By Judy Samelson
02 Aug 2011
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| Katharine Houghton |
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Amanda Wingfield, who lives with her two grown children in a meager St. Louis flat, clings to the halcyon days of her Southern youth and yearns for "happiness and just a little bit of good fortune" for son Tom, a frustrated writer working a mind-numbing warehouse job, and daughter Laura, his painfully shy sister whose collection of delicate glass animals mirrors her own fragility. When Tom succumbs to his mother's constant pleas to find a suitor for Laura, they await the arrival of the Gentleman Caller on whom Amanda has pinned her last hope for her daughter's future.
In the The Glass Menagerie's Wingfields, Tennessee Williams created one of the most vividly etched families in American drama. The autobiographical work originally premiered in Chicago in 1944, starring Laurette Taylor, whose performance as Amanda was universally praised as a defining moment on the American stage. Since Taylor's history-making turn as the woman whose telephone-man husband fell in love with long distance and abandoned her, many a gifted actress has gravitated to the role from Gertrude Lawrence (in the 1950 film version) to Jessica Tandy, Maureen Stapleton, Julie Harris, Joanne Woodward (directed by Paul Newman in a 1987 film), and, in a 1973 television outing for which she was Emmy nominated, Katharine Hepburn.
Houghton made her Broadway debut in 1965 in Ruth Gordon's A Very Rich Woman, and became universally known when she appeared in the 1967 film "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" as the idealistic young woman who brings her African American fiancé Sidney Poitier home, which tests the liberal beliefs of mom and dad, played by the iconic screen team of Katharine Hepburn (Houghton's real-life aunt) and Spencer Tracy (in his final performance). She returned to the theatre to win an Obie Award in 1969 for her performance in A Scent of Flowers and in the years since has appeared in a number of films ("Ethan Frome," "Mr. North," "Billy Bathgate") and starred in regional theatres across the country playing major roles in over 50 stage productions, including Portia in The Merchant of Venice, Kate in The Taming of the Shrew, Nina in The Seagull, Nora in A Doll's House, Barbara in Major Barbara, and Hedda in Hedda Gabler.
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| Katharine Houghton and Sidney Poitier in "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner." |
| Columbia Pictures Corporation |
Houghton, also an accomplished playwright, has acted in her own work (To Heaven in a Swing, a one-woman play about Louisa May Alcott, at the American Place Theatre in 1984, as well as Best Kept Secret, a semi-autobiographical drama about romance and politics during the Cold War, at New Jersey Rep in 2001). Her play Buddha was published in the Best Short Plays of 1988 and other produced works include Merlin, The Marry Month of May, Mortal Friends, The Right Number and the musical Bookends.
Though she's played The Glass Menagerie's Laura twice in the course of her long and varied career, until now the actress has never had the desire to take on Amanda. Recently Houghton spoke with Playbill.com about what drew her to The Pretty Trap, her many stage adventures, her auspicious start in films, and how she feels about the choices she's made in her career.
In reading a little a bit about The Pretty Trap, I was surprised to discover that it is quite different from what we all know to be The Glass Menagerie. Can you talk about some of the marked differences?
Katharine Houghton: Well, first of all The Pretty Trap is a comedy, and I don't know that anybody would ever call The Glass Menagerie a comedy. The four characters — the Tom and Laura and Gentleman Caller and Amanda are all called those same names, but they are all quite different especially the three family members. The Gentleman Caller has similarities to the Gentleman Caller in The Glass Menagerie, but there are differences, too, which I can't tell you because it will spoil it.
There's a happy ending, is there not?
KH: [Laughing] Yes there is a happy ending because all comedies have happy endings.
That's so far removed from what we know of this great autobiographical play.
KH: There's a story that may be apocryphal that somebody — and it might have been the wonderful Audrey Wood [Tennessee Williams' agent who became his friend and advisor] — said to Edwina Williams when she attended the opening of The Glass Menagerie, in 1944 in Chicago, "How does it feel, Mrs. Williams, to see yourself onstage?" And she turned and looked at Audrey, if it was Audrey — I'm not sure it was — but she turned and looked at the person in blank disbelief. She didn't know what she was talking about. I think that her disbelief or surprise that anybody would say that the Amanda in The Glass Menagerie, was like her is made clear when you see this play because it was probably written a couple of years before The Glass Menagerie, and it may have been closer to his actual family.
