HOME | CURRENT SEASON | SALON SERIES | ABOUT TACT | GET INVOLVED | TACTStudio | TACTORS
 
CURRENT SEASON
 
 
2013/2014 Season
2012/2013 Season
2011/2012 Season
2010/2011 Season
2009/2010 Season
2008/2009 Season
2007/2008 Season
2006/2007 Season
2005/2006 Season
2004/2005 Season
2003/2004 Season
2002/2003 Season
2001/2002 Season
2000/2001 Season
1999/2000 Season
1998/1999 Season
1997/1998 Season
1996/1997 Season
1995/1996 Season
1994/1995 Season
1993/1994 Season
Directions
Salon Series
 

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
Directed by Jenn Thompson+

April 27 to May 24, 2008

The Clurman Theatre
Theatre Row
410 West 42nd Street, NYC

SYNOPSIS
RESTLESS HEARTS COLLIDE

In Glorious Hill, Mississippi, Alma Winemiller, a sensitive and lonely young woman, hemmed in by her stern minister father and deranged mother makes a final desperate attempt to win the man of her choice.
CAST/CREW
 LARRY KEITH+*
The Rev. Winemiller 

 MARY BACON+*
Alma Winemiller 

 NORA CHESTER+*
Mrs. Winemiller 

 TODD GEARHEART*
John Buchanan, Jr 

 DARRIE LAWRENCE+*
Mrs. Buchanan 

 SCOTT SCHAFER+*
Roger Doremus 

 JAMES PRENDERGAST+*
Vernon 

 CYNTHIA DARLOW+*
Mrs. Bassett 

 FRANCESCA DI MAURO+*
Rosemary 

 JOHN PLUMPIS+*
Traveling Salesman 


Costumes by David Toser+
Set Design by Bill Clarke
Lighting by Lucrecia Briceno
Sound by Daryl Bornstein+
Original Music by Jonathan Faiman+

+TACT Company Member
* member of Actors' Equity Assoication
PRESS

A Heroine's Inner Flame, Fueled by an Excess of Feeling

The New York Times
Written in 1951, "The Eccentricities of a Nightingale" was Tennessee Williams's revision of the more... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

The New York Times
"Rivals anything I saw this season for complexity, delicacy and lurid truth." To read the entire... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

Variety
It's time to re-evaluate "The Eccentricities of a Nightingale." When the play debuted on Broadway in... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

The New Yorker
Tennessee Williams?s 1951 revision of ?Summer and Smoke? hasn?t been seen in New York for more than... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

TheatreMania
Alma Winemiller is such a nervous bird that her father sits her down to criticize the compulsive... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

Show Business Weekly
Like Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire and Laura Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie, the... [read more]

Eccentricities of a Nightingale

Edge New York, NY
Wow, wow and wow. And wow. Many people know "Summer and Smoke" from the movie that starred Geraldine... [read more]

Eccentricities of a Nightingale

Theater Scene.net
There may not be any second acts in American life, but there may be second chances for failed... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

Curtain Up
Where did the fire come from? ? Alma No one has ever been able to answer the question. ? John... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

NYTheatre.com
The Actors Company Theatre presents a revival of Tennessee Williams's The Eccentricities of a... [read more]

THE ECCENTRICITIES OF A NIGHTINGALE

Wolf Entertainment Guide
For those who take theater seriously, ?The Eccentricities of a Nightingale? by Tennessee Williams... [read more]

Showtime! - Broadway Blog

BroadwayWorld.com
While Broadway audiences are getting a taste of Tennessee Williams' revised text for Cat on a Hot... [read more]

The Eccentricities of a Nightingale

Back Stage
Tennessee Williams was never satisfied. Obsessed with demons in his private and public lives, he... [read more]

Eccentricities by Tennessee Williams

jbspins.blogspot.com
Alma Winemiller must be eccentric. She is far too demonstrative in her music. Not that music is an... [read more]

