A memory play is a play in which a lead character narrates the events of the play, which are drawn from the character's memory. The term was coined by playwright Tennessee Williams , describing his work The Glass Menagerie . In his production notes, Williams says, "Being a 'memory play', The Glass Menagerie can be presented with unusual freedom of convention." In a widening of the definition, it has been argued that Harold Pinter 's plays Old Times , No Man's Land and Betrayal are memory plays, where "memory becomes a weapon". Brian Friel 's Dancing at Lughnasa is a late 20th-century example of the genre.
99-540: 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 . The play premiered in Chicago on 26 December 1944. After
198-410: A guilloche motif. The proscenium measures about 24 ft (7.3 m) high and 40 ft (12 m) wide. A sounding board curves onto the ceiling above the proscenium arch. The sounding board has a large decorated latticework panel in the center, which is surrounded by a molding that depicts overlapping leaves. The rest of the sounding board was originally decorated with Spanish-style motifs and
297-785: A $ 7.5 million loan for the four developments from S. W. Straus & Co. Irwin Chanin launched a competition the same month, asking the public to suggest names for the three theaters. The names of the three theaters were announced in December 1926. The large theater became the Majestic; the mid-sized theater, the Royale; and the small theater, the Masque. The following month, the Chanins gave A. L. Erlanger exclusive control over bookings at
396-400: A Spanish style and was built for real-estate developer Irwin S. Chanin . It has 1,100 seats across two levels and is operated by The Shubert Organization . Both the facade and the auditorium interior are New York City landmarks . The facade is designed in a Spanish style with golden brick, terracotta , and stone and is divided into two sections. The western portion of the facade contains
495-431: A book that she loved and often reread, Freckles by Gene Stratton-Porter ). Generally, the story contains the same plot as the play, with certain sections given more emphasis, and character details edited (for example, in the story, Jim nicknames Tom "Slim", instead of "Shakespeare"). Another basis for the play is a screenplay Williams wrote under the title of The Gentleman Caller . Williams had been briefly contracted as
594-512: A different purpose: the 1,800-seat Majestic for "revues and light operas", the 1,200-seat Royale for "musical comedies", and the 800-seat Masque for "intimate" plays. By developing a small, medium, and large theater concurrently, the Chanins were able to lower their development costs. Burns Mantle wrote for the New York Daily News that the Royale had "a handsome auditorium with a Willy Pogany interior, well proportioned stage, and
693-595: A happy ending. The play had not found an audience and production was being considered for closing after the opening night in Chicago. Then the reviews by critics Ashton Stevens in The Chicago Herald-American and Claudia Cassidy in the Chicago Tribune came out. They praised the production, especially the writing and the performance by Laurette Taylor, with Cassidy writing about it several times. These reviews drove Chicago audiences to
792-461: A high school student), though it has also been suggested that Laura may incorporate aspects of Williams himself, referencing his introverted nature and obsessive focus on just one aspect of life (writing for Williams and glass animals in Laura's case). Williams, who was close to Rose growing up, learned to his horror that in 1943, in his absence, his sister had been subjected to a botched lobotomy . Rose
891-724: A hundred performances before ending. In addition, the Shubert brothers bought the Majestic, John Golden (Masque), and Royale theaters from the Bankers Securities Corporation in 1945, giving the family full ownership of these theaters. The productions in 1946 included The Magnificent Yankee , featuring Louis Calhern and Dorothy Gish ; The Glass Menagerie ; The Front Page ; and Fatal Weakness , featuring Ina Claire . Subsequently, The Importance of Being Earnest , Love for Love , and Medea were all produced in 1947. The comedy Light Up
990-533: A lack of programming, and the theater reverted to the Shuberts. The Magoro Operating Corporation, on behalf of the Shuberts, took over the Royale in October 1940 after CBS's lease ended, and the theater assumed its previous name. The Royale Theatre reopened on October 21, 1940, with Du Barry Was a Lady . The Royale subsequently hosted several productions relocated from other theaters, including Flight to
1089-641: A landmark in December 1987. This was part of the LPC's wide-ranging effort in 1987 to grant landmark status to Broadway theaters. The New York City Board of Estimate ratified the designations in March 1988. The Shuberts, the Nederlanders , and Jujamcyn collectively sued the LPC in June 1988 to overturn the landmark designations of 22 theaters, including the Royale, on the merit that the designations severely limited
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#17328024243351188-519: A month, followed by Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat , which also ran for over a year. Besides Broadway productions, the Royale also held college commencements. In the mid-1980s, the Royale had some brief runs, including The Human Comedy in 1984 and Home Front and Pack of Lies in 1985. The Royale next presented the two-act show Song and Dance in 1985, which ran for 474 performances. This
