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  1. Jun 20, 2024 · Soulpepper’s revival of ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ hits all the right notes. One exceptional element of this revisit to Tennessee Williams’ New Orleans is the total musicality of the staging.

    • Glenn Sumi
    • gsumi@dontdisplay.me
  2. Jun 21, 2024 · Tennessee Williams’ 1947 play is a piece that’s probably always going to be relevant, alas – dealing with a relationship where lust and domestic abuse are very much intermingled, and the intervention of a family member with her own dangerous past intruding on the present.

  3. Jul 5, 2024 · Critic’s Pick. Sometimes, there’s God so quickly. But, in theatre, more often the divinest of productions are the slowest of burns. That’s the case with director Weyni Mengesha’s revival of her...

  4. 2 days ago · A Streetcar Named Desire review – Nikki Shiels is majestic but she’s no Blanche. Nikki Shiels is authoritative and magnetic as Blanche DuBois in MTC’s A Streetcar Named Desire, but the part comes dangerously close to outright camp. Photograph: Pia Johnson. At the very beginning of Tennessee Williams’ colossal masterpiece, as Blanche ...

  5. Jun 20, 2024 · Gentle would-be suitor Mitch (perceptive performance by Lachlan Ruffy) doesn’t stand a chance. ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’. by Len Power, Canberra Critics Circle, 20 June 2024. As Blanche, Amy Kowalczuk establishes an immediate presence as Blanche and maintains it throughout the play.

  6. 1 day ago · Melbourne Theatre Company. Tennessee Williams wrote 'A Streetcar Named Desire' as a southern gothic tale, with the story of Blanche DuBois, her history and her mental fragility told as a haunting tragedy. The original drips with gin and it's sweaty and sticky and a little bit insane, like the city of New Orleans itself in the summer time.

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  8. 23 hours ago · This preamble is all by way of saying that this reviewer saw A Streetcar Named Desire, the latest production from the Melbourne Theatre Company (MTC) twice – once on opening night, literally in the very back row of the stalls, and again a couple of nights later, in a seat a few rows from the front.

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