Strange Fascination

Off Off Online
The Actors Company Theatre?s (TACT?s) production of The Eccentricities of a Nightingale at the... [read more]
DRAMATURGY
Tennessee Williams was known for rewriting his work. In fact, it was practically an obsession. Fourteen of his seventeen full length plays have been published in different versions, some with minor changes and others with completely different endings or even titles. His close friend Maria Britneva said that Williams ?was never satisfied with anything. He was always sitting down and correcting. He was never happy with what he had done.? One of his most drastic rewrites was the complete overhaul of his 1947 play Summer and Smoke. The result was so different from its original that Williams gave the play a new title, The Eccentricities of a Nightingale. Although it was his preferred version of the play, circumstances prevented the play from being produced until 1975, and the timing could not have been worse for Williams, who was in the midst of a personal and professional downward spiral.

The one constant in every incarnation of Eccentricities is the character of Alma Winemiller. ?Alma may well be the best female portrait I have drawn in a play,? Williams wrote. ?She simply seemed to exist somewhere in my being and it was no effort to put her to paper.? The Eccentricities of a Nightingale, The Glass Menagerie and A Streetcar Named Desire were what Williams called ?a trio? at the heart of which was ?a single theme, or legend, that of the delicate, haunted girl, the oversensitive misfit in a world that spins with blind fury.? Williams identified with Alma more than any other character, he said, because ?she grew up in the shadow of the rectory and so did I?she is my favorite because she had the greatest struggle, you know??

Alma?s struggle began in Tennessee Williams? unpublished short story Bobo (1941), the fantastic tale of a minister?s daughter named Alma who rebels against her Puritan father and becomes a prostitute. She gives birth to a magical child who brings her gold and jewels. Williams rewrote the story as Yellow Bird in 1946. In this version, Alma Tutwiler, the repressed daughter of a fire-and-brimstone preacher, begins drinking, smoking and engaging in prostitution after a yellow bird flies into the window of her parish.

In 1946, Williams decided to turn Yellow Bird into a full length play. At the same time he began working on a different play about two sisters in New Orleans, called The Poker Night. Williams found the Yellow Bird play, which he named Chart of Anatomy, increasingly difficult to write. He wrote in his journal: ?[The play is] fraught with the most abysmal discouragement: abandoned five or six times, I nevertheless picked it up again each time and went doggedly on with it, and the result is a play that is good enough to impress some people?not myself and not many but some?? He was much happier with the finished script of The Poker Night, which he had renamed A Streetcar Named Desire, although he had no idea what a major success it would become.

Meanwhile, The Chart of Anatomy, renamed Summer and Smoke, was sent to director Margo Jones, who had co-directed The Glass Menagerie on Broadway. Jones chose Summer and Smoke for the premiere season of her new theater company, Theatre ?47. It starred Katherine Balfour as Alma Winemiller and Tod Andrews as John Buchanan and opened in July of 1947.

The story had changed rather drastically from Williams? original short story. In Summer and Smoke, Alma Winemiller is shocked when her childhood crush, John Buchanan, returns from medical school with an interest in liquor, loose women and fast cars. The conflict between Alma?s soulfulness and John?s sensuality was at the heart of the play, and Alma?s rebellion in Yellow Bird and Bobo was severely downplayed. A Broadway run was inevitable, although the overwhelming success of A Streetcar Named Desire prompted Williams to hold off on Summer and Smoke?s premiere for more than a year. It finally opened on Broadway on October 6th, 1948 at the Music Box Theatre, but Streetcar was still reigning supreme, in the middle of its 855-performance, two year run. Summer and Smoke, however, ran for a meager 102 performances. Tod Andrews reprised his role as John Buchanan and Margaret Phillips took over as Alma Winemiller. Many critics found the production a disappointment compared to the monumental success of A Streetcar Named Desire. Time magazine wrote: ?Summer and Smoke remains only a lucid diagram. [It] has moments of sad sharp insight, but little coherence and intensity as a whole. The reason is partly structural.?