1287-453: A quiet dance, in which he accidentally brushes against her glass menagerie, knocking a glass unicorn to the floor and breaking off its horn. Jim then compliments Laura and kisses her. After Jim tells Laura that he is engaged to be married, Laura asks him to take the broken unicorn as a gift and he then leaves. When Amanda learns that Jim is to be married, she turns her anger upon Tom and cruelly lashes out at him, although Tom did not know that Jim
1386-599: A revival of the play Copenhagen in 2000, which ran 326 performances. The theater then staged One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest and John Leguizamo 's solo show Sexaholix in 2001, as well as The Elephant Man and Jackie Mason 's solo comedy Prune Danish the next year. As part of a settlement with the United States Department of Justice in 2003, the Shuberts agreed to improve disabled access at their 16 landmarked Broadway theaters, including
1485-523: A shaky start, it was championed by Chicago critics Ashton Stevens and Claudia Cassidy , whose enthusiasm helped build audiences so the producers could move the play to Broadway where it won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award in 1945. The Glass Menagerie was Williams' first successful play; he went on to become one of America's most highly regarded playwrights. "Yes, I have tricks in my pocket, I have things up my sleeve. But I am
1584-416: A standing rail behind it. Two staircases lead between the orchestra and the balcony. These staircases have metal railings and elaborate balustrades . In front of the orchestra level is an orchestra pit, which is placed below the stage. The orchestra level is wheelchair-accessible but there are no elevators to the balcony. The balcony level is divided into front and rear sections by an aisle halfway across
1683-647: A theatrical franchise "in New York and half a dozen other large cities in the United States". Herbert Krapp had already designed the 46th Street , Biltmore , and Mansfield theaters for the Chanins in 1925 and 1926. The Chanin brothers had acquired the Klaman site in May 1925. The Chanins planned to build a hotel on Eighth Avenue and three theaters on the side streets. In March 1926, Krapp filed plans with
1782-513: A writer to MGM , and he apparently envisioned Ethel Barrymore and Judy Garland for the roles that eventually became Amanda and Laura, although when the play was eventually filmed in 1950, Gertrude Lawrence was cast as Amanda and Jane Wyman as Laura. In 1944, after several reworkings, while touring on the road, the play arrived at the Civic Theatre in Chicago. The producers wanted more changes and were heavily pressuring Williams for
1881-399: A year following its opening in 1989. During the 1980s, the Shuberts renovated the Royale as part of a restoration program for their Broadway theaters. The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission (LPC) had started considering protecting the Royale as a landmark in 1982, with discussions continuing over the next several years. The LPC designated the Royale's facade and interior as
1980-511: Is a railing with shield motifs; the center motif is flanked by griffins . The underside of each box is decorated with a medallion containing a light fixture, as well as acanthus-leaf motifs. The coved ceilings above the boxes contain Spanish-inspired brass chandeliers. Next to the boxes is an elliptical proscenium arch. The archway is surrounded by rope moldings, above which is a wide band, consisting of four-part leaves surrounded by
2079-443: Is another example of a memory play. The term has also been used to describe film, such as John Ford 's The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance , described by Scott Eyman as containing "under-populated sets" and "archetypal characters". In a 2007 essay entitled "Some Memory Plays Before the 'Memory Play'", academic and director Attilio Favorini identifies Ibsen , Strindberg , Pirandello and O'Neill as early 20th-century exponents of
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#17328024243352178-550: Is available on the BBC iPlayer The first television version, recorded on videotape and starring Shirley Booth as Amanda, was broadcast on December 8, 1966, as part of CBS Playhouse . Barbara Loden played Laura, Hal Holbrook played Tom and Pat Hingle played the Gentleman Caller. Booth was nominated for an Emmy for her performance. The videotape, long thought to be lost, was reconstructed from unedited takes found in
2277-470: 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. The action of the play is loosely based on Williams' own memories. The narrator, Tom Wingfield, moves in and out of
2376-504: Is no clear indication of which, if any, is true. In Friel's Dancing at Lughnasa , "a memory play focusing on the five unmarried Mundy sisters who struggle to maintain the family home ... The memory controlling the play's shape and substance belongs to Michael, the 'love child' of Chris, youngest of the sisters." Critic Irving Wardle has argued that Friel invented the modern memory play, citing Philadelphia, Here I Come! and Faith Healer as examples. The play, Da , by Hugh Leonard
