By Adam Hetrick
27 Nov 2009
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| A Streetcar Named Desire star Cate Blanchett |
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| Photo by Lisa Tomasetti |
Streetcar arrives at BAM after receiving its U.S. premiere at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, earlier this month. The Kennedy Center run was also sold out. The production will officially open Dec. 1 and run through Dec. 20 at the Brooklyn venue.
Screen veteran Liv Ullmann, known for her roles in the films of Ingmar Bergman, stages Tennessee Williams' New Orleans-set classic that features Blanchett ("Benjamin Button," "Elizabeth") as Blanche DuBois with Joel Edgerton as Stanley Kowalski and Robin McLeavy as Stella Kowalski.
The Australian company also features Michael Denkha, Elaine Hudson, Gertraud Ingeborg, Morgan David Jones, Russell Kiefel, Jason Klarwein, Mandy McElhinney, Tim Richards, Sara Zwangobani and musician Alan John.
Designing the production are Ralph Myers (scenic design), Nick Schlieper (lighting design), Tess Schofield (costume design) and Paul Charlier (sound design).
STC press notes for the play read: "Downtown New Orleans. In blows Blanche DuBois: a Southern Belle, a fading beauty, a passionate, fragile thing. And she really is in the wrong place. All her respectability, politenesses and old-fashioned Southern airs and graces provoke the disdain of her sister Stella's husband. Stanley is a rough, modern man with a coarse sense of humour, no interest in manners and a wild streak. Her flirting, primping and needy behaviour fix Stanley's determination to break Blanche and all she stands for. And then she wins the heart of his poker buddy, Mitch."
A Streetcar Named Desire premiered on Broadway at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre in December 1947, playing 855 performances before closing in December 1949. Directed by Elia Kazan, the original company boasted Jessica Tandy as Blanche, Marlon Brando as Stanley and Kim Hunter as Stella. The most recent Broadway revival — in 2005 at Studio 54 — starred John C. Reilly, the late Natasha Richardson and Amy Ryan.
Cate Blanchett won the Academy Award for her performance in "The Aviator"; she was also Oscar-nominated for her work in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age," "I'm Not There," "Notes on a Scandal" and "Elizabeth." The actress starred in Hedda Gabler at New York's Brooklyn Academy of Music, and her acting credits at the Sydney Theatre Company include productions of Caryl Churchill's Top Girls, Timothy Daly's Kafka Dances and David Mamet's Oleanna. Blanchett also appeared on the London stage in David Hare's Plenty.
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