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The Glass Menagerie: written by Tennessee Williams, Acting Edition, C. 1948, rev

£11.28 GBP
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Shipping options

FREE in United Kingdom
Ships from United States Us

Purchase protection

Payment options

PayPal accepted
PayPal Credit accepted
Venmo accepted
PayPal, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, and American Express accepted
Maestro accepted
Amazon Pay accepted
Nuvei accepted

Item traits

Category:

Books

Quantity Available:

Only one in stock, order soon

Condition:

Very Good

Special Attributes:

Vintage Paperback

Author:

Tennessee Williams

Book Title:

The Glass Menagerie

Language:

English

Topic:

play-the glass menagerie

Format:

Soft Cover

Publisher:

Dramatists Play Service Inc.

Genre:

Two Act Play

Publication Year:

1948

Narrative Type:

Fiction

Type:

script for the play

Country/Region of Manufacture:

United States

Edition:

Revised

Intended Audience:

Adults

Number of Pages:

69

Listing details

Shipping discount:

Seller pays shipping for this item.

Price discount:

10% off w/ $100.00 spent

Posted for sale:

More than a week ago

Item number:

1374294589

Item description

The Glass Menagerie is a memory play by Tennessee Williams that premiered in 1944 and catapulted Williams from obscurity to fame. The play has strong autobiographical elements, featuring characters based on its author, his histrionic mother, and his mentally fragile sister. In writing the play, Williams drew on an earlier short story, as well as a screenplay he had written under the title of The Gentleman Caller. Amanda Wingfield, a faded Southern belle of middle age, shares a dingy St. Louis apartment with her son Tom, in his early 20s, and his slightly older sister, Laura. Although she is a survivor and a pragmatist, Amanda yearns for the comforts and admiration she remembers from her days as a fêted debutante. She worries especially about the future of her daughter Laura, a young woman with a limp (an after-effect of a bout of pleurosis) and a tremulous insecurity about the outside world. Tom works in a shoe warehouse doing his best to support the family. He chafes under the banality and boredom of everyday life and struggles to write while spending much of his spare time going to the movies — or so he says — at all hours of the night.