and differentiation and to exist and function as one
interfused mass of automatism.
The
apartment faces an alley and is entered by a fire-escape, a structure whose
name is a touch of accidental poetic truth, for all of these huge buildings are
always burning with the slow and implacable fires of human desperation. The
fire-escape is included in the set - that is, the landing of it and steps
descending from it.
The scene
is memory and is therefore non-realistic. Memory takes a lot of poetic licence.
It omits some details; others are exaggerated, according to the emotional value
of the articles it touches, for memory is seated predominantly in the heart.
The interior is therefore rather dim and poetic.
At the rise
of the curtain, the audience is faced with the dark, grim rear wall of the Wingfield
tenement. This building, which runs parallel to the footlights, is flanked on
both sides by dark, narrow alleys which run into murky canyons of tangled
clothes-lines, garbage cans, and the sinister lattice-work of neighbouring
fire-escapes. It is up and down these alleys that exterior entrances and exits
are made, during the play. At the end of Tom's opening commentary, the dark
tenement wall slowly reveals (by means of a transparency) the interior of the
ground floor Wingfield apartment.
Downstage
is the living-room, which also serves as a sleeping-room for Laura, the sofa is
unfolding to make her bed. Upstage, centre, and divided by a wide arch or
second proscenium with transparent faded portières (or second curtain), is the
dining-room. In an old fashioned what-not in the living-room are seen scores of
transparent glass animals. A blown-up photograph of the father hangs on the
wall of the living-room, facing the audience, to the left of the archway. It is
the face of a very handsome young man in a doughboy's First World War cap. He
is gallantly smiling, ineluctably smiling, as if to say 'I will be smiling
forever'.
The
audience hears and sees the opening scene in the dining-room through both the
transparent fourth wall of the building and the transparent gauze portières of
the dining-room arch. It is during this revealing scene that the fourth wall
slowly ascends out of sight. This transparent exterior wall is not brought down
again until the very end of the play, during Tom' s final speech.
The
narrator is an undisguised convention of the play. He takes whatever licence
with dramatic convention is convenient to his purpose.
TOM enters
dressed as a merchant sailor from alley, stage left, and strolls across the
front of the stage to the fire-escape. There he stops and lights a cigarette.
He addresses the audience.
TOM: Yes, I
have tricks in my pocket, I have things up my sleeve. But I am the opposite of
a stage magician. He gives you illusion that has the appearance of truth. I
give you truth in the pleasant disguise of illusion.
To begin
with, I turn bark time. I reverse it to that quaint period, the thirties, when
the huge middle class of America was matriculating in a school for the blind.
Their eyes had failed them or they had failed their eyes, and so they were
having their fingers pressed forcibly down on the fiery Braille alphabet of a
dissolving economy.
In Spain
there was revolution. Here there was only shouting and confusion.
In Spain
there was Guernica. Here there were disturbances of labour, sometimes pretty
violent, in otherwise peaceful cities such as Chicago, Cleveland, Saint Louis.
. . .
This is the
social background of the play.
[MUSIC]
The play is
memory.
Being a
memory play, it is dimly lighted, it is sentimental, it is not realistic.
In memory
everything seems to happen to music. That explains the fiddle in the wings.
I am the
narrator of the play, and also a character in it. The other characters are my
mother Amanda, my sister Laura and a gentleman caller who appears in the final
scenes.
He is the
most realistic character in the play, being an emissary from a world of reality
that we were somehow set apart from. But since I have a poet's weakness for symbols,
I am using this character also as a symbol; he is the long-delayed but always
expected something that we live for. There is a fifth character in the play who
doesn't appear except in this larger-than-life-size photograph over the mantel.
This is our
father who left us a long time ago.He was a telephone man who fell in love with
long distances; he gave up his job with the telephone company and skipped the
light fantastic out of town. . . .The last we heard of him was a picture
postcard from Mazatlan, on the Pacific coast of Mexico, containing a message of
two words -
'Hello -
Good-bye!' and no address.
I think the
rest of the play will explain itself ...
[AMANDA's
voice becomes audible through the portières.
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: 'Où SONT LES NEIGES'.
He divides
the portieres and enters the upstage area.
AMANDA and
LAURA are seated at a drop-leaf table. Eating is indicated by gestures without
food or utensils. AMANDA faces the audience. TOM and LAURA are Seated is
profile.
The
interior has lit up softly and through the scrim we see AMANDA and LAURA seated
at the table in the upstage area]
AMANDA
[calling] Tom? Yes, Mother.
AMANDA: We
can't say grace until you come to the table!
TOM:
Coming, Mother. [He bows slightly and withdraws, reappearing a few moments
later in his place at the table.]
AMANDA [to
her son]: Honey, don't push with your fingers. If you have to push with
something, the thing to push with is a crust of bread. And chew !chew! Animals
have sections in their stomachs which enable them to digest flood without
mastication, but human beings are supposed to chew their food before they
swallow it down. Eat food leisurely, son, and really enjoy it. A well-cooked
meal has lots of delicate flavours that have to be held in the mouth for
appreciation. So chew your food and give your salivary glands a chance to
function !
[TOM
deliberately lays his imaginary fork down and his chair back from the table.]
TOM: I
haven't enjoyed one bite of this dinner because of your constant directions on
how to eat it. It's you that makes me rush through meals with your hawk-like
attention to every bite I take. Sickening - spoils my appetite - all this
discussion of - animals' secretion - salivary glands -mastication !
AMANDA [lightly]:
Temperament like a Metropolitan star ! [He rises and crosses downstage.] You're
not excused from the table.
TOM: I'm
getting a cigarette.
AMANDA: You
smoke too much.
[LAURA
rises.]
LAURA: I'll
bring in the blancmangé.
[He remains
standing with his cigarette by the portières during the following.]
AMANDA
[rising]: No, sister, no, sister - you be the lady this time and I'll be the
darkey
LAURA: I'm
already up.
AMANDA:
Resume your seat, little sister, I want you to stay fresh and pretty for
gentleman callers!
LAURA: I'm
not expecting any gentleman callers.
AMANDA
[crossing out to kitchenette. Airily]: Sometimes they come when they are least
expected! Why, I remember one Sunday afternoon in Blue Mountain -[Enters
kitchenette.]
TOM: I know
what's coming
LAURA: Yes.
But let her tell it.
TOM: Again?
LAURA: She
loves to tell it.
[AMANDA
returns with bowl of dessert.]
AMANDA: One
Sunday afternoon in Blue Mountain, your mother received seventeen! gentlemen callers!
Why, sometimes there weren't chairs enough to accommodate them all. We had to
send the nigger over to bring in folding chairs from the parish house.
TOM
[remaining at portières]: How did you entertain those gentleman callers?
A M A N D
A: I understood the art of conversation !
TOM: I bet
you could talk.
AMANDA:
Girls in those days knew how to talk, I can tell you.
TOM: Yes?
[IMAGE:
AMANDA AS A GIRL ON A PORCH GREETING CALLERS.]
AMANDA:
They knew how to entertain their gentlemen callers. It wasn't enough for a girl
to be possessed of a pretty face and a graceful figure although I wasn't
alighted in either respect. She also needed to have a nimble wit and a tongue
to meet all occasions.
TOM: What
did you talk about?
AMANDA:
Things of importance going on in the world ! Never anything coarse or common or
vulgar.
[She
addresses Tom as though he were seated in the vacant chair at the table though
he remains by portieres. He plays this scene as though he held the book.]
My callers
were gentleman -all! Among my callers were some of the most prominent young
planters of the Mississippi Delta - planters and sons of planters!
[Tom
motions for music and a spot of light on AMANDA. Her eyes lift, her face glows,
her voice becomes rich and elegiac.
SCREEN
LEGEND: 'Où SONT Les NEIGES']
There was
young Champ Laughlin who later became vice-president of the Delta Planters
Bank.
Hadley
Stevenson who was drowned in Moon Lake and left his widow one hundred and fifty
thousand in Government bonds.
There were
the Cutrere brothers, Wesley and Bates. Bates was one of my bright particular
beaux! He got in a quarrel with that wild Wainwright boy. They shot it out on
the floor of Moon Lake Casino. Bates was shot through the stomach. Died in the
ambulance on his way to Memphis. His widow was also well provided for, came
into eight or ten thousand acres, that's all. She married him on the rebound -
never loved her - carried my picture on him the night he died !And there was
that boy that every girl in the Delta had set her cap for! That brilliant,
brilliant young Fitzhugh boy from Greene County!
TOM: What
did he leave his widow?
AMANDA: He
never married ! Gracious, you talk as though all of my old admirers had turned
up their toes to the daisies !
TOM: Isn't
this the first you've mentioned that still survives ?
AMANDA:
That Fitzhugh boy went North and made a fortune - came to be known as the Wolf
of Wall Street! He had the Midas touch, whatever he touched turned to gold!
And I could
have been Mrs Duncan J. Fitzhugh, mind you! But - I picked your father !
LAURA
[rising]: Mother, let me clear the table.
AMANDA: No,
dear, you go in front and study your typewriter chart. Or practise your
shorthand a little. Stay fresh and pretty! It's almost time for our gentlemen
callers to start arriving. [She flounces girlishly toward the kitchenette.] How
many do you suppose we're going to entertain this afternoon?
[Tom throws
down the paper and jumps up with a groan.]
LAURA
[alone in the dining-room]: I don't believe we're going to receive any, Mother.
AMANDA
[reappearing, airily ] What? Not one - not one? You must be joking!
[LAURA
nervously echoes her laugh.S he slips in a fugitive manner through the
half-open portières and draws them in gently behind her. A shaft of very clear
light is thrown on her face against the faded tapestry of the curtains.]
[MUSIC:
'THE GLASS MENAGERIE' UNDER FAINTLY. Lightly.]
Not one
gentleman caller? It can't be true ! There must be a flood, there must have
been a tornado!
LAURA: It
isn't a flood, it's not a tornado, Mother. I'm just not popular like you were
in Blue Mountain. ... [Tom utters another groan. LAURA glances at him with a
faint, apologetic smile. Her voice catching a little.] Mother's afraid I'm
going to be an old maid.
THE SCENE
DIMS OUT WITH 'GLASS MENAGERIE'
Music
'Laura
Haven't you Ever Liked Some Boy?'
On the dark
stage the screen is lighted with the image of blue roses.
[Gradually
LAURA' S figure becomes apparent and the screen goes out.
The music subsides.
LAURA is
seated in the delicate ivory chair at the small claw-foot table.
She wears a
dress of soft violet material for a kimono - her hair tied back from her
forehead with a ribbon.
She is
washing and polishing her collection of glass.
AMANDA appears
on the fire-escape steps. At the sound of her ascent, LAURA catches her breath,
thrusts the bowl of ornaments away and seats herself stiffly before the diagram
of the typewriter keyboard as though it held her spellbound.
Something
has happened to AMANDA. It is written in her face as she climbs to the landing:
a look that is grim and hopeless and a little absurd.
She has on
one of those cheap or imitation velvety-looking cloth coats with imitation fur
collar. Her hat is five or six years old, one of those dreadful cloche hats
that were worn in the late twenties and she is eloping an enormous black
patent-leather pocketbook with nickel clasps and initials. This is her
full-dress outfit, the one she usually wears to the D.A.R.
Before
entering she looks through the door.
She purses
her lips, opens her eyes very wide, rolls them upward, and shakes her head.
Then she
slowly lets herself in the door. Seeing her mother's expression LAURA touches
her lips with a nervous gesture.]
LAURA:
Hello, Mother, I was - [She makes a nervous gesture toward the chart on the
Wall. AMANDA leans against the shut door and stares at LAURA with a martyred
look.]
A M A N D
A: Deception ? Deception ? [She slowly removes her hat and gloves, continuing
the sweet suffering stare. She lets the hat and gloves fall on the floor - a
bit of acting.]
LAURA
[shakily]: How was the DAR. meeting? [AMANDA slowly opens her purse and removes
a dainty white handkerchief which she shakes out delicately and delicately
touches to her lips and nostrils.] Didn't you go to the DAR. meeting, Mother?
AMANDA
[faintly, almost inaudibly]: - No. - No. [Then more forcibly.] I did not have
the strength - to go to the DAR. In fact, I did not have the courage! I wanted to
find a hole in the ground and hide myself in it for ever ! [She crosses slowly
to the wall and removes the diagram of the typewriter keyboard. She holds it in
front of her for a second, staring at it sweetly and sorrowfully - then bites
her lips and tears it into two pieces.]
LAURA
[faintly]: Why did you do that, Mother? [AMANDA repeats the same procedure with
the chart of the Gregg alphabet.] Why are you ??
AMANDA:
Why? Why? How old are you, Laura?
LAURA:
Mother, you know my age.
AMANDA: I
thought that you were an adult; it seems that I was mistaken. [She crosses
slowly to the sofa and sinks down and stares at LAURA.]
LAURA:
Please don't stare at me, Mother.
[AMANDA
closes her eyes and lowers her head. Count ten.]
AMANDA:
What are we going to do, what is going to be. come of us, what is the future?
[Count
ten.]
LAURA: Has
something happened, Mother? [AMANDA draws a long breath and takes out the
handkerchief again. Dabbing process.] Mother, has - something happened?
AMANDA:
I'll be all right in a minute, I'm just bewildered [Count five.] - by life. ...
LAURA:
Mother, I wish that you would tell me what's happened!
A M A N D
A: As you know, I was supposed to be inducted into my office at the D.A.R. this
afternoon. [IMAGE: A SWARM OF TYPEWRITERS.] But I stopped off at Rubicam's
business college to speak to your teachers about your having a cold and ask
them what progress they thought you were making down there.
LAURA:
Oh....
AMANDA: I went
to the typing instructor and introduced myself as your mother. She didn't know
who you were. Wingfield, she said. We don't have any such student enrolled at
the school!
I assured
her she did, that you had been going to classes since early in January.
'I wonder,'
she said, 'if you could be talking about that terribly shy little girl who
dropped out of school after only a few days' attendance?'
'No,' I
said, 'Laura, my daughter, has been going to school every day for the past six
weeks !'
'Excuse
me,' she said. She took the attendance book out and there was your name,
unmistakably printed, and all the dates you were absent until they decided that
you had dropped out of school.
I still
said, 'No, there must have been some mistake I There must have been some mix-up
in the records !'
