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The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams
The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams






She, like Laura in The Glass Menagerie, began to live in her own world of glass ornaments. Louis that Williams' slightly older sister, Rose, began to cease to develop as a person and failed to cross over the barrier from childhood to adulthood. Likewise, his father, who had been a traveling salesman, was suddenly at home most of the time. Here in school he was often ridiculed for his southern accent, and he was never able to find acceptance. Their cramped apartment and the ugliness of the city life seemed to make a lasting impression on the boy. Louis and moved the family from the expansive Episcopal home in the South to an ugly tenement building in St. The father accepted a position in a shoe factory in St. Perhaps because his early life was spent in an atmosphere of genteel culture, the greatest shock to Williams was the move his family made when he was about twelve. Even though there are several portraits of the clergy in Williams' later works, none seemed to be built on the personality of his real grandfather. His maternal grandfather was an Episcopal rector, apparently a rather liberal and progressive individual. Instead, he read profusely in his grandfather's library. Tennessee was himself a rather delicate child who was plagued with several serious childhood diseases which kept him from attending regular school. In contrast to his father, his mother seemed to be rather quiet and possessive, demonstrating a tremendous attachment to her children. His father was a loud, outgoing, hard-drinking, boisterous man who bordered on the vulgar, at least as far as the young, sensitive Tennessee Williams was concerned. Because his father was a traveling salesman and was often away from home, he lived the first ten years of his life in his maternal grandparents' home. Tennessee Williams was born Thomas Lanier Williams in Columbus, Mississippi.

The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams

Thus, his life is utilized over and over again in the creation of his dramas.

The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams

He uses his experiences so as to universalize them through the means of the stage. More than with most authors, Tennessee Williams' personal life and experiences have been the direct subject matter for his dramas.








The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams