Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Williams, Tennessee (Vol. 30) - Louis Kronenberger
Williams, Tennessee (Vol. 30) - Louis Kronenberger
LOUIS KRONENBERGER
A Streetcar Named Desire is by all odds the most creative new play of the season—the one that reveals the most talent, the one that attempts the most truth. It carries us into the only part of the theater that really counts—not the most obviously successful part, but the part where, though people frequently blunder they seldom compromise; where imagination is seated higher than photography; and where the playwright seems to have a certain genuine interest in pleasing himself….
That is the most important thing about A Streetcar Named Desire; a more important thing, it seems to me, than that A Streetcar is by no means always a good play. It falls down in places; it goes wrong in places. But what is right about it is also, in today's theater, rare. There is something really investigative, something often impassioned, about Mr. Williams' feeling for his material. There is something—in the play's best scenes—that...
[The entire page is 400 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Howard Barnes
- Richard Watts, Jr.
- Louis Kronenberger
- Wolcott Gibbs
- Kappo Phelan
- Joseph Wood Krutch
- John Mason Brown
- Rosamond Gilder
- Harry Taylor
- Harold Clurman
- George Jean Nathan
- W. David Sievers
- Eric Bentley
- Joseph Wood Krutch
- Kenneth Tynan
- John Gassner
- C. N. Stavrou
- Winifred L. Dusenbury
- Marion Magid
- Robert B. Heilman
- R. H. Gardner
- Leonard Berkman
- Martin Gottfried
- Harold Clurman
- Leonard Quirino
- Normand Berlin
- Copyright