And she
said, 'No - I remember her perfectly now. Her hands shook so that she couldn't
hit the right keys ! The first time we gave a speed-test, she broke down
completely - was sick at the stomach and almost had to be carried into the
wash-room! After that morning she never showed up any more. We phoned the house
but never got any answer' -while I was working at Famous and Barr, I suppose,
demonstrating those - Oh!
I felt so
weak I could barely keep on my feet !
I had to
sit down while they got me a glass of water !
Fifty
dollars' tuition, all of our plans - my hopes and ambition for you - just gone
up the spout, just gone up the spout like that. [LAURA draws a long breath and
gets awkwardly to her feet She crosses to the victrola and winds it up.]
What are
you doing?
LAURA: Oh I
[She releases the handle and returns to her seat.]
AMANDA:
Laura, where have you been going when you've gone on pretending that you were
going to business college ?
L A U RA:
I've just been going out walking.
AMANDA:
That's not true.
LAURA: It
is. I just went walking.
AMANDA:
Walking? Walking? In winter? Deliberately courting pneumonia in that light
coat? Where did you walk to, Laura?
LAURA: All
sorts of places - mostly in the park.
AMANDA: Even
after you'd started catching that cold?
LAURA: It
was the lesser of two evils, Mother. [IMAGE: WINTER SCENE IN PARK.] I couldn't
go back up. I threw up -on the floor !
AMANDA: From
half past seven till after five every day you mean to tell me you walked around
in the park, because you wanted to make me think that you were still going to
Rubicam's Business College?
LAURA: It
wasn't as bad as it sounds. I went inside places to get warmed up.
AMANDA:
Inside where?
LAURA: I
went in the art museum and the bird-houses at the Zoo. I visited the penguins
every day! Sometimes I did without lunch and went to the movies. Lately I've
been spending most of my afternoons in the jewel-box, that big glass-house
where they raise the tropical flowers.
AMANDA: You
did all this to deceive me, just for deception? [LAURA looks down.] Why?
LAURA:
Mother, when you're disappointed, you get that awful suffering look on your
face, like the picture of Jesus' mother in the museum !
AMANDA:
Hush !
LAURA: I
couldn't face it.
[Pause. A
whisper of strings.
LEGEND:
'THE CRUST OF HUMILITY'.]
AMANDA
[hopelessly fingering the huge pocketbook]: So what are we going to do the rest
of our lives? Stay home and watch the parades go by? Amuse ourselves with the
glass menagerie, darling? Eternally play those worn-out phonograph records your
father left as a painful reminder of him? We won't have a business career -
we've given that up because it gave us nervous indigestion ! [Laughs wearily.]
What is there left but dependency all our lives? I know so well what becomes of
unmarried women who aren't prepared to occupy a position. I've seen such
pitiful cases in the South - barely tolerated spinsters living upon the
grudging patronage of sister's husband or brother's wife ! - stuck away in some
little mousetrap of a room - encouraged by one in-law to visit another - little
birdlike women without any nest - eating the crust of humility all their life !
Is that the
future that we've mapped out for ourselves? I swear it's the only alternative I
can think of !
It isn't a
very pleasant alternative, is it? Of course - some girls do marry!
[LAURA
twists her hands nervously.]
Haven't you
ever liked some boy?
LAURA: Yes.
I liked one once. [Rises.] I came across his picture a while ago.
AMANDA
[with some interest]. He gave you his picture?
LAURA: No,
it's in the year-book.
AMANDA:
[disappointed]: Oh - a high-school boy.
[SCREEN IMAGE:
JIM AS HIGH-SCHOOL HERO BEARING A SILVER CUP.]
LAURA: Yes.
His name was Jim. [LAURA lifts the heavy annual from the claw-foot table.] Here
he is in The Pirates of Penzance.
AMANDA
[absently]: The what?
LAURA: The
operetta the senior class put on. He had a wonderful voice and we sat across
the aisle from each other Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays in the Aud. Here he
is with the silver cup for debating !See his grin?
AMANDA
[absently]: He must have had a jolly disposition.
LAURA: He
used to call me - Blue Roses.
[IMAGE:
BLUE ROSES.]
AMANDA: Why
did he call you such a name as that?
LAURA: When
I had that attack of pleurosis - he asked me what was the matter when I came
back. I Said pleurosis he thought that I said Blue Roses ! So that's what he
always called me after that. Whenever he saw me, he'd holler, 'Hello, Blue
Roses ! I didn't care for the girl that he went out with. Emily Meisenbach.
Emily was the best-dressed girl at Soldan. She never struck me, though, as
being sincere. . . . It says in the Personal Section - they're engaged. That's
- six years ago ! They must be married by now.
AMANDA:
Girls that aren't cut out for business careers usually wind up married to some
nice man. [Gets up with aspark of revival.] Sister, that's what you'll do !
[LAURA
utters a startled, doubtful laugh. She reaches quickly for a piece of glass.]
LAURA: But,
Mother
AMANDA: Yes
? [Crossing to photograph.]
LAURA [in a
tone of frightened apology]: I'm - crippled !
[IMAGE:
SCREEN.]
AMANDA: Nonsense
! Laura, I've told you never, never to use that word. Why, you're not crippled,
you just have a little defect - hardly noticeable, even! When people have some
slight disadvantage like that, they cultivate other things to make up for it -
develop charm - and vivacity and - charm! That's all you have to do ![She turns
again to the photograph.] One thing your father had plenty of - was charm!
[Tom
motions to the fiddle in the wings.]
THE SCENE
FADES OUT WITH MUSIC
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: 'AFTER THE FIASCO'
[TOM speaks
from the fire-escape landing.]
TOM: After
the fiasco at Rubicam's Business College, the idea of getting a gentleman
caller for Laura began to play a more and more important part in Mother's
calculations. It became an obsession. Like some archetype of the universal
unconscious, the image of the gentleman caller haunted our small apartment. ...
IMAGE:
YOUNG MAN AT DOOR WITH FLOWERS.]
An evening
at home rarely passed without some allusion to this image, this spectre, this
hope.
Even when he
wasn't mentioned, his presence hung in Mother's preoccupied look and in my
sister's frightened, apologetic manner - hung like a sentence passed upon the
Wingfields !
Mother was
a woman of action as well as words.
She began
to take logical steps in the planned direction. Late that winter and in the
early spring - realizing that extra money would be needed to properly feather
the nest and plume the bird - she conducted a vigorous campaign on the-
telephone, roping in subscribers to one of those magazines for matrons called
The Home-maker's Companion, the type of journal that features the serialized ,
sublimations of ladies of letters who think in terms of delicate cup-like
breasts, slim, tapering waists, rich, creamy thighs, eyes like wood-smoke in
autumn, fingers that soothe and caress like strains of music, bodies as
powerful as Etruscan sculpture.
[SCREEN
IMAGE: GLAMOUR MAGAZINE COVER.]
[A M A N D
A enters with phone on long extension cord. She is spotted in the dim state.]
A M A N D A:
Ida Scott? This is Amanda Wingfield! We missed you at the D.A.R. last Monday! I
said to myself: She's probably suffering with that sinus condition ! How is
that sinus condition? Horrors ! Heaven have mercy !- You're a Christian martyr,
yes, that's what you are, a Christian martyr !
Well, I
just have happened to notice that your subscription to the Companion's about to
expire! Yes, it expires with the next issue, honey !- just when that wonderful
new serial by Bessie Mae Hopper is getting off to such an exciting start. Oh,
honey, it's something that you can't miss !You remember how 'Gone With the
Wind' took everybody by storm? You simply couldn't go out if you hadn't read
it. All everybody talked was Scarlet O'Hara. Well, this is a book that critics
already compare to Gone With the Wind. It's the 'Gone With the Wind' of the
post-World War generation! - What? -Burning !- Oh, honey, don't let them bum,
go take a look in the oven and I'll hold the wire! Heavens - I think she's hung
up !
[DIM OUT]
[LEGEND ON
SCREEN: 'YOU THINK I'M IN LOVE WITH CONTINENTAL SHOEMAKERS?']
[Before the
stage is lighted, the violent voices Of TOM and AMANDA are heard.
They are
quarrelling behind the portières. In front of them stands LAURA with clenched
hands and panicky expression. A clear pool of light on her figure throughout
this scene.]
TOM: What
in Christ's name am !
AMANDA
[shrilly]: Don't you use that -
TOM:
Supposed to do !
AMANDA:
Expression !Not in my -
TOM: Ohhh!
!
AMANDA:
Presence ! Have you gone out of your senses?
TOM: I
have, that's true, driven out !
AMANDA:
What is the matter with you, you - big - big IDIOT !
TOM: Look
!- I've got no thing, no single thing !
AMANDA:
Lower Your Voice !
TOM: In my life
here that I can call my OWN ! Everything is -
AMANDA:
Stop that shouting !
TOM:
Yesterday you confiscated my books ! You had the nerve to -
AMANDA: I
took that horrible novel back to the library- yes ! That hideous book by that
insane Mr. Lawrence. [Tom laughs wildly.] I cannot control the output of
diseased minds or people who cater to them - [Tom laughs still more wildly.]
BUT I WON'T ALLOW SUCH FILTH BROUGHT INTO MY HOUSE ! NO, no, no, no, no !
TOM: House,
house ! Who pays rent on it, who makes a slave of himself to -
AMANDA
[fairly screeching]: Don't you DARE to -
TOM: No,
no, I mustn't say things ! I've got to just -
AMANDA: Let
me tell you-
TOM: I
don't want to hear any more! [He tears the portières open. The upstage area is
lit with a turgid smoky red glow.]
[AMANDA's
hair is in metal curlers and she wears a very old bathrobe much too large for
her slight figure, a relic of the faithless Mr Wingfield. An upright typewriter
and a wild disarray of manuscripts are on the drop-leaf table. The quarrel was
probably precipitated by his creative labour. A chair lying overthrown on the
floor.
Their
gesticulating shadows are cast on the ceiling by the fiery glow.]
AMANDA: You
will hear more, you -
TOM: No, I
won' t hear more, I'm going out !
AMANDA: You
come right back in -
TOM: Out,
out, out ! Because I'm -
A M A N D
A: Come back here, Tom Wingfield ! I'm not through talking to you !
TOM: Oh, go
-
LAURA
[desperately]: Tom !
AMANDA: You're
going to listen, and no more insolence from you ! I'm at the end of my patience
!
[He comes
back toward her.]
TOM: What
do you think I'm at? Aren't I supposed to have any patience to reach the end
of, Mother? I know, I know. It seems unimportant to you, what I'm doing - what
I want to do - having a little difference between them !You don't think that -
AMANDA: I
think you've been doing things that you're ashamed of. That's why you act like
this. I don't believe that you go every night to the movies. Nobody goes to the
movies night after night. Nobody in their right mind goes to the movies as
often as you pretend to. People don't go to the movies at nearly midnight, and
movies don't let out at two a.m. Come in stumbling. Muttering to yourself like a
maniac! You get three hours' sleep and then go to work. Oh, I can picture the
way you're doing down there. Moping, doping, because you're in no condition.
TOM
[wildly]: No, I'm in no condition !
AMANDA:
What right have you got to jeopardize your job - jeopardize the security of us
all? How do you think we'd manage if you were -
TOM: Listen
!You think I'm crazy about the warehouse? [He bonds fiercely toward her slight
figure.] You think I'm in love with the Continental Shoemakers? You think I
want to spend fifty-five years down there in that - celotex interior! with -
fluorescent - tubes! Look! I'd rather somebody picked up a crowbar and battered
out my brains - than go back mornings! I go ! Every time you come in yelling………
that God
damn 'Rise and Shine!'- 'Rise and Shine!' I say to myself, 'How lucky dead
people are ! 'But I get up. I go! For sixty-five dollars a month I give up all
that I dream of doing and being ever! And you say self - selfs' all I ever
think of. Why, listen, if self is what I thought of, Mother, I'd be where he is
-G 0 N E ! [Pointing to fathers picture.] As far as the system of
transportation reaches ! [He starts past her. She grabs his arm.] Don't grab at
me, Mother !
AMANDA:
Where are you going?
TOM: I'm
going to the movies!
AMANDA: I
don't believe that lie !
TOM
[crouching toward her, overtowering her tiny figure. She backs away, gasping]:
I'm going to opium dens ! Yes, opium dens, dens of vice and criminals'
hang-outs, Mother. I've joined the Hogan gang, I'm a hired assassin, I carry a
tommy-gun in a violin case! I run a string of cat-houses in the Valley! They
call me Killer, Killer Wingfield, I'm leading a double-life, a simple, honest
warehouse worker by day, by night a dynamic tsar of the underworld, Mother. I
go to gambling casinos, I spin away fortunes on the roulette table ! I wear a
patch over one eye and a false moustache, sometimes I put on green whiskers. On
those occasions they call me -El Diablo ! Oh, I could tell you things to make
you sleepless ! My enemies plan to dynamite this place. They're going to blow
us all sky-high some night ! I'll be glad, very happy, and so will you ! You'll
go up, up on a broomstick, over Blue Mountain with seventeen gentlemen callers!
You ugly - babbling old - witch. [He goes through a series of violent, clumsy
movements, seizing his overcoat, lunging to do door, pulling it fiercely open.
The women watch him, aghast. His arm catches in the sleeve of the coat as he
struggles to pull it on. For a moment he is pinioned by the bulky garment. With
an outraged groan he tears the coat of again, splitting the shoulder of it, and
hurls it across the room. It strikes against the shelf of Laura's glass
collection, there is a tinkle of shattering glass. LAURA cries out as if
wounded.]
[MUSIC.
LEGEND: 'THE GLASS MENAGERIE'.]
L A U R A
[shrilly] : My glass ! - menagerie. . . . [She covers her face and turns away.]
[But AMANDA
is still stunned and stupefied by the 'ugly witch' so that she barely notices
this occurrence. Now she recovers her speech.]
AMANDA [in
an awful voice]: I won't speak to you - until you apologize ! [She crosses
through portières and draws them together behind her. TOM is left with LAURA.
LAURA Clings weakly to the mantel with her face averted. TOM stares at her stupidly
for a moment. Then he crosses to shelf. Drops awkwardly on his knees to collect
the fallen glass, glancing at LAURA as if he would speak but couldn't.]
'The Glass
Menagerie' steals in as
THE SCENE
DIMS OUT
The
interior is dark. Faint light in the alley.
