Skip to main content
The mother, the daughter, her lover and their poet
SIMON PARSONS marvels at a production of Williams’s early masterpiece that transforms the play into a symbolic slow dance of tensions, fears and desires
ALL IN THE MIND: Zacchaeus Kayode, Natalie Kimmerling, Geraldine Somerville and Kasper Hilton-Hille in the Glass Menagerie [Marc Brenner]

The Glass Menagerie
Bristol Old Vic

 

STRIPPED of all the 1930s scenic clutter, most naturalistic productions of Tennessee Williams’s first successful play usually embrace, Atri Banarjee’s dynamically rejuvenated version takes the opening monologue as its lodestone — “a memory play” that is “not realistic” and where “everything happens to music.”

Rosanna Vize’s bare, tilted, dance floor-like stage with central column and illuminated, rotating PARADISE sign above allows movement director, Anthony Missen to turn the play into a symbolic slow dance, emphasising the tensions, fears and desires of the characters locked in their own claustrophobic worlds. 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
broken glass
Theatre review / 5 March 2026
5 March 2026

MARY CONWAY is spellbound by superb performances in Arthur Miller’s study of the social and personal stress brought about by Nazi Germany’s Kristallnacht

arcadia
Theatre Review / 11 February 2026
11 February 2026

MARY CONWAY becomes impatient with the intellectual self-indulgence of Tom Stoppard in a production that is, nevertheless, total class

slammer
Theatre Review / 28 October 2025
28 October 2025

GEORGE FOGARTY is captivated by a brilliant one-man show depicting life in HMP Strangeways

fiddler
Theatre review / 9 June 2025
9 June 2025

WILL STONE applauds a fine production that endures because its ever-relevant portrait of persecution