Gulf News

Dubai plays host to ‘ The Glass Menagerie’

This showis a study of the psyche as much as it is about society

- By Karishma Nandkeolya­r Assistant Online Editor

We each run our own maze, getting lost in the alleyways of society’s constructs, navigating roads that will lead to self- discovery or family approval. We walk past the ruins of regret, or resentment, arching forways to find happiness. Witnessing The Glass Menagerie is a journey into the central character Tom’s personal labyrinth of choices.

The play, running at The Junction from today until Saturday, is an iteration of American play wright Tennessee Williams’ script based in the 1930s against the backdrop of the Great Depression in the US.

It’s told fromthe point of view of Tom, an aspiring poet who is forced into shoemaking because of financial commitment­s. Things cometo a head when he— on the insistence of his dominating mother— tries to set up his painfully shy, disabled sister Laura with a colleague.

While it’s set in the early 1900s, its themes dig downto the bone ofwhat itm eans to live in a society and what it means to be human. The Glass Menagerie is set in the 1930s against the backdrop of the Great Depression in the US with an underlying feeling of being trapped, that there is noway out. We are all feeling stresses today as a result of Covid and the strain that has placed on us financiall­y and mentally,” explains Director and Producer Padraig Downey .“The character of Amanda [ Tom’s mother] pines for her glory days of the past in the Deep South. Those ‘ glory’ days were of course built for themost part on the backs of others exposing many hypocrisie­s and questionin­g who America was great for; thus adding some perspectiv­e to the BLM[ Black Lives Matter] movement we are seeing today,” he adds.

In the play, Tom feels trapped, having to put his own dreams on the back burner, and is constantly at odds with his dominating mother and trying to make his sister feel better about herself. “Laura lives in her own world of glass figurines [ of her glass menagerie], the unicorn being her favourite. The unicorn doesn’t quite belong in thisw orld in the sameway she feels she doesn’t belong in aworld where the disabled are overlooked and forgotten, something that is changing of late in our own society but problems still exist,” explains Downey.

The thing about the mother Tom’s fighting is, fromher viewpoint, she’s only working for what she believes is best for her children.

‘ A PROUD SURVIVOR’

To get them to follow this road, she’ll twist arms or cajole— the end result is what counts.

“She is a survivor; she is proud, fiercely protective of her children and loves them above all else. Shewants the best for them but comes froma different age, a different world,” explains Gwen Watson, who plays Amanda. To those subjected to these means of course, her wall of will is just tiring.

Mario Silva, who plays Tom, adds: “Emotional manipulati­on is a big factor in this play, if you’ve never experience­d it before, it’s like being hypnotised, you can’t step away fromit to lookat the situation objectivel­y, you feel trapped in a situation, and howcan you overcome this if the person manipulati­ng you is your own immediate family? This is a reality that people experience at least once in a lifetime, immediate family or not, and it feels like a nightmare.”

A snapshot of memory, The Glass Menagerie is a prism through which a person’s hopes and drives are unveiled. Shattered and strong, with lines of regret and reform, it exposes all the hues of choice that make Tom and his family who they are— a dysfunctio­nal family unit that love one another even as they try to find a better path for themselves.

 ?? Photos supplied ?? The cast of
‘ The Glass Menagerie’.
Photos supplied The cast of ‘ The Glass Menagerie’.
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