A
deep-voiced bell in a church is tolling the hour of five as the scene
commences.
[Tom
appears at the top of the alley. After each solemn boom of the bell in the
tower, he shakes a little noise-maker or rattle as
if to
express the tiny spasm of man in contrast to the sustained power and dignity of
the Almighty. This and the unsteadiness of his advance make it evident that he
has been drinking.
As he
climbs Me few steps to the fire-escape landing light steals up inside. Laura
appears in night-dress observing Tom's empty bed in the front room.
TOM fishes
in his pockets for door-key removing a motley assortment of articles in the
search, including a perfect shower
of
movie-ticket stubs and an empty bottle. At last he finds the key, but just as he
is about to insert it, it slips from his fingers. He strikes a match and
crouches below the door.]
TOM
[bitterly]:: One crack -and it falls through !
[LAURA
opens the door.]
LAURA: Tom
! Tom, what are you doing?
TOM:
Looking for a door-key.
LAURA:
Where have you been all this time?
TOM: I have
been to the movies.
LAURA: All
this time at the movies?
TO M: There
was a very long programme. There was a Garbo picture and a Mickey Mouse and a
travelogue and a newsreel and a preview of coming attractions. And there was an
organ solo and a collection for the milk-fund - simultaneously - which ended up
in a terrible fight between a fat lady and an usher !
LAURA
[innocently]: Did you have to stay through everything?
TOM: Of
course ! And, oh, I forgot ! There was a big stage show ! The headliner on this
stage show was Malvolio the
Magician.
He performed wonderful tricks, many of them, such as pouriing water back and
forth between pitchers.
First it
turned to wine and then it turned to beer and then it turned to whisky. I knew
it was whisky it finally turned
into
because he needed somebody to come up out of the audience to help him, and I
came up - both shows ! It was
Kentucky
Straight Bourbon. A very generous fellow, he gave souvenirs. (He pulls from his
back pocket a shimmering
rainbow-coloured
scarf.) He gave me this. This is his magic scarf. You can have it, Laura. You
wave it over a canary
cage and
you get a bowl of gold- fish. You wave it over the gold-fish bowl and they fly
away canaries. . . . But the
wonderfullest
trick of all was the coffin trick. We nailed him into a coffin and he got out
of the coffin without rernoving one nail, [He has come inside.] There is a
trick that would come in handy for me - get me out of this 2 by 4 situation !
[Flops on to a bed and starts removing shoes.]
LAURA: Tom
? Shhh'!
TO M:
What're you shushing me for?
LAURA:
You'll wake up mother.
TOM: Goody,
goody ! Pay 'er back for all those 'Rise an' Shines'. [Lies down, groaning.]
You know it don't take much intelligence to get yourself into a nailed-up
coffin, Laura. But who in hell ever got himself out of one without removing one
nail?
[As if in
answer, the father's grinning photograph lights up.]
[SCENE DIMS
OUT.]
[Immediately
following: The church bell is heard striking six. At the sixth stroke the alarm
clock goes off in AMANDA's room, and after a few moments we hear her calling
"Rise and Shine! Rise and Shine! Laura, go tell your brother to rise and
shine!']
TOM
[sitting up slowly]: I'll rise -but I won't shine
[The light
increases.]
AMANDA:
Laura, tell your brother his coffee is ready.
[LAURA
slips into front room.]
LAURA:
Tom!- It's nearly seven. Don't make mother nervous. [He stares at her stupidly.
Beseechingly.] Tom, speak to mother this morning. Make up with her, apologize,
speak to her !
TOM: She
won't to me. It's her that started not speaking.
LAURA: If
you just say you're sorry she'll start speaking.
TOM: Her
not speaking - is that such a tragedy?
LAURA:
Please - please !
AMANDA
[calling from kitchenette]: Laura, are you going to do what I asked you to do,
or do I have to get dressed and go out myself?
LAURA:
Going, going - soon as I get on my coat ![She pulls on a shapeless felt hat
with nervous, jerky movement, pleadingly
glancing at
TOM. Rushes awkwardly for coat. The coat is one of AMANDA's, inaccurately
made-over the sleeves too short for LAURA.] Butter and what else?
AMANDA
[centering upstage]: Just butter. Tell them to charge it.
LAURA: Mother,
they make such faces when I do that
AMANDA:
Sticks and stones can break our bones, but the expression on Mr Garfinkel's
face won't harm us ! Tell your his coffee is getting cold.
LAURA [at
door]: Do what I asked you, will you, will you,
TOM?
[He looks
sullenly away.]
AMANDA:
Laura, go now or just don't go at all !
LAURA
[rushing out]: Going -going! [A second later she cries Out. TOM Springs up and
crosses to door. AMANDA rushes anxiously in. TOM opens the door.]
TOM: Laura?
LAURA: I'm all
right. I slipped, but I'm all right.
AMANDA
[peering anxiously after her]: If anyone breaks a leg on those fire-escape
steps, the landlord ought to be sued for every cent he possesses ! [She shuts
door. Remembers she isn't speaking and returns to other room.]
[As TOM
enters listlessly for his coffee she turns her back to him and stands rigidly
facing the window on the gloomy gray vault of the areaway. Its light on her
face with its aged but childish features is cruelly sharp, satirical as a
Daumier print.
MUSIC
UNDER: 'AVE MARIA'.
TOM glances
sheepishly but sullenly at her averted figure and slumps at the table. The
coffee is scalding hot; he sips it and gasps and spits it back in the cup. At
his gasp, AMANDA catches her breath and half turns. Then catches herself and
turns back to window.
Tom blows
on his coffee, glancing sidewise at his mother. She clears her throat. TOM
clears his. He starts to rise. Sinks back down again, scratches his head,
clears his throat again. AMANDA Coughs. TOM raises his cup in both hands to
blow on it - his eyes staring over the rim of it at his mother for several
moments. Then he slowly sets the cup down and awkwardly and hesitantly rises
from the chair.]
TOM
[hoarsely]: Mother. ! - I apologize, Mother. [AMANDA draws a quick, shuddering
breath. Her face works grotesquely. She breaks into childlike tears.] I'm sorry
for what I said, for everything that I said; I didn't mean it.
AMANDA
[sobbingly]: My devotion has made me a witch and so I make myself hateful to my
children !
TOM: NO,
you don't.
AMANDA: I
worry so much, don't sleep, it makes me nervous!
TOM
[gently]: I understand that.
AMANDA:
I've had to put up a solitary battle all these years. But you're my right-hand
bower ! Don't fall down, don't fail !
TOM [gently]:
I try, Mother.
AMANDA
[with great enthusiasm]: Try and you will suCCEED ! [ The notion makes her
breathless] Why, you -you're just full of natural endowments ! Both of my
children - they're unusual children ! Don't you think I know it? I'm so proud!
Happy and - feel I've - so much to be thankful for but - Promise me one thing,
Son !
TOM: What,
Mother?
AMANDA:
Promise, Son, you'll - never be a drunkard !
TOM [turns
to her grinning]: I will never be a drunkard, Mother.
AMANDA:
That's what frightened me so, that you'd be drinking ! Eat a bowl of Purina !
TOM: Just
Coffee, Mother.
AMANDA:
Shredded wheat biscuit?
Tom: No.
No, Mother, just coffee.
AMANDA: You
can't put in a day's work on an empty stomach. You've got ten minutes - don't
gulp ! Drinking
too hot
liquids makes cancer of the stomach. Put cream in.
TOM: No,
thank you.
AMANDA: To
cool it.
TOM . No!
No, thank you, I want it black.
AMANDA: I
know, but it's not good for you. We have to do all that we can to build ourselves
up. In these trying times we live in, all that we have to cling to is - each
other. . . . That's why it's so important to - Tom, ! - I sent out your sister
so I could discuss something with you. If you hadn't spoken I would have spoken
to you. [Sits down.]
TOM
[gently]: What is it, Mother, that you want to discuss?
AMANDA:
Laura!
[Tom puts
his cup down slowly.
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: 'LAURA.'
MUSIC: '
THE GLASS MENAGERIE']
TOM: - Oh.
- Laura ...
AMANDA
[touching his sleeve] You know how Laura is. So quiet but - still water runs
deep ! She notices things and I think she - broods about them. [Tom looks up.]
A few days ago I came in and she was crying.
TOM: What
about?
AMANDA:
YOU.
TOM: Me?
AMANDA: She
has an idea that you're not happy here
TOM: What
gave her that idea?
AMANDA:
What gives her any idea? However, you do act strangely. ! - I'm not
criticizing, understand that! I know your ambitions do not lie in the warehouse,
that like everybody in the whole wide world - you've had to make sacrifices,
but - Tom - Tom - life's not easy, it calls for - Spartan endurance ! There's
so many things in my heart that I cannot describe to you ! I've never told you
but - I loved your father. . . .
TOM
[gently] : I know that, Mother.
AMANDA: And
you - when I see you taking after his ways ! Staying out late - and - well, you
had been drinking the night you were in that - terrifying condition ! Laura
says that you hate the apartment and that you go out nights to get away from
it! Is that true, Tom?
TOM: No.
You say there's so much in your heart that you can't describe to me. That's
true of me, too. There's so much in my heart that I can't describe to"you!
So let's respect each other's -
AMANDA:
But, why - why, Tom - am you always so restless? Where do you go to, nights?
TOM: I - go
to the movies.
AMANDA: Why
do you go to the movies so much, Tom?
TO M: I go
to the movies because - I like adventure
Adventure
is something I don't have much of at work, so I go to the movies.
AMANDA:
But, Tom, you go to the movies entirely too much !
TOM: I like
a lot of adventure.
[AMANDA
looks baffled, then hurt As the familiar inquisition resumes he becomes hard
and impatient again. AMANDA SLIPS back into her querulous attitude towards him.
IMAGE ON
SCREEN: SAILING VESSEL WITH JOLLY ROGER.]
AMANDA:
Most young men find adventure in their careers.
TOM: Then
most young men are not employed in a warehouse.
AMANDA: The
world is full of young men employed in warehouses and offices and factories.
TOM: Do all
of them find adventure in their careers?
AMANDA:
They do or they do without it! Not everybody has a craze for adventure.
TOM: Man is
by instinct a lover, a hunter, a fighter, and none of those instincts are given
much play at the warehouse !
AMANDA: Man
is by instinct! Don't quote instinct to me! Instinct is something that people
have got away from ! It belongs to animals ! Christian adults don't want it !
TOM: , What
do Christian adults want, then, Mother?
AMANDA:
Superior things! Things of the mind and the spirit ! Only animals have to
satisfy instincts ! Surely your aims are somewhat higher than theirs ! Than
monkeys - pigs
TOM: I
reckon they're not.
AMANDA:
You're joking. However, that isn't what I wanted to discuss.
TOM
[rising] I haven't much time.
AMANDA
[pushing his shoulders] Sit down.
TOM: You
want me to punch in red at the warehouse, Mother?
AMANDA: You
have five minutes. I want to talk about Laura.
[LEGEND:
'PLANS AND PROVISIONS'.]
TOM: All
right! What about Laura?
AMANDA: We
have to be making some plans and provisions for her. She's older than you, two
years, and nothing has happened. She just drifts along doing nothing. It frightens
me terribly how she just drifts along.
TOM: I
guess she's the type that people call home girls.
AMANDA:
There's no such type, and if there is, it's a pity ! That is unless the home is
hers, with a husband !
TOM: What?
AMANDA: Oh,
I can see the handwriting on the wall as plain as I see the nose in front of my
face ! It's terrifying ! More and more you remind me of your father ! He was
out all hours without explanation ! - Then left ! Good-bye ! And me with the
bag to hold. I saw that letter you got from the Merchant Marine. I know what
you're dreaming of. I'm not standing here blindfolded.
Very well,
then. Then, do it ! But not till there's somebody to take your place.
TOM: What
do you mean?
AMANDA: I
mean that as soon as Laura has got somebody to take care of her, married, a
home of her own, independent ?- why, then you'll be free to go wherever you
please, on land, on sea, whichever way the wind blows you !
But until
that time you've got to look out for your sister. I don't say me because I'm
old and don't matter - I say for your sister because she's young and dependent.
I put her
in business college - a dismal failure ! Frightened her so it made her sick at
the stomach.
I took her
over to the Young Peoples League at the church. Another fiasco. She spoke to
nobody, nobody spoke to her. Now all she does is fool with those pieces of
glass and play those worn-out records. What kind of a life is that for a girl
to lead?
TOM: What
can I do about it?
AMANDA:
Overcome Selfishness ! Self, self, self is all that you ever think of !
[Tom
springs up and crosses to got his coat. It is ugly and bulky He pulls on a cap
with earmuffs.]
Where is
your muffler? Put your wool muffler on ! [He snatches it angrily from the
closet and tosses it around his neck and pulls both ends tight.] Tom ! I
haven't said what I had in mind to ask you.
TOM: I'm
too late to
AMANDA
[catching his arm - very importunately. Then shyly]: Down at the warehouse,
aren't there some - nice young men?
TOM: No !
AMANDA: There
must be - some
TOM: Mother
[Gesture.]
AMANDA:
Find out one that's clean-living - doesn't drink and - ask him out for sister !
TOM: What?
AMANDA: For
sister ! To meet ! Get acquainted
TOM
[stamping to door]: Oh, my go- osh !
AMANDA: Will
you? [He opens door. Imploringly.] Will you? [He starts down.] Will you? Will
you, dear?
TOM
[calling back]: YES !
[AMANDA
closes the door hesitantly and with a troubled but faintly hopful expression.
SCREEN
IMAGE: GLAMOUR MAGAZINE COVER. Spot AMANDA at phone.]
AMANDA:
Ella Cartwright? This is Amanda Wingfield !How are you, honey?
How is that
kidney condition?
[Count
Five]
Horrors!
[Count
five.]
You're a
Christian martyr, yes, honey, that's what you are, a Christian martyr!
Well, I just
now happened to notice in my little red book that your subscription to the
Companion has just run out! I knew that you wouldn't want to miss out on the
wonderful serial starting in this issue. It's by Bessie Mae Hopper, the first
thing she's written since Honeymoon for Three.
Wasn't that
a strange and interesting story? Well, this one is even lovelier, I believe. It
has a sophisticated, society background. It's all about the horsy set on Long
Island!
