
Tennessee Rising: The Dawn of Tennessee Williams
By
Edward Rubin
The night I attended a
live production of Jacob Storm’s one man show, Tennessee Rising: The Dawn of
Tennessee Williams, held at the Cell Theater in New City, it was
raining lightly. Though the playwright actor was protected by a small overhang
which covered the staging area, the umbrella holding, stage-facing audience,
seated outside in the theater’s lovely garden was not. Ironically, this being a
second rain date, it was touch and go as to whether this play would go on at
all. I reminded the nervously pacing Storms -- who was performing this night
for an audience of 18 (composed chiefly of theater critics -- how scary can things
get?) – about Diana Ross’ 1983 Central Park concert in which, drenched to the
bone she continued to sing throughout half a murderous storm.
The intermittently
falling rain subsided a wee bit, and Storms, obviously a bit shaken, took to
the stage. It took some ten or fifteen minutes for Storms, as well as the rest
of us mask-wearing, umbrella-holding audience members to get our mojo back. But
once he regained his footing and began to pepper us with little known tales of
young Williams’ formative years (1939-1943), it was smooth sailing.
In an earlier version of
Tennessee Rising, presented at the 2017 United Solo Festival in New York
City, Storms received an award for the Best One-Man show. The following year,
fast-travelling word of mouth got him a headlining gig at the Saint Louis’
Tennessee Williams Festival. This current version, directed by Alan Cumming,
was originally scheduled to premiere at the Beaubourg Theatre in New Orleans in
March 2020. However, the ugly tentacles of Covid had other ideas.
The play opens in a
minimally furnished attic of a boarding house in the French Quarter of New
Orleans. The year is 1939. It is the room in which the 28-year-old aspiring
writer Tom Williams, soon to be known as Tennessee, is currently living.
Downstage and center we see a small desk holding an old typewriter, with two
chairs on either side. Also on view, on the top of a cupboard directly behind
the desk, is a rocks glass, a half empty bottle of liquor, cigarettes, and a
pair of sunglasses, all liberally used throughout the play.
Walking to the edge of
the stage, with his rocks glass in hand, Storms welcomes the audience (or is it
an imaginary visitor?) to his room. With his left arm cavalierly lifted towards
the heavens, we are toasted with the last half of Blanche Dubois’ famous line
from A Streetcar Named Desire. “To the kindness of strangers.”
Not coincidentally, it
is precisely the kindness of strangers that whisks the young and fevered
Williams (and us too of course) on a wild pilgrimage from New Orleans to Los
Angeles, Laguna Beach, St. Louis, New Mexico, New York, Provincetown, Mexico
City, Boston, Key West, Georgia, and Chicago, each of which give birth to a
juicily delivered anecdote.
The amount of
deep-diving research which helped to fashion Rising Tennessee, and that
includes, William’s plays, movies, short stories, letters, interviews, several
biographies, Memoirs (1975), and conversations with people who knew William’s,
all of which Storms deftly embroidered into this play, is simply mind-boggling.
The only drawback is
this deluge of information being offered by Storms takes on the patina of a
reading, if not a lecture. Still, this heavily fact-filled laden script gifts
us with Williams’ innermost feelings and thoughts, his friendships and love
affairs, the people and books that influenced him (writers D.H. Lawrence, Hart
Crane, and actress Nazimova), his working process, and his relationship with
his parents, and his beloved Glass Menagerie spawning sister Rose. Her
extremely moving story, which runs throughout the play is simply
heartbreaking.
Miscellaneous:
Storms last performance at the Cell
Theatre will be Sunday, June 27. To purchase tickets, go to www.spincyclenyc.com or call Ron Lasko at 212-505-1700.
Also in the works for this coming September 2021 is a filmed version of Rising
Tennessee.
Next on Jacob Storms calendar he will
be performing Rising Tennessee at the is the Rochester Fringe Festival
September 14-25. The exact dates (still undetermined) will be posted on their
website mid-August. www.rochesterfringe.com.
Edward
Rubin is a member of American Theatre Critics Association, NYC’s Drama Desk,
and the Outer Critics Circle