As it turns out, Williams agreed. He revised the script in 1950, removing the prologue, shifting lines from one scene to another, and adding a scene between Alma and John?s father. Then in 1952, while Summer and Smoke was being prepared for an Off-Broadway revival and a West End premiere, Williams began a complete overhaul of the script, which he called a ?radical piece of surgery.? Some characters, such as the Gonzaleses, were removed altogether while others, especially the main characters, were altered drastically. John was no longer the wild playboy from Summer and Smoke, but instead a decent young doctor with an overbearing mother. Alma bore a closer resemblance to her rebellious predecessor from Yellow Bird, Alma Tutwiler. The violence of Summer and Smoke, such as the murder of the elder John and the cockfight at the Moonlight Casino, was removed, simplifying and clarifying the plot. When he arrived in London with the revamped version, he was dismayed to find that he was too late. Rehearsals had already begun and his alterations to the script were too extensive for the company to incorporate. He left the revised script with his longtime friend, actress Maria Britneva, and promptly forgot about it.

By 1962, Williams had won two Pulitzers and four New York Drama Critics? awards and had been nominated for three Tony awards (one win) and two Oscars. But following the death of his lover of fifteen years, Frank Merlo, in 1963, Williams? addiction to drugs and alcohol became debilitating. A series of major critical and commercial failures followed. Although many modern critics consider Williams? later work to have been misunderstood or unjustly compared to his earlier work, Williams? plays of the 1960s and 70s were largely dismissed, with one critic going so far as to say ?the kindest thing is to assume that Williams died shortly after completing Sweet Bird of Youth [in 1959].?

In the early 1970s, Williams and Maria Britneva were having a drink together when she handed him the revised manuscript of Summer and Smoke he had given her nearly fifteen years ago. ?I am going to put this in your overcoat pocket and I want you to read it tonight if you?re sober enough,? she told him. Williams was so pleased with the manuscript that he read it in one sitting. He began touching up the script immediately.

In 1976, Eccentricities was produced for public television as part of Theater in America. The television production starred Blythe Danner as Alma and Frank Langella as John. John Leonard of The New York Times wrote that Eccentricities ?survives because in 1948 the lyric fruit of Williams? prose had not yet rotted down.? Williams revised the script for the last time shortly after the television premiere. The final script was produced by Neal LeBrock for the Studio Arena Theatre in Buffalo, New York, in 1976. A massive snow storm kept many away, but Broadway and film producer Gloria Hope Sher was brought to the theater in a sled. Sher loved the play so much she decided to produce it on Broadway. It opened at the Morosco Theater on November 23rd, 1976 and starred Betsy Palmer as Alma and David Selby as John Buchanan.

Brendan Gill of The New Yorker called Eccentricities an ?ingenious reworking?which actors and actresses will be constantly beseeching producers to put on; what delectable roles it provides.? Alan Rich of New York Magazine called it a ?profound improvement?I can only wonder why the inferior first draft has held the boards for so long?.some new moments exhale a poetry beyond description.? Variety also preferred Eccentricities: ?It provides a more interesting situation and better theatre.? Most importantly, Williams himself was pleased with the new version, which he called ?one of my favorite and most difficult works.?

Despite the mostly positive critical reception, Eccentricities was unable to escape the dark cloud that loomed over Williams? later career. The show closed after only twenty-four performances. The massive success of Streetcar Named Desire may have stolen the spotlight from Summer and Smoke, but it was the critical and commercial rejection of Williams? work in the 60s and 70s that overshadowed The Eccentricities of a Nightingale. Although Summer and Smoke receives occasional productions (a Broadway revival in 1996 closed after 52 performances), The Eccentricities of a Nightingale?Williams? preferred version?has not been seen since its original production. TACT is honored to have received special permission from the Williams Estate to present this lost gem to New York for the first time in thirty years.