FADE OUT
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: 'ANNUNCIATION'. Fade With music.
[It is
early dusk on a spring evening. Supper has jot been finished in the Wingfield
apartment. AMANDA and LAURA in light-coloured dresses are removing dishes from
the table, in the upstage area, which is shadowy, their movements formalized
almost as a dance or ritual their moving forms as pale and silent as moths.
TOM, in
white shirt and trousers, rises from do table and crosses toward the
fire-escape.]
AMANDA [As
he passes her]: Son, Will you do me a favour?
TOM: What?
AMANDA:
Comb your hair! You look so pretty when your hair is combed! [Tom slouches on
sofa with evening paper. Enormous caption 'Franco Triumphs'.] There is only one
respect in which I would like you to emulate your father.
TOM: What
respect is that?
AMANDA: The
care he always took of his appearance. He never allowed himself to look untidy.
[He throws down the paper and crosses to fire-escape] Where are you going?
TOM: I'm
going out to smoke.
AMANDA: You
smoke too much. A pack a day at fifteen cents a pack. How much would that
amount to in a month? Thirty times fifteen is how much, Tom? Figure it out and
you will be astounded at what you could save. Enough to give you a night-school
course in accounting at Washington U ! Just think what a wonderful thing that
would be for you, Son !
[TOM is
unmoved by the thought.]
TOM: I'd
rather smoke. [He steps out on the landing letting the screen door slam.]
AMANDA
[sharply]: I know !That's the tragedy of it. [Alone, she turns to look at her
husband's picture.]
[DANCE
MUSIC: 'ALL THE WORLD IS WAITING FOR THE SUNRISE !']
TOM [to the
audience]: Across the alley from us was the Paradise Dance Hall. On evenings in
spring the windows and doors were open and the music came outdoors. Sometimes
the lights were turned out except for a large glass sphere that hung from the
ceiling. It would turn slowly about and filter the dusk with delicate rainbow
colours. Then the orchestra played a waltz or a tango, something that had a
slow and sensuous rhythm. Couples would come outside, to the relative privacy
of the alley. You could see them kissing behind ash-pits and telegraph poles.
This was
the compensation for lives that passed like mine, without any change or
adventure.
Adventure
and change were imminent in this year. They were waiting around the corner for
all these kids.
Suspended
in the mist over Berchtesgaden, caught in the folds of Chamberlain's umbrella.
In Spain there was Guernica!
But here
there was only hot swing music and liquor, dance halls, ban, and movies, and
sex that hung in the gloom like a chandelier and flooded the world with brief,
deceptive rainbows. ...
All the
world was waiting for bombardments !
[AMANDA
turns front de picture and comes outside.]
AMANDA
[sighing]: A fire-escape landing's a poor excuse for a porch. [She spreads a
newspaper on a step and sits down grace and demurely as if she were settling
into a swing on a Mississippi veranda.] What are you looking at?
TOM: The
moon.
AMANDA: Is
there a moon this evening?
TOM: It's
rising over Garfinkel's Delicatessen.
AMANDA: So
it is ! A little silver slipper of a moon. Have you made a wish on it yet?
TOM:
Um-hum.
AMANDA:
What did you wish for?
TOM: That's
a secret.
AMANDA: A secret,
huh? Well, I won't tell mine either. I will be just as mysterious as you.
TOM: I bet
I can guess what yours is.
AMANDA: Is
my head so transparent?
TOM: You're
not a sphinx.
AMANDA: No,
I don't have secrets. I'll tell you what I wished for on the moon. Success and
happiness for my precious children! I wish for that whenever there's a moon,
and when there isn't a moon, I wish for it, too.
TOM: I
thought perhaps you wished for a gentleman caller.
AMANDA: Why
do you say that?
TOM: Don't
you remember asking me to fetch one?
AMANDA: I
remember suggesting that it would be nice for your sister if you brought home
some nice young
from the
warehouse. I think that I've made that suggestion more than once.
TOM: Yes,
you have made it repeatedly.
AMANDA:
Well?
TOM: We are
going to have One.
AMANDA:
What?
TOM: A
gentleman caller !
[THE
ANNUNCIATION IS CELEBRATED WITH MUSIC. AMANDA rises
IMAGE ON
SCREEN: CALLER WITH BOUQUET.]
AMANDA: You
mean you have asked some nice young man to come over?
TOM: Yep.
I've asked him to dinner.
AMANDA: You
really did?
TOM: I did
!
AMANDA: You
did, and did he - accept?
TOM: He did
!
AMANDA:
Well, Well ? Well, well ! That's -lovely !
TOM: I
thought that you would be pleased.
AMANDA:
It's definite, then?
TOM: Very
definite.
AMANDA:
Soon?
TOM: Very
soon.
AMANDA: For
heaven's sake, stop putting on and tell me some things, will you?
TOM: What
things do you want me to tell you?
AMANDA: Naturally
I would like to know when he's coming!
TOM: He's
coming tomorrow.
AMANDA:
Tomorrow?
TOM: Yep.
Tomorrow.
AMANDA:
But, Tom !
TOM: Yes,
Mother?
AMANDA:
Tomorrow gives me no time I
TOM: Time
for what?
AMANDA:
Preparations! Why didn't you phone me at once, as soon as you asked him, the
minute that he accepted? Then, don't you see, I could have been getting ready!
TOM: You
don't have to make any fuss.
AMANDA: Oh,
Tom, Tom, Tom, of course I have to make a fuss! I want things nice, not sloppy!
Not thrown together. I'll certainly have to do some fast thinking, won't I?
TOM: I
don't see why you have to think at all.
AMANDA: You
just don't know. We can't have a gentleman caller in a pigsty ! All my wedding silver
has to be polished, the monogrammed table linen ought to be laundered ! The
windows have to be washed and fresh curtains put up. And how about clothes? We
have to wear something, don't we?
TOM:
Mother, this boy is no one to make a fuss over !
AMANDA: Do
you realize he's the first young man we've introduced to your sister?It's
terrible, dreadful, disgraceful that poor little sister has never received a
single gentleman caller ! Tom, come inside! [She opens the screen door.]
TOM: What
for?
AMANDA: I
want to ask you some things.
TOM: If
you're going to make such a fuss, I'll call it off, I'll tell him not to come !
AMANDA: You
certainly won't do anything of the kind. Nothing offends people worse than
broken engagements. It simply means I'll have to work like a Turk ! We won't be
brilliant, but we will pass inspection. Come on inside. [Tom follows,
groaning.] Sit down.
TOM Any
particular place you would like me to sit?
AMANDA:
Thank heavens I've got that new sofa ! I'm also making payments on a floor lamp
I'll have sent out ! And put the chintz covers on, they'll brighten things up !
Of course I'd hoped to have these walls re-papered. ... What is the young man's
name?
TOM: His
name is O'Connor.
AMANDA:
That, of course, means fish- tomorrow is Friday ! I'll have that salmon loaf -
with Durkee's dressing ! What does he do? He works at the warehouse?
TOM: Of
course ! How else would -
AMANDA:
Tom, he - doesn't drink?
TOM: Why do
you ask me that?
AMANDA:
Your father did!
TOM: Don't get
started on that !
AMANDA: He
does drink, then?
TOM: Not
that I know of !
AMANDA:
Make sure, be certain ! The last thing I want for my daughter's a boy who
drinks !
TOM: Aren't
you being a little bit premature? Mr O'Connor has not yet appeared on the scene
!
AMANDA: But
will tomorrow. To meet your sister, and what do I know about his character?
Nothing ! Old maids are better off than wives of drunkards !
TOM: Oh, my
God !
AMANDA: Be
still !
TOM
[leaning forward to whisper]: Lots of fellows meet girls whom they don't marry
!
AMANDA: Oh,
talk sensibly, Tom - and don't be sarcastic !
[She has
gotten a hairbrush.]
TOM: What
are you doing?
AMANDA: I'm
brushing that cow-lick down ! What is this young man's position at the
warehouse?
TOM [submitting
grimly to the brush and the interrogation]: This young man's position is that
of a shipping clerk, Mother.
AMANDA:
Sounds to me like a fairly responsible job, the sort of a job you would be in
if you just had more get-up.
What is his
salary? Have you any idea?
TOM: I
would judge it to be approximately eighty-five dollars a month.
AMANDA:
Well - not princely, but
TOM: Twenty
more than I make.
AMANDA:
Yes, how well I know! But for a family man, eighty-five dollars a month is not much
more than you can just get by on. . . .
TOM: Yes.
but Mr O'Connor is not a family man.
AMANDA: He
might be, mightn't he? Some time in the future ?
TOM: I see.
Plans and provisions.
AMANDA: You
are the only young man that I know of who ignores the fact that the future
becomes the present, the present the past, and the past turns into everlasting
regret if you don't plan for it!
TOM: I will
think that over and see what I can make of it.
AMANDA:
Don't be supercilious with your mother ! Tell me some more about this - what do
you call him?
TOM: James
D. O'Connor. The D. is for Delaney.
AMANDA:
Irish on both sides! Gracious! And doesn't drink?
TOM: Shall
I call him up and ask him right this minute?
AMANDA: The
only way to find out about those things is to make discreet inquiries at the
proper moment. When I was a girl in Blue Mountain and it was suspected that a
young man drank, the girl whose attentions he had been receiving, if any girl
was, would sometimes speak to the minister of his church, or rather her father
would if her father was living, and sort of feel him out on the young man's
character. That is the way such things are discreetly handled to keep a young
woman from making a tragic mistake !
TOM: Then
how did you happen to make a tragic mistake !
AMANDA:
That innocent look of your father's had everyone fooled ! He smiled - the world
was enchanted !
No girl can
do worse than put herself at the mercy of a handsome appearance !
I hope that
Mr O'Connor is not too good-looking.
TOM: No,
he's not too good-looking. He's covered with freckles and hasn't too much of a
now.
AMANDA:
He's not right-down homely, though?
TOM: Not
right-down homely. Just medium homely, I'd say.
AMANDA:
Character's what to look for in a man.
TOM: That's
what I've always said, Mother.
AMANDA:
You've never said anything of the kind and I suspect you would never give it a
thought.
TOM: Don't
be so suspicious of me.
AMANDA: At
least I hope he's the type that's up and coming.
TOM: I
think he really goes in for self-improvement.
AMANDA:
What reason have you to think so?
TOM: He
goes to night school.
AMANDA
[beaming]: Splendid ! What does he do, I mean study ?
TOM: Radio
engineering and public speaking !
AMANDA:
Then he has visions of being advanced in the world! Any young man who studies
public speaking is aiming to have an executive job some day !
And radio
engineering- A thing for the future !
Both of
these facts are very illuminating. Those are the sort of things that a mother
should know concerning any young man who comes to call on her daughter.
Seriously or - not.
TOM: One
little warning. He doesn't know about Laura. I didn't let on that we had dark
ulterior motives. I just said, why don't you come and have dinner with us? He
said okay and that was the whole conversation.
AMANDA: I
bet it was! You're eloquent as an oyster.
However,
he'll know about Laura when he gets here. When he sees how lovely and sweet and
pretty she is, he'll thank his lucky stars be was asked to dinner.
TOM:
Mother, you mustn't expect too much of Laura.
AMANDA:
What do you mean?
TOM: Laura
seems all those things to you and me because she's ours and we love her. We
don't even notice she's crippled any more.
AMANDA: Don't
say crippled ! You know that I never allow that word to be used !
TOM: But
face facts, Mother. She is and - that's not all
AMANDA:
What do you mean "not all'?
TOM: Laura
is very different from other girls
AMANDA: I
think the difference is all to her advantage.
TOM: Not
quite all - in the eyes of others - strangers - she's terribly shy and lives in
a world of her own and those things make her seem a little peculiar to people
outside the house.
AMANDA:
Don't say peculiar.
TOM: Face the
facts. She is.
[THE
DANCE-HALL MUSIC CHANGES TO A TANGO THAT HAS A MINOR AND SOMEWHAT OMINOUS
TONE.]
AMANDA: In
what way is she peculiar - may I ask?
TOM
[gently]: She lives in a world of her own - a world of little glass ornaments,
Mother. . . . [Gets Up. AMANDA remains holding brush, looking at him,
troubled.] She plays old phonograph records and - that's about all - [He
glances at himself in the mirror and crosses to door.]
AMANDA
[sharply]: Where are you going?
TOM: I'm
going to the movies. [Out screen door.]
AMANDA: Not
to the movies, every night to the movies! [Follows quickly to screen door.] I
don't believe you always go to the movies! [He is gone. AMANDA looks worriedly
after him for a moment. Then vitality and optimism return and she turns from
the door. Crossing to portières.] Laura ! Laura ![LAURA answers from
kitchenette.]
LAURA: Yes,
Mother.
AMANDA: Let
those dishes go and come in front ! [LAURA appears with dish towel. Gaily.]
Laura, come here and make a wish on the moon !
[SCREEN
IMAGE: MOON.]
LAURA
[entering]: Moon - moon?
AMANDA: A
little silver slipper of a moon. Look over your left shoulder, Laura, and make
a wish !
[LAURA
looks faintly puzzled as if called out of sleep. AMANDA seizes her shoulders and
turns her at an angle by the door.] Now ! Now, darling, wish !
LAURA: What
shall I wish for, Mother?
AMANDA [her
voice trembling and her eyes suddenly filing with tears]: Happiness ! Good
fortune !
[The violin
rises and the stage dims out.]
CURTAIN
[IMAGE:
HIGH SCHOOL HERO.]
TOM: And so
the following evening I brought Jim home to dinner. I had known Jim slightly in
high school. In high school Jim was a hero. He had tremendous Irish good nature
and vitality with the scrubbed and polished look of white chinaware. He seemed
to move in a continual spotlight. He was a star in basket-ball, captain of the
debating club, president of the senior class and the glee club and he sang the
male lead in the annual light operas. He was always running or bounding, never
just walking. He seemed always at the point of defeating the law of gravity. He
was shooting with such velocity through his adolescence that you would
logically expect him to arrive at nothing short of the White House by the time
he was thirty. But Jim apparently ran into more interference after his
graduation from Soldan. His speed had definitely slowed. Six years after he
left high school he was holding a job that wasn't much better than mine.
[IMAGE:
CLERK.]