2475-452: Is obsessed with finding a suitor (or, as she puts it, a "gentleman caller") for Laura, whose crippling shyness and anxiety has led her to drop out of both high school and a subsequent secretarial course, and who spends much of her time polishing and arranging her collection of little glass animals. Pressured by his mother to help find a caller for Laura, Tom invites Jim, an acquaintance from work, home for dinner. The delighted Amanda spruces up
2574-506: Is so overcome by shyness that she is unable to join the others at dinner, and she claims to be ill. After dinner, however, Jim and Laura are left alone by candlelight in the living room, waiting for the electricity to be restored. (Tom has not paid the power bill, which hints to the audience that he is banking the bill money and preparing to leave the household.) As the evening progresses, Jim recognizes Laura's feelings of inferiority and encourages her to think better of herself. He and Laura share
2673-428: Is surrounded by moldings on all sides. The depth of the auditorium to the proscenium is 26 ft 4 in (8.03 m), while the depth to the front of the stage is 30 ft 1 in (9.17 m). The ceiling consists of a groin vault that extends over the balcony. The vault is surrounded by a molding with laurel leaves. The ceiling is divided into ribs, containing laurel-leaf and talon moldings. The center of
2772-595: The COVID-19 pandemic . It reopened on November 15, 2021, with previews of Company , which ran until July 2022. Following the closure of Company , the theater hosted Almost Famous from November 2022 to January 2023. New York City Center 's production of Parade opened at the Jacobs in March 2023 and ran until August. This was followed in April 2024 by the musical The Outsiders . Productions are listed by
2871-477: The Lincoln Hotel , were all developed by the Chanin brothers and designed by Krapp as part of a theater/hotel complex. The Royale was the first of the three theaters to be completed, opening on January 11, 1927. The Shubert family took over the Royale in 1930 but subsequently went into receivership , and producer John Golden leased the theater in 1932. Golden renamed the theater after himself in 1934, but
2970-664: The National Film Award for Best Supporting Actress , and Geethu Mohandas won the Kerala State Film Award for the best actress. The 2011 Iranian film Here Without Me is also an adaptation of the play, in a contemporary Iranian setting. The first radio adaptation was performed on Theatre Guild on the Air in 1951 starring Helen Hayes as Amanda with Montgomery Clift as Tom, Kathryn Baird as Laura and Karl Malden as Jim. A 1953 adaptation appeared on
3069-478: The New York City Department of Buildings for the hotel and theaters, which were projected to cost $ 4.5 million. Local news media reported that there would be a large theater on 44th Street and a medium-sized theater and a small theater on 45th Street. The brownstones on the site were razed starting in May, and the site was cleared by the next month. That July, the Chanin brothers received
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3168-570: The Playhouse Theatre on March 31, 1945, and played there until June 29, 1946. It then moved to the Royale Theatre from July 1, 1946, until its closing on August 3, 1946. The show was directed by Eddie Dowling and Margo Jones . The cast for opening night was as follows: Laurette Taylor's performance as Amanda set a standard against which subsequent actresses taking the role were to be judged, typically to their disadvantage. In
3267-664: The Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City . The nearly rectangular land lot covers 9,275 sq ft (861.7 m ), with a frontage of 88.17 ft (26.87 m) on 44th Street and a depth of 100.42 ft (31 m). The Golden Theatre shares the city block with the Row NYC Hotel to the west. It adjoins six other theaters: the Gerald Schoenfeld and Booth to
3366-603: The 2004 documentary Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There , Broadway veterans rank Taylor's performance as the most memorable of their lives. The play won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award as Best American Play. Williams gave credit to two Chicago critics, Claudia Cassidy and Ashton Stevens, for "giving him a 'start...in a fashion'..." Cassidy wrote that the play had "the stamina of success ..." Stevens wrote that
3465-515: The Chanin brothers. It was part of an entertainment complex along with the Lincoln Hotel and the Majestic and Masque theaters, which were also designed by Krapp in a Spanish style. The Royale was designed to be the medium-sized theater of the complex, with about 1,200 seats initially. The Chanin Realty and Construction Company constructed all four structures. The Jacobs is operated by
3564-487: The Civic Theater and the play became a hit, propelling it to Broadway the next year. Two Hollywood film versions of The Glass Menagerie have been produced. The first , released in 1950 and directed by Irving Rapper , stars Gertrude Lawrence (Amanda), Jane Wyman (Laura), Arthur Kennedy (Tom) and Kirk Douglas (Jim). Williams characterized this version, which had an implied happy ending grafted onto it in