How does she differ from the Amanda in The Glass Menagerie?
KH: The Amanda in it is a very different kind of a woman. She's not nostalgic. She's not sentimental. She's a very much a feet-on-the-ground survivor.
And that appealed to you?
KH: That immediately attracted me to the play, to wanting to do it. This is a premiere, and it's a great honor and a great challenge to create a character who has never been articulated. Also the Laura is very different. She is not an invalid. She does not have a limp. She's a very strong. She's shy but she's a very strong, determined individual. And the dynamic between the mother and daughter, therefore, is evenly matched. Completely evenly matched.
I know you've played Laura a couple of times but never Amanda. Did you ever want to play that role in The Glass Menagerie?
KH: No, I never did want to play her because I don't like sentimental, nostalgic people. They annoy me. So I never had any interest in doing it. When Susan Charlotte sent me this play, I approached it with dread, but then I read it and thought, "Oh, my Lord, this is a completely different kettle of fish. This is a wonderful woman, I love this woman." I hope I can do her justice.
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| Tennessee Williams |
Is this unique, do you think — where a playwright has taken a work considered a masterpiece of his and gone back and retooled it like this. Actually, though, this is a pre-curser to The Glass Menagerie, right?
KH: Yes. I was told Williams wrote this two or three years before he came up with The Glass Menagerie. Also this is a long one-act. It's not a full-length play. And he says in the preface that he's working on a play called The Gentleman Caller and that this is the second act of his play. Now I don't know what the first act is — maybe it's in his archive in the University of Texas in Austin. But what we're doing he describes as the second act of a play called The Gentleman Caller. To my knowledge, that was never done because ostensibly this is a premiere according to his estate. I have a feeling — and I may be wrong but my hunch is, having read quite a bit about his mother and his father and also his sister — that these people — the characters in this play — are closer to the truth about his family. Though that may make no difference whatsoever, but it's interesting to me that when he came to do The Glass Menagerie, he for artistic reasons distorted the actual nature of the people. So, for his mother not to recognize herself in the Amanda in The Glass Menagerie . . .
. . . Must mean something…I think most people might look at The Pretty Trap and assume the opposite — that the upbeat version was the one that was fabricated.
KH: It's not that this is a woman without faults. She, of course, has a lot of faults and vulnerabilities, which are very interesting the way they're written. She's mercurial and far from a perfect person. But what she isn't is insane or drenched in nostalgia in some sort of fanciful idea of her youth. I've talked to a couple of people who knew his mother quite well, and I've told them about this play and they've said that sounds much more like Miss Edwina—that's what they all called her. She lived to be a fairly senior citizen and was a strong, articulate, charming person.
You wear many different artistic hats—actress, playwright, and I know you co-founded a theatre company in Kentucky. Is that still operating?
KH: No, that ended in around 1981.
What brought you to Kentucky?
KH: Well, what brought me into that was I was working at Actors Theatre of Louisville and when my little group were not actually in plays during the season — you know, we'd do a show, and then we'd have a show off or something — we would get an Arts Commission grant, something they don't have anymore, but we would get an Arts Commission grant to go off to someplace that didn't get to see theatre and present a show that one of the members of our group put together called Shakespeare for Lovers and Others.
Where did you perform?
KH: We did that all over the place, in Kentucky, in South Carolina, in Mississippi, even at a Catholic college in Connecticut. It was really great fun. It was hard work, but it was great fun, and we had fabulous adventures. Then we wrote a few other shows or we co-opted some other shows like Dear Liar, and did them in Dayton, OH; Indianapolis; Yellow Springs, OH; and a few other places, and so on. It was a way of supplementing the work. We primarily were all working at Actors Theatre at that time, and instead of twiddling our thumbs waiting for the next show, we did this and it was great fun. As a footnote to this artistic company, I did the props. I'm very proud to say. I made masses of props for the Shakespeare by hand, and I loved doing that. I had never actually done that sort of work before, so that was one thing that was a special treat.