He was the
only one at the warehouse with whom I was on friendly terms. I was valuable to
him as someone who could remember his former glory, who had seen him win
basketball games and the silver cup in debating. He knew of my secret practice
of retiring to a cabinet of the washroom to work on poems when business was
slack in the warehouse. He called me Shakespeare. And while the other boys in
the warehouse regarded me with suspicious hostility, Jim took a humorous
attitude toward me. Gradually his attitude affected the others, their hostility
wore off and they also began to smile at me as people smile at an oddly
fashioned dog who trots across their path at some distance.
I knew that
Jim and Laura had known each other at Soldan, and I had heard Laura speak
admiringly of his voice. I didn't know if Jim remembered her or not. In high
school Laura had been as unobtrusive as Jim had been astonishing. If he did
remember Laura, it was not as my sister, for when I asked him to dinner, he
grinned and said, 'You know, Shakespeare, I never thought of you as having
folks !'
He was
about to discover that I did.
[LIGHT
UPSTAGE.
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: 'THE ACCENT OF A COMING FOOT'.
Friday
evening. It is about five o'clock of a late spring evening which comes
'scattering poems in the sky.'
A delicate
lemony light is in the Wingfield apartment.
AMANDA has
worked like a Turk in preparation for the gentleman caller. The results are
astonishing. The new floor lamp with its rose-silk shade is in place, a
coloured paper lantern conceals the broken light fixture in the ceiling, new
billowing white curtains are at the windows, chintz covers are on chairs and
sofa, a pair of new sofa pillows make their initial appearance.
Open boxes
and tissue paper are scattered on the floor.
LAURA
stands in the middle with lifted arms while AMANDA crouches before her,
adjusting the hem of the new dress, devout and ritualistic. The dress is
coloured and designed by memory. The arrangement Of LAURA's hair is changed; it
is softer and more becoming. A fragile, unearthly prettiness has come out in
LAURA: she is like a piece of translucent glass touched by light, given a
momentary radiance, not actual, not lasting.]
AMANDA
[impatiently]: Why are you trembling?
LAURA:
Mother, you've made me so nervous !
A M A N D A:
How have I made you nervous ?
LAURA: By
all this fuss ! You make it seem so important !
AMANDA: I
don't understand you, Laura. You couldn't be satisfied with just sitting home,
and yet whenever I try to arrange something for you, you seem to resist it.
[She gets up.] Now take a look at yourself. No, wait ! Wait just a moment - I
have an idea !
LAURA: What
is it now?
[AMANDA
produces two powder puffs which she wraps in handkerchiefs and stuffs in
LAURA's bosom.]
LAURA:
Mother, what are you doing?
AMANDA:
They call them 'Gay Deceivers'!
LAURA: I
won't wear them !
AMANDA: YOU
Will !
LAURA: Why
should I?
AMANDA:
Because, to be painfully honest, your chest is flat.
LAURA: You
make it seem like we were setting a trap.
AMANDA: All
pretty girls are a trap, a pretty trap, and men expect them to be !
[LEGEND: '
A PRETTY TRAP']
Now look at
yourself, young lady. This is the prettiest you will ever be ! I've got. to fix
myself now ! You're going to be surprised by your mother's appearance ! [She
crosses through portières, humming gaily.]
[LAURA
moves slowly to the long mirror and stares solemnly at herself. A wind blows
the white curtains inward in a slow, graceful motion and with a faint,
sorrowful sighing.]
AMANDA [off
stage]: It isn't dark enough yet. [LAURA turns slowly before the mirror with a
troubled look.]
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: ' THIS IS MY SISTER: CELEBRATE HER WITH STRINGS!' MUSIC.]
AMANDA
[laughing, off]: I'm going to show you something. I'm going to make a
spectacular appearance I
LAURA: What
is it, Mother?
AMANDA:
Possess your soul in patience ? you will see !
Something
I've resurrected from that old trunk! Styles haven't changed so terribly much
after all.
[She parts
the portières.]
Now just
look at your mother !
[She wears
a girlish frock of yellowed voile with a blue silk sash. She carries a bunch of
jonquils - the legend of her youth is nearly revived.]
[Feverishly]:
This is the dress in which I led the cotillion, won the cakewalk twice at
Sunset Hill, wore one spring to the Governor's ball in Jackson !
See how I
sashayed around the ballroom, Laura?
[She raises
her skirt and does a mincing step around the room.]
I wore it on
Sundays for my gentlemen callers ! I had it on the day I met your father I had
malaria fever all that spring. The change of climate from East Tennessee to the
Delta - weakened resistance I had a little temperature all the time - not
enough to be serious - just enough to make me restless and giddy I Invitations
poured in - parties all over the Delta! - 'Stay in bed,' said mother, 'you have
fever!' - but I just wouldn't. - I took quinine but kept on going, going !
Evenings, dances ! - Afternoons, long, long rides! Picnics. - lovely! - So
lovely, that country in May. - All lacy with dogwood, literally flooded with
jonquils! - That was the spring I had the craze for jonquils. Jonquils became
an absolute obsession. Mother said, 'Honey, there's no more room for jonquils.'
And still I kept on bringing in more jonquils. Whenever, wherever I saw them,
I'd say, "Stop ! Stop! I see jonquils ! I made the young men help me
gather the jonquils ! It was a joke, Amanda and her jonquils ! Finally there
were no more vases to hold them, every available space was filled with
jonquils. No vases to hold them? All right, I'll hold them myself - And then I
- [She stops in front of the picture. M U S I C.] met your father ! Malaria
fever and jonquils and then - this - boy....
[She
switches on the rose-coloured lamp.]
I hope they
get here before it starts to rain.
[She
crosses upstage and places the jonquils in bowl on table.]
I gave your
brother a little extra change so he and Mr O'Connor could take the service car
home.
LAURA [with
altered look]: What did you say his name was?
AMANDA:
O'Connor.
LAURA: What
is his first name?
AMANDA: I
don't remember. Oh, yes, I do. It was - Jim !
[LAURA
sways slightly and catches hold of a chair.
LEGEND
ONSCREEN: ' NOT JIM !']
LAURA
[faintly]: Not - Jim!
AMANDA:
Yes, that was it, it was Jim ! I've never known a Jim, that wasn't nice !
[MUSIC
OMINOUS.]
LAURA: Are
you sure his name is Jim O'Connor?
AMANDA:
Yes. Why?
LAURA: Is he
the one that Tom used to know in high school?
AMANDA: He
didn't say so. I think he just got to know him at the warehouse.
LAURA:
There was a Jim O'Connor we both knew in high school - [Then, with effort.] If
that is the one that Tom is bringing to dinner - you'll have to excuse me, I
won't come to the table.
AMANDA:
What sort of nonsense is this?
LAURA: You
asked me once if I'd ever liked a boy. Don't you remember I showed you this
boy's picture?
AMANDA: You
mean the boy you showed me in the year book?
LAURA: Yes,
that boy.
AMANDA:
Laura, Laura, were you in love with that boy?
LAURA: I
don't know, Mother. All I know is I couldn't sit at the table if it was him!
AMANDA: It
won't be him! It isn't the least bit likely. But whether it is or not, you will
come to the table. You will not be excused.
LAURA: I'll
have to be, Mother.
AMANDA: I
don't intend to humour your silliness, Laura. I've had too much from you and
your brother, both !
So just sit
down and compose yourself till they come. Tom has forgotten his key so you'll
have to let them in, when they arrive.
LAURA
[panicky]: Oh, Mother - you answer the door !
AMANDA
[lightly]: Ill be in the kitchen - busy !
LAURA: Oh,
Mother, please answer the door, don't make me do it !
AMANDA
[crossing into kitchenette]: I've got to fix the dressing for the salmon. Fuss,
fuss - silliness ! over a gentleman caller !
[Door
swings Shut. LAURA is left alone
LEGEND: '
TERROR!'
She utters
a low moan and turns off the lamp - sits stiffly on the edge of the sofa,
knotting her fingers together.
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: ' THE OPENING OF A DOOR !'
T0M and JIM
appear on the fire-escape steps and climb to landing. Hearing their approach,
LAURA rises with a panicky gesture. She retreats to the portières.
The
doorbell, LAURA catches her breath and touches her throat. Low drums.]
AMANDA
[calling]: Laura, sweetheart ! The door !
[LAURA
stares at it without moving.]
JIM: I
think we just beat the rain.
TOM: Uh -
huh. [He rings again, nervously. JIM whistles and fishes for a cigarette.]
AMANDA
[very gaily]: Laura, that is your brother and Mr O'Connor ! Will you let them
in, darling?
[LAURA
Crosses toward kitchenette door.]
LAURA
[breathlessly]: Mother - you go to the door !
[AMANDA steps
out of kitchenette and stares furiously at LAU R A. She points imperiously at
the door.]
LAURA:
Please, please!
AMANDA [in
a fierce whisper]: What is the matter with you, you silly thing?
LAURA
[desperately]: Please, you answer it, please !
AMANDA: I
told you I wasn't going to humour you, Laura. Why have you chosen this moment
to lose your mind?
LAURA:
Please, please, please, you go !
A M A N D
A: You'll have to go to the door because I can't !
LAURA
[despairingly] : I can't either !
AMANDA:
Why?
LAURA: I'm
sick!
AMANDA: I'm
sick, too - of your nonsense ! Why can't you and your brother be normal people?
Fantastic whims and behaviour !
[Tom gives
a long ring.]
Preposterous
goings on ! Can you give me one reason - [Calls out lyrically] COMING! JUST ONE
SECOND! - why you should be afraid to open a door? Now you answer it, Laura !
LAURA: Oh,
oh, oh ... [She returns through the portières. Darts to the victrola and winds
it franticallly and turns it on.]
AMANDA: Laura
Wingfield, you march right to that door !
LAURA: Yes
- yes, Mother !
[A faraway,
scratchy rendition of 'Dardanella' softens the air and gives her strength to
move through it. She slips to the door and draws it cautiously open.
TOM enters
With the caller, JIM O'CONNOR.]
TOM: Laura,
this is Jim. Jim, this is my sister, Laura.
JIM
[stepping inside]: I didn't know that Shakespeare had a sister!
LAURA
[retreating stiff and trembling from the door]: How - how do you do?
JIM
[heartily extending his hand]: - Okay !
[LAURA
touches it hesitantly with hers.]
JIM: Your
hand's cold, Laura !
LAURA: Yes,
well- I've been playing the victrola....
JIM: Must
have been playing classical music on it! You ought to play a little hot swing
music to warm you up !
LAURA:
Excuse me - I haven't finished playing the victrola. ... [She turns awkwardly
and hurries into the front room. She pauses a second by the victrola. Then
catches her breath and darts through the portières like a frightened deer.]
JIM: [grinning]:
What was the matter?
TOM: Oh -
with Laura? Laura is - terribly shy.
JIM: Shy,
huh? It's unusual to meet a shy girl nowadays. I don't believe you ever
mentioned you had a sister.
TOM: Well, now
you know. I have one. Here is the Post Dispatch. You want a piece of it?
JIM:
Uh-huh.
TOM: What
piece? The comics?
JIM: Sports
! [Glances at it.] Ole Dizzy Dean is on his bad behaviour.
T0M
[disinterested] : Yeah ? [Lights cigarette and crosses back to fire-escape
door.]
JIM: Where
are you going?
TOM: I'm
going out on the terrace.
JIM [goes
after him]: You know, Shakespeare - I'm going to sell you a bill of goods !
TOM: What
goods?
JIM: A
course I'm taking.
TOM: Huh?
JIM: In
public speaking! You and me, we're not the warehouse type.
TOM: Thanks
- that's good news. But what has public speaking got to do with it?
JIM: It
fits you for - executive positions !
TOM: Awww.
JIM: I tell
you it's done a helluva lot for me.
[IMAGE: EXECUTIVE
AT DESK.]
TOM: In
what respect?
JIM: In
every ! Ask yourself what is the difference between you an' me and men in the
office down front? Brains? No! - Ability? - No ! Then what? Just one little
thing
TOM: What
is that one little thing?
JIM
Primarily it amounts to - social poise! Being able to square up to people and
hold your own on any social level!
AMANDA [off
stage]: Tom?
TOM: Yes,
Mother?
AMANDA: Is
that you and Mr O'Connor?
AMANDA:
Well, you just make yourselves comfortable in there.
TOM: Yes,
Mother.
AMANDA: Ask
Mr O'Connor if he would like to wash his hands.
JIM Aw, no
- no - thank you - I took care of that at the warehouse. Tom-
TOM: Yes?
JI M: Mr
Mendoza was speaking to me about you.
TOM:
Favourably?
JIM: What
do you think?
TOM: Well
JIM: You're
going to be out of a job if you don't wake up.
TOM: I am
waking up
JIM: You
show no signs.
TOM: The
signs are interior.
[IMAGE ON
SCREEN: THE SAILING VESSEL WITH JOLLY ROGER AGAIN.]
TOM: I' m planning
to change. [He loans over the rail speaking with quiet exhilaration. The
incandescent marquees and signs of the first-run movie houses light his face
from across the alley. He looks like a voyager.] I'm right at the point of
committing myself to a future that doesn't include the warehouse and Mr Mendoza
or even a night-school course in public speaking.
JIM: What
are you gassing about?
TOM: I'm
tired of the movies.
J IM:
Movies!
TOM: Yes, movies
! Look at them ? [A wave toward the marvels of Grand Avenue.] All of those
glamorous people - having ,adventures - hogging it all, gobbling the whole
thing up ! You know what happens? People go to the movies instead of moving!
Hollywood characters are supposed to have all the adventures for everybody in
America, while everybody in America sits in a dark room and watches them have
them ! Yes, until there's a war. That's when adventure becomes available to the
masses ! Everyone's dish, not only Gable's ! Then the people in the dark room
come out of the dark room to have some adventure themselves Goody, goody! -
It's our turn now, to go to the South Sea Islands - to make a safari - to be
exotic, far-off ! - But I'm not patient. I don't want to wait till then. I'm
tired of the movies and I am about to move !
JIM
[incredulously]: Move?
TOM: Yes.
JIM: When?
TOM: Soon !
JIM: Where?
Where?
[THEME
THREE MUSIC SEEMS TO ANSWER THE QUESTION, WHILE TOM THINKS IT OVER. HE SEARCHES
AMONG HIS POCKETS.]
TOM: I'm
starting to boil inside. I know I seem dreamy, but inside - well, I'm boiling !