3663-581: The Golden (Royale) hosted several short-lived productions in 1936, among them Three Wise Fools , Ghosts , and Double Dummy . The Broadway theater industry declined during the Great Depression , and the Majestic, Masque, and Golden (Royale) were auctioned in November 1936 to satisfy a $ 2 million mortgage against the theaters. A representative of the Shubert family bought the rights to operate
3762-407: The Jacobs in 2012 and was a hit, running for nearly three years. Once was followed by the comedy It's Only a Play in 2015. The Jacobs hosted two musicals over the following two years: The Color Purple (2015) and Bandstand (2017). Following were the dramas The Iceman Cometh and The Ferryman in 2018, as well as Betrayal in 2019. The theater closed on March 12, 2020 , due to
3861-404: The Royale featured The Matchmaker , which was adapted from a flop but had 486 performances. Other popular productions during the decade were The Tunnel of Love in 1957 and The Entertainer in 1958. Following a screening of the film Gigi in May 1958, the Royale again hosted theatrical productions that November with La Plume de Ma Tante , which ran over 800 performances. In
3960-481: The Royale hosted the Chicago Shakespeare Theater for two weeks in late 1931. By then, the Shuberts were in receivership and were forced to give up the Royale, though they kept the Majestic and Masque. In July 1932, producer John Golden granted the right to lease the Royale for 21 months, despite objections from Lee Shubert . That November, Golden officially signed a 21-month lease with
4059-460: The Royale in 1927, as did three Gilbert and Sullivan works: The Mikado , Iolanthe , and The Pirates of Penzance . The Royale's productions in 1928 included The Madcap , as well as Sh! The Octopus , its first straight play . Later that year, the Royale had its first major hit, the Mae West play Diamond Lil . It was followed in 1929 by the flop Woof, Woof , then by
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4158-683: The Royale. Also in 2003, the Royale hosted the short-lived revivals Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and "Master Harold"...and the Boys , as well as the more successful Anna in the Tropics . The next year, the Royale held the productions A Raisin in the Sun and 'night, Mother . In September 2004, the Shubert Organization's board of directors voted to rename the Royale for its longtime president Bernard B. Jacobs (1916–1996), as well as
4257-471: The Shubert Organization . The facade contains two sections. The western section is wider and is symmetrical, containing the auditorium entrance. The eastern section, which contains the stage house , is narrower and taller than the western section. In both sections, the ground floor is clad in rusticated blocks of terracotta above a granite water table . At ground level, the auditorium entrance includes five pairs of glass and aluminum doors, which lead to
4356-422: The Shubert Organization, the auditorium has 1,092 seats, while according to The Broadway League , there are 1,078 seats. The physical seats are divided into 636 seats in the orchestra, 168 at the front of the balcony, 252 at the rear of the balcony, and 16 in the boxes. There are 20 standing-only spots. Below the orchestra are restrooms and drinking fountains. The Jacobs and the neighboring Schoenfeld are two of
4455-406: The Shuberts took over in 1936 and leased the theater to CBS Radio . The Royale was restored as a legitimate theater under its original name in 1940. The theatre was renamed in 2005 after Bernard B. Jacobs (1916–1996), former president of the Shubert Organization. The Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre is at 242 West 45th Street, on the south side between Eighth Avenue and Broadway , near Times Square in
4554-502: The Sky ran over 200 performances in 1948, and The Madwoman of Chaillot played the Royale the next year. The following decade began with productions of The Devil's Disciple and The Lady's Not for Burning in 1950, as well as a relocated production of Darkness at Noon in 1951. Following that was Borscht Capades and a series of short-lived productions. The Royale then hosted New Faces of 1952 , which turned out to be
4653-484: The West and The Corn Is Green in 1941. Some of the subsequent productions were hits with several hundred performances, including Counsellor-at-Law in 1942, as well as Ramshackle Inn with ZaSu Pitts ; School for Brides with Roscoe Karns ; and Catherine Was Great with Mae West in 1944. Less successful were the 1945 productions of Good Night, Ladies and Strange Fruit , which both ran for less than
4752-650: The action, directly addressing the audience at times. The other characters Amanda and Laura also revisit their own memories throughout. Williams' plays A Streetcar Named Desire and Summer and Smoke are also referred to as memory plays. Dharamveer Bharti wrote Suraj Ka Satvan Ghoda in 1952. It was adapted on screen by Shyam Benegal in 1992 as a film of the same name. The 1970s works of Harold Pinter, including Landscape , Silence , A Kind of Alaska , Betrayal and Old Times have been described by Michael Billington and others as memory plays. Characters recite their own versions of past events and there
4851-418: The apartment, prepares a special dinner, and converses coquettishly with Jim, almost reliving her youth when she had an abundance of suitors calling on her. Laura discovers that Jim is the boy she was attracted to in high school and has often thought of since, though the relationship between the shy Laura and the "most likely to succeed" Jim was never more than a distant, teasing acquaintanceship. Initially, Laura
