The Glass Menagerie Show Poster

The Glass Menagerie Critics’ Reviews

The Glass Menagerie opens with Tom Wingfield in a hotel room, trying to forge his past into art. Tom’s space is soon overtaken by the memories of the cramped apartment he once shared with his mother Amanda and beloved sister Laura. The drama recalls the family’s unrequited dreams and the night a visit from a man known as the Gentleman Caller changed their lives forever.

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About The Glass Menagerie

What Is the Story of The Glass Menagerie?
Tennessee Williams’ The Glass Menagerie is a semi-autobiographical “memory play” that recounts the sometimes hilarious, more often heartbreaking events that lead to the undoing of the Wingfield family. Abandoned by her charmer of a husband years ago, fading Southern belle Amanda Wingfield dominates her home and the lives of her two adult children, Laura and Tom. Fixated on her highly sensitive daughter’s future—and sensing her son’s need to leave the nest—Amanda demands Tom find a suitable “Gentleman Caller” to court her daughter. When Tom finally finds a potential suitor in a coworker at the local warehouse, the family spins into frenzied preparations for the momentous evening; a night no one will forget.

Reviews

critics reviews Critics’ Reviews (4)
A collection of our favorite reviews from professional news sources.
Backstage

""The freshest, most vital account of The Glass Menagerie I've seen—and I've seen my share. Director Edelstein and his excellent quartet of actors have blown the dust off this beloved 65-year-old classic. It's a cause for celebration.""

Backstage

Erik Haagensen

""Tennessee Williams' first great play The Glass Menagerie is done few favors by helmer Gordon Edelstein's on-the-nose interpretation, which stages the play in protag (and Williams stand-in) Tom Wingfield's hotel room and features Tom writing the script throughout the play.""

Sam Theilman

Variety

Entertainment Weekly

""All four actors have mastered the space between Williams' words, squeezing every ounce of sardonicism and naked vulnerability into a mesmerizing collaborative performance.""

Entertainment Weekly

Jeff Labrecque

The New York Times

""Fiercely moving and seriously funny. Lightning-lit from within by the tough, compelling and first-rate Amanda Wingfield of Judith Ivey, giving what is surely the performance of her career.""

The New York Times

Charles Isherwood

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