- Whenever I pick up a shoe, I shudder a little thinking how short life is and
what I am doing! - Whatever that means, I know it doesn't mean shoes - except
as something to wear on a traveller's feet ! [Finds paper.] Look
JIM: What?
TOM: I'm a
member.
JIM
[reading]: The Union of Merchant Seamen.
TOM: I paid
my dues this month, instead of the light bill.
JIM: You
will regret it when they turn the lights off.
TOM: I
won't be here.
JIM: How
about your mother?
TOM: I'm
like my father. The bastard son of a bastard! See how he grins? And he's been
absent going on sixteen years !
JIM: You're
just talking, you drip. How does your mother feel about it?
TOM: Shhh!
-
Here comes
mother ! Mother is not acquainted with my plans!
AMANDA
[enters portières]: Where are you all?
TOM: On the
terrace, Mother.
[They start
inside. She advances to them. TOM is distinctly shocked at her appearance. Even
JIM blinks a little. He is making his first contact with girlish Southern
vivacity and in spite of the night-school course in public speaking is somewhat
thrown off the beam by the unexpected outlay of social charm.
Certain
responses are attempted by JIM but are swept aside by AMANDA's gay laughter and
chatter. TOM is embarrassed but after the first shock JIM reacts very warmly.
Grins and chuckles, is altogether won over.
IMAGE:
AMANDA AS A GIRL.]
AMANDA
[coyly smiling, shaking her girlish ringlets]: Well, well, well, so this is Mr
O'Connor. Introductions entirely unnecessary. I've heard so much about you from
my boy. I finally said to him, Tom - good gracious! - why don't you bring this
paragon to supper? Id like to meet this nice young man at the warehouse! -
Instead of just hearing you sing his praises so much!
I don't
know why my son is so stand-offish - that's not Southern behaviour !
Let's sit
down and - I think we could stand a little more air in here ! Tom, leave the
door open. I felt a nice fresh breeze a moment ago. Where has it gone to?
Mmm, so
warm already ! And not quite summer, even. We're going to bum up when summer
really gets started. However, we're having - we're having a very light supper.
I think light things are better fo' this time of year. The same as light
clothes are. Light clothes an' light food are what warm weather calls fo'. You
know our blood gets so thick during th' winter - it takes a while fo' us to
adjust ou'selves! - when the season changes ...
It's come
so quick this year. I wasn't prepared. All of a sudden - heavens ! Already
summer! - I ran to the trunk an' pulled out this light dress - Terribly old!
Historical almost! But feels so good - so good an' co-ol, y' know....
TOM: Mother
AMANDA:
Yes, honey?
TOM: How about
- supper?
A M A N D
A: Honey, you go ask Sister if supper is ready ! You know that Sister is in
full charge of supper! Tell her you hungry boys are waiting for it.
[To JIM]
Have you
met Laura?
JIM: She-
AMANDA: Let
you in? Oh, good, you've met already! It's rare for a girl as sweet an' pretty
as Laura to be domestic! But Laura is, thank heavens, not only pretty but also
very domestic. I'm not at all. I never was a bit. I never could make a thing
but angel-food cake. Well, in the South we had so many servants. Gone, gone,
gone. All vestige of gracious living ! Gone completely! I wasn't prepared for
what the future brought me. All of my gentlemen callers were sons of planters
and so of course I assumed that I would be married to one and raise my family
on a large piece of land with plenty of servants. But man proposes and woman
accepts the proposal ! - To vary that old, old saying a little bit - I married
no planter! I married a man who worked for the telephone company! - That
gallantly smiling gentleman over there! [Points to the picture.] A telephone
man who - fell in love with long distance I - Now he travels and I don't even
know where ! - But what am I going on for about my - tribulations?
Tell me
yours ? I hope you don't have any ! Tom?
TOM
[returning]: Yes, Mother?
AMANDA: Is
supper nearly ready?
TOM: It
looks to me like supper is on the table.
AMANDA: Let
me look - [She rises prettily and looks through portières.] Oh, lovely ! - But
where is Sister?
TOM: Laura
is not feeling well - and she says that she thinks she'd better not come to the
table.
AMANDA:
What? - Nonsense ! - Laura? Oh, Laura !
LAURA [off
stage, faintly]: Yes, Mother.
AMANDA: You
really must come to the table. We won't be seated until you come to the table !
Come in, Mr
O'Connor. You sit over there, and I'll Laura - Laura Wingfield !
You're
keeping us waiting, honey ! We can't say grace. until you come to the table !
[The back
door is pushed weakly open and LAURA comes in. She is obviously quite faint,
her lips trembling, her eyes wide and staring. She moves unsteadily toward the
table.
LEGEND: '
TERROR!'
Outside a
summer storm is coming abruptly. The white curtains billow inward at the
windows and there is a sorrowful murmur and deep blue dusk.
LAURA suddenly
stumbles - she catches at a chair with a faint moan.]
TOM: Laura!
AMANDA:
Laura !.
LEGEND: '
AH!']
[Despairingly]
Why, Laura, you are sick, darling ! Tom, help your sister into the living-room,
dear !
Sit in the
living-room, Laura - rest on the sofa. Well !
[To the
gentleman caller.]
Standing
over the hot stove made her ill ! - I told her that was just - too warm this
evening, but -
[Tom comes
back in. LAURA is on the sofa.]
Is Laura
all right now?
TOM: Yes.
AMANDA: What
is that? Rain? A nice cool rain has come up!
[She gives
the gentleman caller a frightened look.]
I think we
may - have grace - now ...
[Tom looks
at her steadily.]
Tom, honey
- you say grace !
TOM: Oh ...
'For these
and all thy mercies-'
[They bow
their heads, AMANDA stealing a nervous glance at JIM. In the living-room LAURA,
stretched on the sofa, clenches her hand to her lips, to hold back a shuddering
sob.]
God's Holy
Name be praised
THE SCENE
DIMS OUT
A SOUVENIR
Half an
hour later. Dinner is just being finished in the upstage area which is
concealed by the drawn portières.
[As the
curtain rises LAURA is still huddled upon the sofa, her feet drawn under her,
her head resting on a pale blue pillow, her eyes wide and mysteriously watchful.
The new floor lamp with its shade of rose-coloured silk gives a soft, becoming
light to her face, bringing out the fragile, unearthly prettiness which usually
escapes attention. There is a steady murmur of rain, but it is slackening and
stops soon after the scene begins; the air outside becomes pale and luminous as
the moon breaks out. A moment after the curtain rises, the lights in both rooms
flicker and go out.]
JIM: Hey,
there, Mr Light Bulb !
[AMANDA
laughs nervously.
LEGEND:
'SUSPENSION OF A PUBLIC SERVICE! .]
AMANDA:
Where was Moses when the lights went out? Ha-ha. Do you know the answer to that
one, Mr O'Connor?
JIM: No,
Ma'am, what's the answer?
AMANDA: In
the dark!
[JIM laughs
appreciatively.]
Everybody sit
still. I'll light the candles. Isn't it lucky we have them on the table?
Where's a match? Which of you gentlemen can provide a match?
JIM: Here.
AMANDA:
Thank you, Sir.
JIM: Not at
all, Ma'am!
AMANDA: I
guess the fuse has burnt out. Mr O'Connor, can you tell a burnt-out fuse? I
know I can't and Tom is a total loss when it comes to mechanics.
[SOUND:
GETTING UP: VOICES RECEDE A LITTLE TO KITCHENETTE.]
Oh, be
careful you don't bump into something. We don't want our gentleman caller to
break his neck. Now wouldn't that be a fine howdy-do?
JIM: Ha-ha!
Where is the fuse-box?
AMANDA:
Right here next to the stove. Can you see anything?
JIM: just a
minute.
AMANDA:
Isn't electricity a mysterious thing? Wasn't it Benjamin Franklin who tied a key
to a kite?
We live in
such a mysterious universe, don't we? Some people say that science clears up
all the mysteries for us. In my opinion it only creates more !
Have you
found it yet?
JIM: No,
Ma'am. All these fuses look okay to me.
AMANDA:Tom!
TOM: Yes,
Mother?
AMANDA:
That light bill I gave you several days ago. The one I told you we got the
notices about?
[LEGEND:
'HA!']
TOM: Oh. -
Yeah.
AMANDA: You
didn't neglect to pay it by any chance?
TOM: Why, I
-
AMANDA:
Didn't ! I might have known it !
JIM:
Shakespeare probably wrote a poem on that light bill, Mrs Wingfield.
AMANDA: I
might have known better than to trust him with it! There's such a high price
for negligence in this world!
JIM: Maybe
the poem will win a ten-dollar prize.
AMANDA:
We'll just have to spend the remainder of the evening in the nineteenth
century, before Mr Edison made the Mazda lamp!
JIM:
Candlelight is my favourite kind of light.
AMANDA:
That shows you're romantic! But that's no excuse for Tom.
Well, we
got through dinner. Very considerate of them to let us get through dinner
before they plunged us into ever-lasting darkness, wasn't it, Mr O'Connor?
JIM: Ha-ha
!
A M A N D
A: Tom, as a penalty for your carelessness you can help me with the dishes.
JIM: Let me
give you a hand.
A M A N D
A: Indeed you will not !
JIM: I
ought to be good for something.
AMANDA:
Good for something? [Her tone is rhapsodic.] You? Why, Mr O'Connor, nobody,
nobody's given me this much entertainment in years - as you have !
JIM: Aw,
now, Mrs Wingfield !
AMANDA: I'm
not exaggerating, not one bit! But Sister is all by her lonesome. You go keep
her company in the parlour ! I'll give you this lovely old candelabrum that
used to be on the altar at the church of the Heavenly Rest. It was melted a
little out of shape when the church burnt down. Lightning struck it one spring.
Gypsy Jones
was holding a revival at the time and he intimated that the church was
destroyed because the Episcopalians gave card parties.
JIM: Ha-ha.
AMANDA: And
how about you coaxing Sister to drink a little wine? I think it would be good
for her ! Can you carry both at once?
JIM: Sure.
I'm Superman!
AMANDA:
Now, Thomas, get into this apron !
[The door of
kitchenette swings closed on Amanda's gay laughter; the flickering light
approaches the portières.
LAURA sits
up nervously as he enters. Her speech at first is low and breathless from the
almost intolerable strain of being alone with a stranger.
THE LEGEND:
'I DON'T SUPPOSE YOU REMEMBER ME AT ALL ! '
In her
first speeches in this scene, before JIM's warmth overcomes her paralysing
shyness, LAURA's voice is thin and breathless as though she has just run up a
steep flight of stairs.
JIM's
attitude is gently humorous. In playing this scene it should be stressed that
while the incident is apparently unimportant, it is to LAURA the climax of her
her secret life.]
JIM: Hello,
there, Laura.
LAURA
[faintly]: Hello. [She clears her throat.]
JIM: How
are you feeling now? Better?
LAURA: Yes.
Yes, thank you.
JIM: This
is for you. A little dandelion wine. [He extends it toward her with extravagant
gallantry.]
LAURA:
Thank you.
JIM: Drink
it - but don't get drunk!
[He laughs
heartily. LAURA takes the glass uncertainly; laughs shyly.]
Where shall
I set the candles?
LAURA: Oh -
oh, anywhere. . . ,
JIM -. How
about here on the floor? Any objections?
LAURA-No.
JIM: I'll
spread a newspaper under to catch the drippings. I like to sit on the floor. Mind
if I do?
LAURA: Oh,
no.
JIM: Give
me a pillow?
LAURA:
What?
JIM: A
pillow !
LAURA:Oh
... [Hands him one quickly.]
JIM: How
about you? Don't you like to sit on the floor?
LAURA: Oh -
yes.
JIM: Why
don't you, then?
LAURA: I -
Will.
JIM: Take a
pillow ! [LAURA does. Sits on the other side of the candelabrum. JIM crosses
his legs and smiles engagingly as her.] I can't hardly see you sitting way over
there.
LAURA: I
can - see you.
JIM: I
know, but that's not fair, I'm in the limelight. [LAURA moves her pillow
closer.] Good ! Now I can see you ! Comfortable?
LAURA: Yes.
JIM: So am
I . Comfortable as a cow ! Will you have some gum?
LAURA: No,
thank you.
JIM: I think
that I will indulge, with your permission, [Musingly unwraps it and holds it
up.] Think of the fortune made by the guy that invented the first piece of
chewing gum. Amazing, huh? The Wrigley Building is one of the sights of
Chicago. - I saw it summer before last when I went up to the Century of
Progress. Did you take in the Century of Progress?
LAURA: No,
I didn't.
JIM: Well,
it was quite a wonderful exposition. What impressed me most was the Hall of
Science. Gives you an idea of what the future will be in America, even more
wonderful than the present time is! [Pause. Smiling at her.] Your brother tells
me you're shy. Is that right, Laura?
LAURA: I -
don't know.
JIM: I
judge you to be an old-fashioned type of girl. Well, I think that's a pretty
good type to be. Hope you don't think I'm being too personal - do you?
LAURA
[hastily, out of embarrassment]: I believe I will take a piece of gum, if you -
don't mind. [Clearing her throat.] Mr O'Connor, have you - kept up with your
singing?
JIM: Singing?
Me?
LAURA: Yes.
I remember what a beautiful voice you had.
JIM: When
did you hear me sing?
[VOICE OFF
STAGE IN THE PAUSE]
Voice [off
stage] : 0 blow, ye winds, heigh-ho,
A-roving I
will go!
I'm off to
my love
With a
boxing glove
Ten thousand
miles away !
JIM: You
say you've heard me sing?
LAURA: Oh,
yes! Yes, very often I don't suppose - you remember me - at all?
JIM
[smiling doubtfully]: You know I have an idea I've seen you before. I had that
idea soon as you opened the door. It seemed almost like I was about to remember
your name. But the name that I started to call you - wasn't a' name! And so I
stopped myself before I said it.
LAURA:
Wasn't it - Blue Roses?
JIM:
[springs up. Grinning]: Blue Roses ! - My gosh, yes - Blue Roses! That's what I
had on my tongue when you opened the door !
Isn't it
funny what tricks your memory plays? I didn't connect you with high school
somehow or other.
But that's
where it was; it was high school. I didn't even know you were Shakespeare's sister
!
Gosh, I'm
sorry.
