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tennessee williams
Thomas Lanier Williams was born in Columbus, Mississippi, on March 26,
1911, the first son and second child of Cornelius Coffin and Edwina Dakin
Williams.
His mother, the daughter
of a minister, was of genteel upbringing, while his father, a shoe salesman,
came from a prestigious Tennessee family which included the state’s
first governor and first senator. The family lived for several years in
Clarksdale, Mississippi, before moving to St Louis in 1918. At the age
of 16, he encountered his first brush with the publishing world when he
won third prize and received $5 for an essay, Can a Good Wife Be a
Good Sport?, in Smart Set. A year later, he published The Vengeance
of Nitocris in Weird Tales. In 1929, he entered the University of
Missouri. His success there was dubious, and in 1931 he began work for
a St Louis shoe company. It was six years later when his first play, Cairo,
Shanghai, Bombay, was produced in Memphis, in many respects the true beginning
of his literary and stage career.
Building upon the experience
he gained with his first production, Williams had two of his plays, Candles
to the Sun and The Fugitive Kind, produced by Mummers of
St Louis in 1937. After a brief encounter with enrolment at Washington
University, St Louis, he entered the University of Iowa and graduated
in 1938. As the Second World War loomed over the horizon, Williams found
a bit of fame when he won the Group Theatre prize of $100 for American
Blues and received a $1,000 grant from the Authors’ League
of America in 1939. Battle of Angels was produced in Boston a
year later. Near the close of the war in 1944, what many consider to be
his finest play, The Glass Menagerie, had a very successful run
in Chicago and a year later burst its way onto Broadway. Containing autobiographical
elements from both his days in St Louis as well as from his family’s
past in Mississippi, the play won the New York Drama Critics’ Circle
award as the best play of the season. Williams, at the age of 34, had
etched an indelible mark among the public and among his peers.
Following critical acclaim of The Glass Menagerie, over the next
eight years he found homes for A Streetcar Named Desire, Summer
and Smoke, A Rose Tattoo, and Camino Real on Broadway.
Although his reputation on Broadway continued to peak, particularly upon
receiving his first Pulitzer Prize in 1948 for Streetcar, Williams
reached a larger world-wide public in 1950 with The Glass Menagerie
and again in 1951 when A Streetcar Named Desire were both made
into motion pictures. Williams had now achieved a fame few playwrights
of his day could equal.
Over the next thirty years, dividing his time between homes in Key West,
New Orleans, and New York, his reputation continued to grow and he saw
many more of his works produced on Broadway and made into films, including
such works as Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (for which he earned a second
Pulitzer Prize in 1955), Orpheus Descending, and Night of
the Iguana. There is little doubt that as a playwright, fiction writer,
poet, and essayist, Williams helped transform the contemporary idea of
Southern literature. However, as a Southerner he not only helped to pave
the way for other writers, but also helped the South find a strong voice
in those auspices where before it had only been heard as a whisper.
Tennessee Williams died on February 24, 1983, at the Hotel Elysée
in New York City.
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