Stanley,
Blanche and Stella are finishing the dismal birthday supper.
Blanche says this is the first time she has ever been stood
up, and she tells a joke to try to cheer them all up. Stanley
then reacts badly to a remark of Stella’s and sweeps his
cup and saucer to the floor, then goes outside for a cigarette.
Blanche has guessed that Stanley has told Mitch something bad
about her, and she calls Mitch and leaves a message. Stella
goes to the porch and reproaches Stanley. Back in the kitchen,
Blanche regrets having called Mitch, and Stanley gets annoyed
again because Blanche calls him a Polack. The phone rings and
Blanche hopes it is Mitch, but it is a friend of Stanley’s.
Stanley then presents Blanche with an envelope as if it is a
birthday present. Inside is the bus ticket. Upset, Blanche rushes
to the bathroom. Stella reproaches Stanley once more for his
cruelty. She demands to know why he did it. Stanley explains
that they were happy until Blanche arrived. Stella then feels
her baby moving inside her, and tells Stanley to take her to
the hospital.
Analysis
The recurrence of the Varsouviana polka music at the moment
Stanley presents Blanche with the bus ticket has a symbolic
significance. It shows that Blanche’s world now collapses
as suddenly and as completely as it did when she learned that
her husband had shot himself. It is a devastating blow.
There is another
reminder in this scene of the nature of the sexual bond between
Stanley and Stella. It is this that has been disrupted by the
presence of Blanche, separated from them only by a curtain.
Stanley refers to sexual pleasure as getting “the colored
lights going.” |