LAURA: I
didn't expect you to. You - barely knew me !
JIM: But we
did have a speaking acquaintance, huh?
LAURA: Yes,
we - spoke to each other.
JIM: When
did you recognize me?
LAURA: Oh,
right away !
JIM: Soon
as I came in the door?
LAURA: When
I heard your name I thought it was probably you. I knew that Tom used to know
you a little in high school. So when you came in the door Well, then I was -
sure.
JIM: Why
didn't you say something, then?
LAURA [breathlessly]:
I didn't know what to say, I was - too surprised !
JIM: For
goodness' sakes I You know, this sure is funny !
LAURA: Yes
I Yes, isn't it, though ...
JIM: Didn't
we have a class in something together?
LAURA: Yes,
we did.
JIM: What class
was that?
LAURA: It
was - singing - Chorus !
JIM: Aw !
LAURA: I
sat across the aisle from you in the Aud.
JIM: Aw!
LAURA:
Mondays, Wednesday, and Fridays.
JIM: Now I
remember - you always came in late.
LAURA: Yes,
it was so hard for me, getting upstairs. I had that brace on my leg - it
clumped so loud I
JIM: I
never heard any clumping.
LAURA
[wincing at the recollection]: To me it sounded like thunder !
JIM: Well,
well, well, I never even noticed.
LAURA: And everybody
was seated before I came in. I had to walk in front of all those people. My
seat was in the back row. I had to go clumping all the way up the aisle with
everyone watching I
JIM: You
shouldn't have been self-conscious.
LAURA: I
know, but I was. It was always such a relief when the singing started.
JIM: Aw,
yes, I've placed you now I I used to call you Blue Rom. How was it that I got
started calling you that?
LAURA: I
was out of school a little while with pleurosis. When I came back you asked me
what was the matter. I said I had pleurosis - you thought I said Blue Roses
That's what you always called me after that I
JIM: I hope
you didn't mind.
LAURA: Oh,
no - I liked it. You see, I wasn't acquainted with many - people....
JIM: As I
remember you sort of stuck by yourself.
LAURA: I -
I - never have had much luck at - making
friends.
JIM: I
don't see why you wouldn't.
LAURA:' .
Well, I - started out badly.
JIM: You
mean being -
LAURA: Yes,
it sort of - stood between me -
JIM: You
shouldn't have let it !
LAURA: I
know, but it did, and -
JIM: You
were shy with people !
LAURA: I
tried not to be but never could -
JIM:
Overcome it?
LAURA: No,
I - I never could !
JIM: I
guess being shy is something you have to work out of
kind of
gradually.
LAURA
[sorrowfully]: Yes - I guess it -
JIM: Takes
time !
LAURA: Yes
-
JIM -
People arc not so dreadful when you know them. That's what you have to remember
! And everybody has
problems,
not just you, but practically everybody has got some problems. You think of
yourself as having the only
problems,
as being the only one who is disappointed. But just look around you and you
will see lots of people as
disappointed
as you are. For instance, I hoped when I was going to high-school that I would
be further along at this
time, six
years later, than I am now - You remember that wonderful write-up I had in The
Torch?
LAURA:: Yes
! [She rises and crosses to table.]
JIM: It
said I was bound to succeed in anything I went into!
[LAURA
returns with the annual.] Holy Jeez ! The Torch ! [He accepts it reverently.
They smile across it with
mutual
wonder. LAURA crouches beside him and they begin to turn through it. LAURA's
shyness is dissolving in his warmth.]
LAURA::
Here you are in The Pirates of Penzance!
JIM:
[wistfully] : I sang the baritone lead in that operetta.
LAURA
[raptly]: So - beautifully!
JIM
[protesting]: Aw -
LAU R A:
Yes, yes - beautifully - beautifully !
JIM: You
heard me?
LAURA: All
three times !
JIM: No !
LAURA: Yes
!
JIM: All
three performances?
LAURA
[looking down]: Yes.
JIM: Why?
LAURA: I -
wanted to ask you to - autograph my programme.
JIM: Why
didn't you ask me to?
LAURA: You were
always surrounded by your own friends so much that I never had a chance to.
JIM: You
should have just
LAURA:
Well, I - thought you might think I was
JIM:
Thought I might think you was - what?
LAURA: Oh
JIM [with
reflective relish]: I was beleaguered by females In those days.
LAURA: You
were terribly popular !
JIM: Yeah
LAURA: You
had such a - friendly way
JIM: I was
spoiled in high school.
LAURA:
Everybody - liked you !
JIM:
Including you?
LAURA: I - yes,
I - I did, too - [She gently closes the book in her lap.]
JIM: Well,
weH, well ! - Give me that programme, Laura. [She hands it to him. He signs it
with a flourish.] There youare - better late than never !
LAURA: Oh,
I - what a - surprise!
JIM: My
signature isn't worth very much tight now. But some day - maybe - it will
increase in value ! Being disappointed is one thing and being discouraged is
something else. I am disappointed but I am not discouraged. I'm twenty-three
years old. How old are you?
LAURA::
I'll be twenty-four in June.
JIM: That's
not old age!
LAURA: No,
but
JIM: You
finished high school?
LAURA [with
difficulty]: I didn't go back.
JIM: You
mean you dropped out?
LAURA: I
made bad grades in my final examinations. [She rises and replaces the book and
the programme. Her voice strained.] How is - Emily Meisenbach getting along?
JIM: Oh,
that kraut-head!
LAURA:: Why
do you call her that ?
J I M:
That's what she was.
LAURA:
You're not still - going with her?
J I M: I
never see her.
LAURA: It
said in the Personal Section that you were engaged!
J I M: I
know, but I wasn't impressed by that -propaganda I
LAURA: It
wasn't - the truth?
J I M: Only
in Emily's optimistic opinion !
LAURA: Oh
[LEGEND: '
WHAT HAVE YOU DONE SINCE HIGH SCHOOL?' ]
JIM lights
a cigarette and loans indolently back on his elbows smiling at LAURA with a
warmth and charm which lights her inwardly with altar candler. She remains by
the table and turns in her hands a piece of glass to cover her tumult.]
JIM: [after
several reflective puffs on a cigarette] : What have you done since high
school? [She seems not to hear him.] Huh? [LAURA looks up.] I said what have
you done since high school, Laura?
LAURA::
Nothing much.
JIM: You
must have been doing something these six long years.
LAURA:Yes.
JIM: Well,
then, such as what?
LAURA: I
took a business course at business college
JIM: How
did that work out?
LAURA: Well,
not very - well - I had to drop out, it gave me - indigestion
J I M
[laughs gently.]: What are you doing now?
LAURA: I
don't do anything - much. Oh, please don't think I sit around doing nothing! My
glass collection takes up agood deal of time. Glass is something you have to
take good care of
JIM: What
did you say - about glass?
LAURA:
Collection I said - I have one - [she clears her throat and turns away, acutely
shy.]
JIM:
[abruptly]: You know what I judge to be the trouble with you?
Inferiority
complex I Know what that is? That's what they call it when someone low-rates
himself !
I
understand it because I had it, too. Although my caw was not so aggravated as
yours seems to be. I had it until I took up public speaking, developed my
voice, and learned that I had an aptitude for science. Before that time I never
thought of myself as being outstanding in any way whatsoever I
Now I've
never made a regular study of it, but I have a friend who says I can analyse
people better than doctors that make a profession of it. I don't claim that to
be necessarily true, but I can sure guess a person's psychology, Laura I [Takes
out his gum] Excuse me, Laura. I always take it out when the flavour is gone.
I'll use this scrap of paper to wrap it in. I know how it is to get it stuck on
a shoe.
Yep -
that's what I judge to be your principal trouble. A lack of amount of faith in
yourself as a person. You don't have the proper amount of faith in yourself.
I'm basing that fact on a number of your remarks and also on certain
observations I've made. For instance that clumping you thought was so awful in
high school. You say that you even dreaded to walk into class. You see what you
did? You dropped out of school, you gave up an education because of a clump,
which as far as I know was practically non-existent! A little physical defect
is what you have. Hardly noticeable even! Magnified thousands of times by
imagination !
You know
what my strong advice to you is? Think of yourself as superior in some way!
LAURA: In
what way would I think?
JIM: Why,
man alive, Laura! just look about you a little. What do you see? A world full
of common people! All of 'em born and all of 'em going to die !
Which of
them has one-tenth of your good points I Or mine ! Or anyone else's, as far as
that goes - Gosh !
Everybody
excels in some one thing. Some in many !
[Unconsciously
glances at himself in the mirror.]
All you've
got to do is discover in whatl Take me, for instance.
[He adjusts
his tie at the mirror.]
My interest
happens to lie in electro-dynamics. I'm taking a course in radio engineering at
night school, Laura, on top of a fairly responsible job at the warehouse. I'm
taking that course and studying public speaking.
LAURA:
Ohhhh.
JIM:
Because I believe in the future of television !
[Turning
back to her.]
I wish to
be ready to go up right along with it. Therefore
I'm
planning to get in on the ground floor. In fact I've already made the right
connexions and all that remains is for the industry itself to get under way I
Full steam
[His eyes
are starry.]
Knowledge -
Zzzzzp ! Money - Zzzzzzp I - Power! That's the cycle democracy is built on I
[His
attitude is convincingly dynamic. LAURA stares at him, even her shyness
eclipsed in her absolute wonder. He suddenly grins.]
I guess you
think I think a lot of myself !
LAURA: No -
o-o-o, !
JIM: Now
how about you? Isn't there something you, take more interest in than anything
else?
LAURA:
Well, I do - as I said - have my - glass collection [A peal of girlish laughter
from du kitchen]
JIM: I'm
not right sure I know what you're talking about What kind of glass is it?
LAURA:
Little articles of it, they're ornaments mostly I
Most of them
are little animals made out of glass, the tiniest little animals in the world.
Mother calls them A
glass
menagerie !
Here's an
example of one, if you'd like to see it I
This one is
one of the oldest. It's nearly thirteen.
[MUSIC: '
THE GLASS MENAGERIE''
He
stretches out his hand.]
Oh, be
careful - if you breathe, it breaks !
JIM: I'd
better not take it. I'm pretty clumsy with things.
LAURA: Go
on, I trust you with him !
[Places it
in his palm.]
There now -
you're holding him gently !
Hold him
over the light, he loves the light I You see how the light shines through him?
JIM: It
sure does shine!
LAURA: I
shouldn't be partial, but he is my favourite one.
JIM: What
kind of a thing is this one supposed to be?
LAURA: Haven't
you noticed the single horn on his forehead head?
JIM: A
unicorn, huh?
LAURA:
Mmmm-hmmm!
JIM:
Unicorns, aren't they extinct in the modern world?
LAURA: I
know !
JIM: Poor
little fellow, he must feel sort of lonesome.
LAURA
[smiling]: Well, if he does he doesn't complain about it. He stays on a shelf
with some horses that don't have horns and all of them seem to get along nicely
together.
JIM: How do
you know?
LAURA
[Iightly]: I haven't heard any arguments among them!
JIM:
[grinning]: No arguments, huh? Well, that's a pretty good sign ! Where shall I
set him?
LAURA: Put
him on the table. They all like a change of scenery once in a while !
JIM:
[stretching]: Well, well, well, well Look how big my shadow is when I stretch !
LAURA: Oh,
oh, yes - it stretches across the ceiling !
JIM:
[crossing to door]: I think it's stopped raining. [Opens fire-escape door.]
Where does the music come from?
LAURA: From
the Paradise Dance Hall across the alley.
JIM: How about
cutting the rug a little, Miss Wingfield?
LAURA: Oh
JIM: Or is
your programme filled up? Let me have a look at it. [Grasps imaginary card.]
Why, every dance is taken! I'll just have to scratch some out. [WALTZ MUSIC 'LA
GOLONDRINA'.]. Ahhh, a waltz ! [He executes some sweeping turns by himself then
holds his arms toward LAURA.]
LAURA
[breathlessly]: I - can't dance !
JIM: There
you go, that inferiority stuff ! Come on, try !
LAURA: Oh,
but I'd step on you !
JIM: I'm
not made out of glass.
LAURA: How
- how - how do we start?
J IM: just
leave it to me. You hold your arms out a little.
LAURA: Like
this?
JIM: A
little bit higher. Right. Now don't tighten up, that's the main thing about it
- relax.
LAURA
[laughs breathlessly]: It's hard not to. I'm afraid you can't budge me.
JIM: What
do you bet I can't? [He swings her into motion.]
LAURA:
Goodness, yes, you can!
JIM: Let
yourself go, now, Laura, just let yourself go.
LAURA: I'm
JIM: Come
on!
LAURA:
Trying !
JIM: Not so
stiff - Easy does it I!
LAURA: I
know but I'm -
JIM: Loosen
th' backbone! There now, that's a lot better.
LAURA: Am
I?
JIM: Lots,
lots better !
[He moves
her about the room in a clumsy waltz ]
LAURA: Oh,
my !
JIM: Ha-ha
!
LAURA: Oh,
my goodness !
JIM:
Ha-ha-ha !
[They
suddenly bump into the table. JIM stops] What did we hit on?
LAURA:
Table.
JIM: Did
something fall off it? I think-
LAURA: Yes.
JIM: I hope
that it wasn't the little glass horse with the horn !
LAURA: Yes.
JIM: Aw aw
aw- Is it broken?
LAURA: Now
it is just like all the other horses.
JIM: It's
lost its -
LAURA:
Horn!
It doesn't
matter. Maybe it's a blessing in disguise.
JIM: You'll
never forgive me. I bet that that was your Favourite piece of glass.
LAURA: I
don't have favourites much. It's no tragedy, Freckles. Glass breaks so easily.
No matter how careful you are. The traffic jars the shelves and things fall off
them.
JIM: Still
I'm awfully sorry that I was the cause.
LA U R A [smiling]
I'll just imagine he had an operation. The horn was removed to make him feel
less - freakish !
[They both
laugh.]
Now he will
feel more at home with the other horses, the ones that don't have horns. .
JIM: Ha-ha,
that's very funny !
[Suddenly
serious]
I'm glad to
see that you have a sense of humour. You know - you're - well - very different
! Surprisingly different from anyone else I know !
[His wire
become soft and hesitant with a genuine feeling]
Do you mind
me telling you that?
[LAURA is
abashed beyond speech]
I mean it
in a nice way ...