4950-654: The arches' outer reveals. According to a contemporary account, the arches measured 45 by 15 ft (13.7 by 4.6 m) across. Times Square became the epicenter for large-scale theater productions between 1900 and the Great Depression . During the 1900s and 1910s, many theaters in Midtown Manhattan were developed by the Shubert brothers , one of the major theatrical syndicates of the time. The Chanin brothers developed another grouping of theaters in
5049-501: The archives of the University of Southern California and an audio recording of the original telecast. On December 8, 2016 — fifty years to the day after the original telecast — a re-assembled version of the play was shown on TCM. A second television adaptation was broadcast on ABC on December 16, 1973, starring Katharine Hepburn as Amanda, Sam Waterston as Tom, Joanna Miles as Laura and Michael Moriarty as Jim. It
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#17328024243355148-404: The audience that what they see may not be precisely what happened. 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
5247-424: The balcony are moldings of swags and rosettes. The soffit has been modified with the installation of air-conditioning grilles, while lights have been installed in front of the balcony. On either side of the stage is an elliptically arched wall section with two boxes at the balcony level. The front box on either side is lower than the rear box. Each wall section is surrounded by a rope molding. In front of each box
5346-427: The ceiling contains a latticework grille with arabesques, marking the convergence of the ribs. In addition, there are two arches along the walls on either side of the vault; they contain a set of murals by Willy Pogany, entitled Lovers of Spain . These arches each depict a woman in a procession of musicians. The arches are surrounded by molded acanthus leaves and shells, and there are square panels with rosettes on
5445-489: The comedy Every Thursday , Golden renewed his lease in September 1934 and renamed the Royale for himself. The first productions at the renamed theater included Small Miracle and Rain from Heaven . The Irish group Abbey Theatre Players started hosting repertory productions in November 1934, changing the shows every week. This was followed in 1935 by The Bishop Misbehaves and A Touch of Brimstone. Afterward,
5544-546: The depth. The walls consist of paneled stucco blocks. Above the wall is a frieze with rosettes , which forms the wall's cornice . Light fixtures and square panels with arabesques are placed at the front of the balcony's soffit , or underside. Behind this, the center of the soffit is decorated with a medallion containing a light fixture and acanthus-leaf motifs. The outer portions of the soffit are divided into rhombus-shaped panels, which contain latticework and arabesques surrounded by acanthus-leaf and rope moldings. In front of
5643-526: The earlier incarnation, it has yet to receive a physical media release. In 2004, an Indian adaptation of the play, filmed in the Malayalam language, was released, titled Akale ( At a Distance ). Directed by Shyamaprasad , the story is set in the southern Indian state of Kerala in the 1970s, in an Anglo-Indian/Latin Catholic household. The characters were renamed to fit context (the surname Wingfield
5742-621: The early 1960s, the Royale hosted numerous productions including Becket in 1960, From the Second City in 1961, The Night of the Iguana in 1961, and Lord Pengo in 1962. The Royale additionally presented a four-week engagement of the Karmon Israeli Dancers in May 1963. Following were The Rehearsal in 1963 and The Chinese Prime Minister , The Subject Was Roses , and Hughie in 1964. For much of
5841-827: The east, the Broadhurst and Shubert to the southeast, the Majestic to the south, and the Golden to the west. Other nearby structures include the Music Box Theatre and Imperial Theatre to the north; the New York Marriott Marquis to the northeast; One Astor Plaza to the east; and Sardi's restaurant, the Hayes Theater , and the St. James Theatre one block south. The Jacobs is part of
5940-450: The established atmosphere of a hospitable and well-run theatre". Piggy (renamed mid-run to I Told You So ) had a weak script, but comedian Sam Bernard carried the show for 79 performances. The Royale next hosted Judy with Queenie Smith . This was followed by the short-running Oh, Ernest! , though the Chanins unsuccessfully tried to prevent the producers from relocating prematurely. The Black revue Rang Tang also played at
6039-400: The exclusive rights to operate the Royale in 1930. Under Shubert management, the Royale hosted Second Little Show in 1930, which was followed by Lew Leslie's Blackbirds and Stepping Sisters . Another Mae West play, Constant Sinner , was presented at the Royale in 1931, along with numerous unsuccessful productions. After West unsuccessfully tried to show a revival of Macbeth ,
