Blanche
and Stella are in the bedroom. Blanche is laughing about the
lies she has written in a letter to Shep. They are interrupted
by the sound of a quarrel upstairs between Eunice and Steve.
Eunice rushes down saying she is going to call the police, although
she has no real intention of doing so. Steve comes down looking
for her. He has a bruise on his forehead. Stanley, who has just
arrived home, says Stella will be at the Four Deuces bar.
Blanche
tries to engage Stanley in a discussion about astrology, but
he shows little interest. Stanley then reveals he has heard
some gossip about Blanche from a man named Shaw, who says he
met her in the Hotel Flamingo at Laurel, her hometown. Blanche
says the Flamingo is not the sort of hotel she would be seen
at, but she is flustered by Stanley’s comment.
As Steve
and Eunice return, Stanley goes out to the Four Deuces. Blanche
immediately wants to know from Stella what people have been
saying about her. She reveals that there was some unsavory gossip
about her in Laurel. Stella gives Blanche a Coke with a shot
of whiskey in it. Blanche, emotional, promises Stella that she
will not be staying long, but Stella tells her not to talk so
foolishly.
It transpires
that Blanche has been dating Mitch, and he is due to arrive
at seven that night. Blanche wants the relationship to develop
to marriage so that she will not have to stay with Stella and
Stanley any longer. Stella encourages her and then goes to meet
her husband.
A young
man arrives who is collecting money for the evening newspaper.
Blanche flirts with him. He is shy and uncertain of himself.
She crosses the room and kisses him on the mouth. As the boy
leaves, Mitch appears carrying a bunch of roses.
Analysis
The quarrel between Eunice and Steve reveals a relationship
similar to that between Stanley and Stella. Sexual passion is
strong, and there are frequent violent outbursts from the man.
But they are quickly over and the couple makes up. Both couples
seem happy with this uninhibited state of affairs; there is
a raw animal vigor about it that satisfies the man and seems
to arouse admiration in the woman. It is a kind of sensual paradise
for them. Not for nothing is the area in which they live called
the Elysian Fields. The Elysian Fields were the happy land in
Greek mythology in which those who have found favor with the
gods lived forever.
This is
in complete contrast to Blanche’s fragility and neuroticism.
Each scene reveals more of the real woman behind the façade
that she tries so hard to keep up. Her letter to Shep, for example,
reveals her as an accomplished liar, although one senses that
it is only desperation that drives her to such lengths. The
audience is likely to sympathize with her because she has considerable
self-awareness about what is happening to her. She reveals this
in her confessions to Stella in this scene. She is a highly
sensitive, “soft” woman, ill-suited to survive in
a harsh world. If she is not to be destroyed, she must somehow
shield herself from reality and keep the illusion going, both
for herself and others. It is not an easy task. |