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Clothes for a Summer Hotel

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First edition (publ.New Directions, 1983)

Clothes for a Summer Hotel is a two-act play written in 1979–80 byTennessee Williams concerning the relationship between novelistF. Scott Fitzgerald and his wifeZelda. A critical and commercial failure, it was Williams' last play to debut onBroadway during his lifetime. The play takes place over a one-day visit Scott pays the institutionalized Zelda atHighland Mental Hospital inAsheville, North Carolina, with a series of flashbacks to their marriage in the twenties. Williams began work in 1976 on what he envisioned as a "long play" about the Fitzgeralds (he eventually cut it down), and hadGeraldine Page in mind to play Zelda from the start.[1]

Williams biographerDonald Spoto has argued that Scott's visit to Zelda was a clear representation of the playwright's frequent visits to his mentally incapacitated sister, Rose, in mental hospitals.[2] Williams himself admitted a close identification with Fitzgerald, saying, "At one point I went through a deep depression and heavy drinking. And I, too, have gone through a period of eclipse in public favor....[The Fitzgeralds] embody concerns of my own, the tortures of the creative artist in a materialist society....They were so close to the edge. I understood the schizophrenia and the thwarted ambition."[3] Williams also acknowledged feeling a kinship with Zelda and insisted, "I think that Zelda has as much talent as her husband did."[4]

After an unsuccessful out-of-town tryout inWashington,Clothes for a Summer Hotel opened at Broadway'sCort Theatre on March 26, 1980, withJosé Quintero directing and Page andKenneth Haigh leading the cast. The play was interpreted by critics as a literal biography of the Fitzgeralds "that got its facts wrong" rather than a metaphorical play that alluded to Williams' life.[5]Walter Kerr ofThe New York Times even faulted the play for "the fact that Mr. Williams's personal voice is nowhere to be heard."[6] In addition to receiving poor critical notices, the play opened at the same time that New Yorkers were dealing with a heavy blizzard and a transit strike, and subsequently closed after fourteen performances.[7] As a result of the play's critical failure, Williams vowed that he would "never open a play in New York again....I can't get good press from theNew York Times, and [critics]Harold Clurman,Brendan Gill andJack Kroll hate me....I put too much of my heart in [my plays] to have them demolished by some querulous old aisle sitters."[8]

In 1981 Williams revised the play for the publication of its acting text byDramatists Play Service; he then revised that text for the 1983 New Directions edition, which appeared posthumously.[9]

Footnotes

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  1. ^Spoto 1985, p. 329.
  2. ^Spoto 1985, p. 339.
  3. ^Spoto 1985, p. 345.
  4. ^Devlin, Albert J., ed.Conversations with Tennessee Williams. Jackson, Miss.: University Press of Mississippi, 1986, pp. 321–322.ISBN 0-87805-263-1
  5. ^Dorff, Linda. "Collapsing Resurrection Mythologies: Theatricalist Discourses of Fire and Ash inClothes for a Summer Hotel." InGross, Robert F., Ed. (2002).Tennessee Williams: A Casebook. New York: Routledge.ISBN 0-8153-3174-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) p. 153.
  6. ^Kerr, Walter (March 27, 1980)."The Stage: 'Clothes for a Summer Hotel'; People Out of Books"(fee required).The New York Times. RetrievedMay 27, 2007.
  7. ^Spoto 1985, p. 344.
  8. ^Wallis, Claudia (August 18, 1980)."People". Time. Archived fromthe original on November 25, 2010. RetrievedMay 27, 2007.
  9. ^Williams, Tennessee.Clothes for a Summer Hotel. New York: New Directions, 1983, xii.ISBN 0-8112-0870-2

References

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