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#17328024243356138-608: The extent to which the theaters could be modified. The lawsuit was escalated to the New York Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of the United States , but these designations were ultimately upheld in 1992. The first hit at the Royale in the 1990s was the 1992 play Conversations with My Father , which ran for over a year. London's Royal National Theatre presented An Inspector Calls in 1994, which ran 454 performances. The National Actors Theatre
6237-486: The fifth story, the three center windows are placed within a loggia , which in turn is placed on brackets . The loggia has paired columns with decorative capitals, which support a Spanish tile roof. There is a pyramidal tile roof above the stage house. The Jacobs's loggia complements a similar one on the Golden Theatre. The Jacobs's interior was designed with a red, orange, and gold color scheme. The layout
6336-411: 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. Amanda
6435-404: The initial issue of its theatre series. The production starred Jessica Tandy as Amanda, Montgomery Clift as Tom, Julie Harris as Laura and David Wayne as the gentleman caller. The recording is now available in the form of an audio app. In 2020, BBC Radio 3 adapted the play with Anastasia Hille as Amanda, George MacKay as Tom, Patsy Ferran as Laura, Sope Dirisu as Jim. This version
6534-458: The largest concentration of Broadway theaters on a single block. The adjoining block of 45th Street is also known as George Abbott Way , and foot traffic on the street increases box-office totals for the theaters there. The Majestic, Masque (Golden), and Royale (Jacobs) theaters and the Lincoln Hotel (Row NYC Hotel) had all been developed concurrently. The site of all four buildings had previously occupied by twenty brownstone residences. The site
6633-416: The last popular Broadway revue for several years due to the growing popularity of television. The Immoralist played at the Royale in 1954, as did The Boy Friend , the latter of which featured Julie Andrews 's Broadway debut. The same year saw the shortest production at the Royale on record: a single performance of The Starcross Story , which had premiered just before The Immortalist . In 1955,
6732-485: The memory play, arguing the influence of Freud and Jung on their work. Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre The Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre (formerly the Royale Theatre and the John Golden Theatre ) is a Broadway theater at 242 West 45th Street ( George Abbott Way ) in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City . Opened in 1927, the theater was designed by Herbert J. Krapp in
6831-472: The mid-1920s. Though the Chanins largely specialized in real estate rather than theaters, Irwin Chanin had become interested in theater when he was an impoverished student at the Cooper Union . He subsequently recalled that he had been "humiliated" by having to use a separate door whenever he bought cheap seats in an upper balcony level. By October 1926, the Chanins had decided to construct and operate
6930-530: The moderately successful comedy Kibitzer . In July 1929, the Shubert brothers bought the Chanin brothers' half-ownership stakes in the Majestic, Masque, and Royale theaters for a combined $ 1.8 million. In exchange, the Shuberts sold a parcel of land on the Upper West Side to the Chanins, who bought several adjacent lots and developed the Century apartment building there. The Shuberts obtained
7029-447: The most desired theaters among producers because of their good sightlines from the seating areas. The rear of the orchestra contains a promenade with two columns supporting the balcony level. The orchestra floor is raked . The orchestra and its promenade contain walls with paneled baseboards , above which are rough stucco blocks. The side walls contain doors, above which are exit signs within bracketed panels. The rearmost row has
7128-418: The neighboring Plymouth for then-current president Gerald Schoenfeld . The two theaters were officially renamed with a marquee replacement ceremony on May 9, 2005. While Jacobs's family was "thrilled", the renaming was controversial among producers and theatrical fans, despite the longstanding tradition of renaming Broadway houses after their producers. The play Glengarry Glen Ross opened just before
7227-413: The opposite of a stage magician. He gives you an illusion that has the appearance of truth. I give you truth in the pleasant disguise of illusion." The beginning of Tom's opening soliloquy. The play is introduced to the audience by Tom, the narrator and protagonist, as a memory play based on his recollection of his mother Amanda and his sister Laura. Because the play is based on memory, Tom cautions
7326-411: The play had "the courage of true poetry ..." The characters and story mimic Williams' own life more closely than any of his other works: Williams (whose real name was Thomas) closely resembles Tom, and his mother inspires Amanda. His sickly and mentally unstable older sister Rose provides the basis for the fragile Laura (whose nickname in the play is "Blue Roses", a result of a bout of pleurosis as
7425-421: The radio series Best Plays starring Evelyn Varden as Amanda and Geraldine Page as Laura. Jane Wyman recreated her film portrayal of Laura for a 1954 adaptation on Lux Radio Theatre with Fay Bainter as Amanda and Frank Lovejoy as Tom and Tom Brown as Jim. The 1953 version is not known to survive but recordings of the other two are in circulation. In 1964, Caedmon Records produced an LP version as