You were like a band of traveling players. What was the name of the company?
KH: This is a funny story. We called ourselves The Passionate Pilgrim Company originally because at the back of Shakespeare's plays there's the section called The Passionate Pilgrim. There's Venus and Adonis and The Passionate Pilgrim and I think one other section that's always in the compendium of Shakespeare's plays. Well the first time that I went to rent the truck for the company, so we could put all our costumes and sets in the truck, I filled out the form and the company, The Passionate Pilgrim Company. The guy looking it over was an older man, and he looked up at me and he said [affecting a Kentucky drawl], "Um, what're you gonna do in that truck?" So I went back to the company and I said, "We cannot call ourselves The Passionate Pilgrim Company because we may know what Passionate Pilgrim means, but it doesn't mean the same thing to the local people here, and we'd better change the name." So we called ourselves The P Pilgrim Company, but I love that story. I just think it's so funny. The look on my face — as if we were going to do something naughty in that truck — and the look on his face of, "Am I renting this truck out as a sort of traveling . . ." [Laughs]
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| Houghton and Anthony Newfield in Best Kept Secret. |
When your play Best Kept Secret opened at New Jersey Rep in 2001, you told Playbill.com, "One of the ways writers have to try to figure out the mysteries in their lives is to write about them." Does acting in your own work as you did in that play, enhances your ability do that? Is there anything you discover in performance that maybe wasn't on the page, when you appear in your own play?
KH: For me, yes. There was definitely a quest to understand something. And by going through the process of writing it and acting in it, it did illuminate quite a lot to me about the nature of that story because it was somewhat autobiographical. Now, that's also true though, I think, with plays that are not necessarily autobiographical. The first play I wrote about Louisa May Alcott and her father . . .
To Heaven in a Swing?
KH: Yes. In writing the dynamic of that relationship of that father and daughter, it also taught me a great deal about my own life. So even though that wasn't my life, there was enough in it that was very familiar to me, that it also was just a very illuminating experience.
Alcott is also a character of sorts in another one of your works — your musical, Bookends.
KH: Bookends is really about the women [rare book dealers Madeleine Stern and Leona Rostenberg] who I knew very well — I knew them for 25 years — who discovered who Alcott was, so that's almost a footnote in the play. By "discovered who she was" [I mean] they discovered that Louisa May Alcott had a pseudonym, that she wrote wonderfully trashy stories under a different name, or anonymous, and they then actually, put that together by reading her papers that had in 1942 been donated to the Houghton library up in Cambridge. Then they went around and they found a lot of the stories that were published in things like The Flag of Our Union. But my focus in Bookends was really much more on them and the fact that at the end of their life, which is really when I knew them — the sort of last chapter of their life [Rostenberg died at 96 in 2005 and Stern at 95 in 2007] — they were very torn about whether to continue as rare book dealers because they started when the rare book business was really fairly new and fresh. Not that people hadn't been dealing rare books for hundreds of years, but there weren't any women in the field until they went into it, so they were pioneers. And books were not just commodities when they first went into the business. People really read them and loved them and different collectors were collecting different things depending on their interests. And talk about passion. There was a lot of passion in the business, and not just money. Then one of them, Leona, just said, "I don't want to do this anymore. I don't like what's going on in the book business, and I think we should quit." And the other one, Madeleine, really didn't want to quit. She thought this was their life, and if they quit what would they do? They'd just drop dead. So it's really more about them and their relationship to each other and to the book business and what to do about the fact that they just didn't really know how the future of books was going to turn out and whether anybody was interested in books anymore.
How would they have fared in the world of devices like Kindle and Nook?
KH: Yeah, that kind of thing. That was already coming . . . and should they have a web page and was there anyone to carry on their flag, so to speak. That's really more what that musical is about rather than Alcott.





