It
is late afternoon in mid-September. The table is set for Blanche’s
birthday supper. Blanche is in the bathroom, and Stanley makes
hostile remarks to Stella about her. Stanley then tells his
wife that he has found out some unsavory details about Blanche’s
life in Laurel. She is not the refined woman she claims to be.
She used to live at the disreputable Flamingo Hotel, but Blanche
was too much even for that hotel. She was asked to leave. This
was about two weeks before she arrived in New Orleans.
Stella says there
is no truth in such a story, but Stanley insists he has proof.
He says that everyone in Laurel thought Blanche was crazy. Even
the soldiers at the nearby army camp had been told not to go
near her, and the mayor of Laurel had practically run her out
of town. Stanley also claims that Blanche will not be going
back to teach at the school. She was kicked out of her job because
she had an affair with a seventeen-year-old boy.
Stella still insists
that not all the stories are true, but admits there may be some
truth in some of them. Blanche had always been flighty. Stella
tells Stanley about Blanche’s marriage to the man who
committed suicide. Then it comes out that Mitch, who had been
invited to the birthday party, will not be coming, because Stanley
passed on the stories about Blanche to him. Stella reproaches
him, pointing out that Blanche was hoping Mitch would marry
her. Stanley says there is no chance of that now. He explains
that he has bought Blanche a bus ticket back to Mississippi
for Tuesday. Stella is horrified, because she does not know
what Blanche will do if she is forced to leave.
Blanche emerges from
the bathroom saying she feels so good after her long bath. But
she knows immediately from Stella’s look that something
has happened.
Analysis
Blanche spends almost the entire scene in the bathroom. Bathing
for her seems to have a kind of ritualistic significance, as
if it can make her whole and pure once more. The theme of the
naïve popular song she sings is the illusory nature of
life, except when it can be redeemed by love. It’s an
appropriate song for Blanche, and the juxtaposition of her singing
with Stanley’s ruthless demolition of her character in
his words to Stella is dramatically extremely effective. The
veil has now been torn from Blanche, and her chances of surviving
the disclosure are slim. |