7524-637: The renaming and had 137 performances. This was followed in 2006 by the short-running drama Three Days of Rain and Martin Short 's biographical revue Fame Becomes Me ; the Jacobs also hosted a memorial for Lloyd Richards the same year. Further productions of the late 2000s included Frost/Nixon and Rock 'n' Roll in 2007; The Country Girl and 13 in 2008; and God of Carnage in 2009. The Jacobs hosted Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson in 2010, as well as That Championship Season and The Mountaintop in 2011. The musical Once opened at
7623-501: The rest of the decade, the Royale was taken up by Cactus Flower , which premiered in 1965 and ran for 1,234 performances. Man in the Glass Booth , which premiered in 1968, was the Royale's last major production of the 1960s. The Royale hosted Child's Play in 1970 and Moonchildren in 1972. From 1972 to 1980, the Royale hosted the musical Grease . The production became the longest-running show on Broadway , and
7722-403: The script, Williams describes the scene: The scene is memory and is therefore non-realistic. Memory takes a lot of poetic license. 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. In his first few lines Tom Wingfield declares: The play
7821-543: The set was peeling by the time Grease stopped playing at the Royale. In February 1980, Whose Life is it Anyway? opened at the Royale, with Mary Tyler Moore playing what had previously been a male starring role. This was followed the same year by A Day in Hollywood / A Night in the Ukraine , a double bill with 588 performances. The Royale then hosted Duet for One with Anne Bancroft and Max von Sydow for
7920-542: The style of American films from that era, as the worst adaptation of his work. Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote, "As much as we hate to say so, Miss Lawrence's performance does not compare with the tender and radiant creation of the late Laurette Taylor on the stage." The film has never been released on home media. In 1987, a second adaptation was released, directed by Paul Newman and starring Joanne Woodward (Amanda), Karen Allen (Laura), John Malkovich (Tom) and James Naughton (Jim). If anything, this
8019-431: The theater's entrance, with five double-height arched windows and a curved pediment above. The eastern portion is the stage house and is topped by a loggia . The auditorium contains Spanish-style detailing, a large balcony, and an expansive vaulted ceiling. The auditorium's interior features murals by Willy Pogany as well as several box seats. The Royale, Majestic , and Masque (now John Golden) theaters, along with
8118-399: The theater's name is placed between the auditorium and stage sections. The parapet of the auditorium facade contains a terracotta coping . Above the center portion of the facade, there is a rounded pediment with finials and an ornamental lunette . The stage house has five sash windows on each of the second through fifth stories. These windows contain sills made of terracotta. At
8217-472: The theater's receiver. At the time, Golden had recently lost the right to operate his eponymous theater on 58th Street. The Royale hosted Golden's comedy When Ladies Meet in late 1932, and the Theatre Guild next hosted two productions: Both Your Houses (1933) and They Shall Not Die (1934). Otherwise, the Royale's productions during this time were largely flops. After the Royale hosted
8316-652: The theaters for $ 700,000, but the Bankers Securities Corporation retained a half interest. John Golden, undeterred by the auction proceeding, moved his production to the Masque and renamed that theater after himself. The Shuberts leased the former Royale to CBS Radio the following month, and CBS started operating the studio in January 1937 as CBS Radio Theatre No. 1. At the time, CBS had converted several theaters around Times Square into broadcast studios. The studio closed in May 1940 due to
8415-410: The three new theaters and their five existing houses. The Royale Theatre was the first of the three theaters to open, showing the play Piggy on January 11, 1927. The opening of the Majestic, Masque, and Royale signified the westward extension of the traditional Broadway theater district, as well as an expansion of the Chanins' theatrical developments. Each of the Chanin theaters was intended for
8514-542: The ticket office and auditorium. There are also rectangular aluminum-framed sign boards beside the openings. The entrance is topped by a marquee . Four sets of aluminum doors lead from the stage house portion of the facade. A terracotta cornice runs above the base. The stage door is at 270 West 45th Street (next to the Golden Theatre) and is shared with the Majestic and Golden theaters. The upper stories contain gold-colored, bonded Roman brick. The brick facade
8613-467: The year of their first performance. This list only includes Broadway shows; it does not include films screened at the theater, nor does it include shows that were taped there. Once previously achieved the box office record for the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre, grossing $ 1,447,598 over nine performances for the week ending December 30, 2012. This record was broken by Parade , which grossed $ 1,814,013 for