[LAURA nods
shyly, looking away.]
You make me
feel sort of - I don't know how to put it ! I'm usually pretty good at
expressing things, but This is something that I don't know how to say !
[LAURA
touches her throat and clears it - turns the unicorn in her hands. Even
softer.]
Has anyone
ever told you that you were pretty?
[PAUSE:
MUSIC.
LAURA looks
up slowly with wonder and shakes her head.]
Well, you
are! In a very different way from anyone else. And all the nicer because of the
difference, too.
[His voice
becomes low and husky. LA U R A turns away, nearly faint with the novelty of
her emotions.]
I wish that
you were my sister. I'd teach you to have some confidence in yourself. The different
people are not like other people, but being different is nothing to be ashamed
of. Because other people are not such wonderful people. They're one hundred
times one thousand. You're one times one! They walk all over the earth. You
just stay here. They're common as - weeds, -but - you - well, you're - Blue
Roses!
[IMAGE ON
SCREEN: BLUE ROSES.
MUSIC
CHANGES.]
LAURA: But
blue is wrong for - roses...
JIM: It's
right for you ! - You're - pretty !
LAURA: In
what respect am I pretty?
JIM: In all
respects - believe me ! Your eyes - your hair are pretty! Your hands are pretty
!
[He catches
hold of her hand.]
You think
I'm making this up because I'm invited to dinner and have to be nice. Oh, I
could do that ! I could put on an act for you, Laura, and say lots of things
without being very sincere. But this time I am. I'm talking to you sincerely. I
happened to notice you had this inferiority complex that keeps you from feeling
comfortable with people. Somebody needs to build your confidence up and make
you proud instead of shy and turning away and - blushing - Somebody -ought to -
Ought to - kiss you, Laura !
[His hand
slips slowly up her arm to her shoulder.
MUSIC
SWELLS TUMULTUOUSLY
He suddenly
turns her about and kisses her on the lips.
When he
releases her, LAURA sinks on the sofa with a bright, dazed look.
J IM backs
away and fishes in his pocket for a cigarette.
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: ' SOUVENIR'.]
Stumble-john
!
[He lights
the cigarette, avoiding her look.
There is a
peal of girlish laughter from AMANDA in the kitchen.
LAURA
slowly raises and opens her hand. It still contains the little broken glass
animal. She looks at it with a tender, bewildered expression.]
Stumble-john
!
I shouldn't
have done that - That was way off the beam. You don't smoke, do you?
[She looks
up, smiling, not hearing the question.
He sits
beside her a little gingerly. She looks at him speechlessly - waiting.
He coughs
decorously and moves a little farther aside as he considers the situation and
senses her feelings, dimly, with perturbation.
Gently.]
Would you -
care for a - mint?
[She
doesn't seem to hear him but her look grows brighter even.]
Peppermint
- Life-Saver?
My pocket's
a regular drug store - wherever I go ...
[He pops a
mint in his mouth. Then gulps and decides to make a clean breast of it. He
speaks slowly and gingerly.]
Laura, you
know, if I had a sister like you, I'd do the same thing as Tom. I'd bring out
fellows and - introduce her to them. The right type of boys of a type to -
appreciate her.
Only - well
- he made a mistake about me.
Maybe I've
got no call to be saying this. That may not have been the idea in having me
over. But what if it was? There's nothing wrong about that. The only trouble is
that in my case - I'm not in a situation to - do the right thing.
I can't
take down your number and say I'll phone. I can't call up next week and - ask
for a date.
I thought I
had better explain the situation in case you misunderstand it and - hurt your
feelings. .
[Pause.
Slowly,
very slowly, LAURA's look changes, her eyes returning slowly from his to the
ornament in her palm.
AMANDA
utters another gay laugh in the kitchen.]
LAURA
[faintly] You - won't - call again?
JIM: No,
Laura, I can't.
[He rises
from the sofa.]
As I was
just explaining, I've - got strings on me. Laura, I've - been going steady !
I go out
all of the time with a girl named Betty. She's a home-girl like you, and
Catholic, and Irish, and in a great many ways we - get along fine.
I met her
last summer on a moonlight boat trip up the river to Alton, on the Majestic.
Well -
right away from the start it was - love !
[LEGEND:
'LOVE!'
LAURA sways
slightly forward and grips the arm of the sofa. He fails to notice, now enrapt
in his own comfortable being.]
Being in
love has made -a new man of me !
[Leaning
stiffly forward, clutching the arm of the sofa LAURA struggles visibly with her
storm. But JIM is oblivious, she it a long way of.]
The power
of love is really pretty tremendous !
Love is
something that - changes the whole world, Laura !
[The storm
abates a little and LAURA leans back. He notices her again.]
It happened
that Betty's aunt took sick, she got a wire and had to go to Centralia. So Tom
- when he asked me to dinner - I naturally just accepted the invitation, not
knowing that you - that he - that ! [He stops awkwardly.]
huh - I'm a
stumble-john!
[He flops
back on the sofa.
The holy
candles in the altar of LAURA's face have been snuffed out.
There is a
look of almost infinite desolation.
JIM:
glances at her uneasily.]
I wish that
you would - say something. [She bites her lip which was trembling and then
bravely smiles. She opens her hand again on the broken glass ornament. Then she
gently takes his hand and raises it level with her own. She carefully places
the unicorn in the palm of his hand, then pushes his fingers closed upon it.]
What are you - doing that for? You want me to have him? Laura? [She nods.] What
for?
LAURA: A -
souvenir ...
[She rues
unsteadily and crouches beside Lim victrola to wind it up.
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: ' THINGS HAVE A WAY OF
TURNING OUT
SO BADLY !'
OR IMAGE:
GENTLEMAN CALLER WAVING GOOD-BYE! - GAILY.
At this
moment AMANDA rushes brightly back in the front room. She bears a pitcher of
fruit Punch in an old-fashioned cut-glass Pitcher and a plate of macaroons. The
Plate has a gold border and poppies painted on it.]
AMANDA:
Well, Well, Well ! Isn't the air delightful after the shower? I've made you
children a little liquid refteshment.
[Turns
gaily to the gentleman caller.]
JIM, do you
know that song about lemonade? 'Lemonade, lemonade Made in the shade and
stirred with a spade Good enough for any old maid !'
JIM
[uneasily]: Ha-ha! No - I never heard it.
A M: A N D
A: Why, Laura ! You look so serious !
JIM: We
were having a serious conversation.
AMANDA:
Good !Now you're better acquainted !
J I M:
[uncertainly] : Ha-ha ! Yes.
AMANDA: You
modem young people are much more serious-minded than my generation. I was so
gay as a girl I
JIM: You
haven't changed, Mrs Wingfield
AMANDA:
Tonight I'm rejuvenated ! The gaiety of the occasion, Mr O'Connor !
[She tosses
her head with a pod of laughter. Spa lemonade.]
Oooo! I'm
baptizing myself!
JIM: Here -
let me
AMANDA
[Setting the pitcher down] : There now. I discovered we had some maraschino
cherries. I dumped them in, juice and all !
JIM: You
shouldn't have gone to that trouble, Mrs Wing, field.
AMANDA:
Trouble, trouble? Why, it was loads of fun! Didn't you hear me cutting up in
the kitchen? I bet your ears were burning! I told Tom how outdone with him I
was for keeping you to himself so long a time! He should have brought you over
much, much sooner ! Well, now that you've found your way, I want you to be a
very frequent caller ! Not just occasional but all the time. Oh, we're going to
have a lot of gay times together ! I see them coming !
Mmm, just
breathe that air ! So fresh, and the moon's so pretty !
I'll skip
back out - I know where my place is when young folks are having a - serious
conversation !
JIM: Oh,
don't go out, Mrs Wingfield. The fact of the matter is I've got to be going.
AMANDA:
Going, now? You're joking ! Why, it's only the shank of the evening, Mr
O'Connor !
JIM: Well,
you know how it is.
AMANDA: You
mean you're a young working man and have to keep working men's hours. Well let
you off early tonight.
But only on
the condition that next time you stay later.
What's the
best night for you? Isn't Saturday night the best night for you working men?
J I M: I
have a couple of time-clocks to punch, Mrs Wingfield. One at morning, another
one at night !
AMANDA: My,
but you are ambitious !You work at night, too?
JIM: No,
Ma'am, not work but - Betty ! [He crosses deliberately to pick up his hat. The
band at the Paradise Dance Hall goes into a tender waltz.]
AMANDA:
Betty? Betty? Who's - Betty !
[There is
an ominous cracking sound in the sky.]
JIM: Oh,
just a girl. The girl I go steady with [He smiles charmingly. The sky falls]
[LEGEND:
'THE SKY FALLS'.]
AMANDA [a
long-drawn exhalation]: Ohhhh. ... Is it a serious romance, Mr O'Connor?
JIM: -
We're going to be married the second Sunday in June.
AMANDA: Ohhhh
- how nice ! Tom didn't mention that you were engaged to be married.
JIM: The
cat's not out of the bag at the warehouse yet. You know how they are. They call
you Romeo and stuff like that.
[He stops
at the oval mirror to put on his hat. He carefully shapes the brim and the
crown to give a discreetly dashing effect.]
It's been a
wonderful evening, Mrs Wingfield. I guess this is what they mean by Southern
hospitality.
AMANDA: It
really wasn't anything at all.
J I M: I hope
it don't seem like I'm rushing off. But I promised Betty I'd pick her up at the
Wabash depot, an' by the time I get my jalopy down there her train'll be in.
Some women are pretty upset if you keep 'em waiting.
AMANDA:
Yes, I know - Ile tyranny of women !
[Extends
her hand.]
Good-bye,
Mr O'Connor. I wish you luck - and happiness - and success ! All three of them,
and so does Laura !-Don't you, Laura?
LAURA: Yes
!
JIM [taking
her hand]: Good-bye, Laura. I'm certainly going to treasure that souvenir. And
don't you forget the good advice I gave you.
[Raises his
voice to a cheery shout.]
So long,
Shakespeare ! Thanks again, ladies - Good night !
[He grins
and ducks jauntily out.]
Still
bravely grimacing, AMANDA closes the door on the gentleman caller. Then she
turns back to the room with a Puzzled expression. She and LAURA don't dare face
each other. LAURA crouches beside the victrola to wind it.]
AMANDA
[faintly] Things have a way of turning out so badly.
I don't
believe that I would play the victrola. Well, well - well Our gentleman caller
was engaged to be married!
TOM!
TOM [from
back]: Yes, Mother?
AMANDA:
Come in here a minute. I want to tell you something awfully funny.
TOM [enters
with macaroon and a glass of lemonade]: Has the gentleman caller gotten away
already?
AMANDA: The
gentleman caller has made an early departure. What a wonderful joke you played
on us !
TOM: How do
you mean?
AMANDA: You
didn't mention that he was engaged to be married.
TOM: JIM?
Engaged?
AMANDA:
That's what he just informed us.
TOM: I'll
be jiggered ! I didn't know about that
AMANDA:
That seems very peculiar.
TOM:
'What's peculiar about it?
AMANDA:
Didn't you call him your best friend down at the warehouse?
TOM: He is,
but how did I know?
AMANDA: It
seems extremely peculiar that you wouldn't know your best friend was going to
be married !
TOM: The
warehouse is where I work, not where I know things about people !
AMANDA: You
don't know things anywhere ! You live in a dream; you manufacture illusions !
[He crosses
to door.]
Where are
you going?
TOM: I'm
going to the movies.
AMANDA:
That's right, now that you've had us make such fools of ourselves. The effort, the
preparations, all the expense ! The new floor lamp, the rug, the clothes for
Laura ! all for what? To entertain some other girl's fiancé ! Go to the movies,
go ! Don't think about us, a mother deserted, an unmarried sister who's
crippled and has no job ! Don't let anything interfere with your selfish
pleasure I just go, go, go - to the movies !
TOM: All
right, I 'will ! The more you shout about my selfishness to me the quicker I'll
go, and I won't go to the movies !
AMANDA: Go,
then ! Then go to the moon - you selfish dreamer !
[Tom
smashes his glass on the floor. He plunges out on the fire-escape, slamming the
door . LAURA screams -cut by door.
Dance-hall
Music up. TOM goes to the rail and grips it desperately, lifting his face in
the chill white moonlight penetrating narrow abyss of the alley.
LEGEND ON
SCREEN: ' AND SO GOOD-BYE...'
TOM 's
closing speech is timed with the interior pantomime. [The interior scene is
played as though viewed through soundproof glass. AMANDA appears to be making a
comforting speech to LAURA who is huddled upon the sofa. Now that we cannot
hear the mother's speech, her silliness is gone and she has dignity and tragic
beauty.
LAURA' s
dark hair hides her face until at the endof the speech she lifts it to smile at
her Mother. AMANDA' s gestures are slow and graceful, almost dancelike as she
comforts the daughter. At the end of her speech she glances a moment at the
father's picture - then withdraws through the portières. At the close of Tom's
speech, LAURA blows out the candles, ending the play.]
TOM: I
didn't go to the moon, I went much further - for time is the longest distance
between places. Not long after that I was fired for writing a poem on the lid
of a shoebox.
I left
Saint Louis. I descended the step of this fire-escape for a last time and
followed, from then on, in my father's footsteps, attempting to find in motion
what was lost in space - I travelled around a great deal. The cities swept
about me like dead leaves, leaves that were brightly coloured but tom away from
the branches.
I would
have stopped, but I was pursued by something.
It always
came upon me unawares, taking me altogether by surprise. Perhaps it was a
familiar bit of music. Perhaps it was only a piece of transparent glass.
Perhaps I am walking along a street at night, in some strange city, before I
have found companions. I pass the lighted window of a shop where perfume is
sold. The window is filled with pieces of coloured glass, tiny transparent
bottles in delicate colours, like bits of a shattered rainbow.
Then all at
once my sister touches my shoulder. I turn around and look into her eyes ...
Oh, Laura,
Laura, I tried to leave you behind me, but I am more faithful than I intended
to be !
I reach for
a cigarette, I cross the street, I run into the movies or a bar, I buy a drink,
I speak to the nearest stranger -anything that can blow your candles out !
[LAURA
bends over the candles.]
- for
nowadays the world is lit by lightning ! Blow out your candles, Laura - and so
good-bye.
[She blows
the candles out.]
THE SCENE
DISSOLVES