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Tennessee Williams Festival St. Louis is presenting a trio of the playwright鈥檚 early one-act plays. They show the influence the city鈥檚 vibrant cinema culture of the 1930s had on the writer.
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Tennessee Williams is celebrated, once again, in the city he disdained.
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A new production of "The Glass Menagerie" is being staged on the grounds of the Westminster Place apartment building where playwright Tennessee Williams once lived. Carrie Houk and Brian Hohlfeld share the details on "St. Louis on the Air."
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In his new book about playwright Tennessee Williams, Washington University professor Henry I. Schvey argues that St. Louis was indispensable in shaping Williams鈥 artistry.
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鈥淚 really wanted to do something for our audience that would take them away from their computer,鈥 the festival鈥檚 executive artistic director, Carrie Houk, explained. Radio seemed the perfect medium, and indeed, she and other organizers, including Brian Hohlfeld, are finding that the playwright's dialogue translates well to it.
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The third annual Tennessee Williams Festival St. Louis gets underway later this week in honor of a legendary American playwright, poet and artist who鈥
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It is well documented that playwright Tennessee Williams did not look kindly on his childhood spent in St. Louis, Missouri. Born in Mississippi into a鈥
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We鈥檝e said it before and we鈥檒l say it again: Tennessee Williams was not the world鈥檚 biggest fan of the town he grew up in. But that鈥檚 not stopping the鈥
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The Guardian has called it 鈥渃ompulsively readable.鈥 Dame Helen Mirren has said it to be a 鈥渕asterpiece.鈥 On Thursday鈥檚 鈥淪t. Louis on the Air,鈥 host Don鈥
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For only the second time, Tennessee Williams' "Stairs to the Roof" will be seen in the U.S. Williams wrote the play in December 1941, after he had left鈥