8712-434: Was changed to D'Costa, reflecting the part-Portuguese heritage of the family — probably on the absent father's side, since the mother is Anglo-Indian), but the story remains essentially the same. It stars Prithviraj Sukumaran as Neil D'Costa (Tom Wingfield), Geethu Mohandas as Rosemary D'Costa (Laura Wingfield), Sheela as Margaret D'Costa (Amanda Wingfield) and Tom George Kolath as Freddy Evans (Jim O'Connor). Sheela won
8811-427: Was credited for the overall design, while Willy Pogany painted murals and Joseph Dujat created plasterwork. By the 2010s, the Jacobs was designed with a red and gray color palette. The auditorium has an orchestra level, one balcony, boxes , and a stage behind the proscenium arch. The auditorium's width is greater than its depth, and the space is designed with plaster decorations in high relief . According to
8910-495: Was designed to relate to the adjacent theaters and hotel. On the upper stories, the auditorium section has a set of five arches on the second and third stories. The arches rise above terracotta piers that contain Corinthian -style capitals . Each arch contains iron-framed sash windows with multiple panes, separated by horizontal transom bars. A similar, narrower arcade exists on the neighboring Golden Theatre. A sign with
9009-627: Was directed by Anthony Harvey . (Tom's initial soliloquy is cut from this version; it opens with him walking alone in an alley, sitting on a rampart to read the newspaper and having his sister's and mother's voices conjure up the first domestic scene.) All four actors were nominated for Emmy Awards , with Moriarty and Miles winning. The Glass Menagerie has had several Broadway revivals. Maureen Stapleton , Anne Pitoniak , Jessica Tandy , Julie Harris , Jessica Lange , Judith Ivey , Harriet Harris , Cherry Jones , Sally Field and Amy Adams have all portrayed Amanda Wingfield. Memory play In
9108-451: Was engaged. Tom seems quite surprised by this, and it is possible that Jim was only making up the story of the engagement as he felt that the family was trying to set him up with Laura, and he had no romantic interest in her. The play concludes with Tom saying that he left home soon afterward and never returned. He then bids farewell to his mother and sister and asks Laura to blow out the candles. The Glass Menagerie opened on Broadway in
9207-453: Was even less well-received than the earlier film and sank without much attention. However, The New York Times reviewer noted it "starts stiffly and gets better as it goes along, with the dinner-party sequence its biggest success; in this highly charged situation, Miss Woodward's Amanda indeed seems to flower. But quiet reverence is its prevailing tone, and in the end, that seems thoroughly at odds with anything Williams ever intended." Similar to
9306-490: Was followed by a four-performance revival of the play Broadway in 1987 to celebrate George Abbott 's 100th birthday. Other flops included Roza in 1987 and the New York Shakespeare Festival 's off-Broadway production Serious Money in 1988. The decade ended with two hits: Speed-the-Plow , which opened in 1988 and played 287 performances, and Lend Me a Tenor , which ran for over
9405-477: Was left incapacitated and institutionalized for the rest of her life. With the success of The Glass Menagerie , Williams was to give half of the royalties from the play to his mother. He later designated half of the royalties from his play Summer and Smoke to provide for Rose's care, arranging for her move from the state hospital to a private sanitarium. Eventually, he was to leave the bulk of his estate to ensure Rose's continuing care. Rose died in 1996. The play
9504-509: Was part of an effort by Irwin Chanin , one of the developers, to "democratize" the seating arrangement of the theater. The Jacobs was designed with a single balcony rather than the typical two, since Chanin had perceived the second balcony to be distant. The Chanin brothers wanted the three theaters' interior designs to be distinct while still adhering to a Spanish motif, in the belief that beautiful and comfortable theaters would be able to compete against other performing-arts venues. Roman Melzer
9603-533: Was part of the Astor family estate from 1803 to 1922, when it was sold to Henry Claman. The plots collectively measured 200 feet (61 m) wide along Eighth Avenue, 240 feet (73 m) along 44th Street, and 250 feet (76 m) along 45th Street. The Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre, originally the Royale Theatre, was designed by Herbert J. Krapp in a Spanish style and was constructed from 1926 to 1927 for
9702-453: Was reworked from one of Williams' short stories "Portrait of a Girl in Glass" (1943; published 1948). The story is also written from the point of view of narrator Tom Wingfield, and many of his soliloquies from The Glass Menagerie seem lifted straight from this original. Certain elements have been omitted from the play, including the reasons for Laura's fascination with Jim's freckles (linked to
9801-461: Was the next occupant of the Royale, presenting a revival of Inherit the Wind . The Royal National Theatre also produced Skylight at the Royale in 1996, and Triumph of Love premiered in 1997. The play Art opened in 1998, running through the following year with 600 performances. The Royale's final production of the 1990s was a revival of The Price in 1999. The Royale hosted
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