
When Tennessee Williams’ Broadway megahit “A Streetcar Named Desire” finally worked its way through censorship and debuted on the silver screen in 1951, it signaled a significant transformation in the American psyche: an admission that rape is a legitimate public metaphor for the manner in which the savage, instinctive elements of society brutalize our hopes and dreams.
This and other universal themes get impressive treatment from the principles in director Craig A. Bond’s well-executed production at Vintage Theatre’s intimate East 17th Avenue digs.
Remaining true to the original 1947 New Orleans setting, Bond carefully mines the masterwork’s essential and supportive details for poignancy while shaping a fresh and psychologically insightful interpretation.
Bond also tweaks the physical typecasting of Blanche DuBois (Haley Johnson) and her married sibling, Stella Kowalski (Linda Williams), which pays huge dividends in sisterly resonance.
Johnson’s alignment with the behavioral linchpins of Williams’ great heroines, topped off by her dreamy, poetic rendering of the playwright’s transcendent lyricism is riveting. Her personification of the decayed beauty of the aristocratic South — with key monologues enhanced by lighting (Jen Orf) and sound (Ray Berry) — echoes sympathetically with designer Nick Kargel’s scenic, patina-laden corner of the Big Easy.
Equally at home in the luxuriant Delta dialect, Linda Williams offers a striking dramatic contrast with a vibrant, sexually charged Stella, at once protective of her sister, yet deeply attached to Blanche’s antagonist, Stanley.
Alternately bemused, insouciant and hostile, Kurt Brighton deftly avoids overplaying the industrial transplant Stanley’s violent, inebriated outbursts, instead conveying a consistent and relentlessly escalating malevolence, culminating with sinister perfection in a well-orchestrated, explosive final scene with Blanche.
Patrick Collins, as Blanche’s “gentleman caller” Mitch, draws a sensitive counterbalance to Stanley’s bestiality, as well as a sublime counterpoint to Blanche’s faded gentility.
Some dialects wander or are wholly absent in the supporting roles, where opportunities for stage business are also lost, but Bond does an admirable job perfuming the tableau with French Quarter streetwalkers and vendors and seasoning the emotional gumbo with choice selections of jazz and blues.
Sixty-two years after its New York premiere, as we hear Stanley’s final plaintive, “Stella!” — now more a question than a command — we still are left wondering what she will choose to do, an apt metaphor for our national soul-searching during this political season.
Bob Bows also reviews theater for Variety, for KUVO 89.3 FM, and for his own website, . He can be reached at bbows@coloradodrama.com.
Editor’s note: Kurt Brighton is a contributing freelance theater critic for The Denver Post. He has not reviewed Vintage Theatre, nor has he any connection to Bob Bows, another contributing freelance.
“A Streetcar Named Desire”
Vintage Theatre, 2119 E 17th Ave. Written by Tennessee Williams. Directed by Craig A. Bond. Starring Haley Johnson, Kurt Brighton, Linda Williams, and Patrick Collins. 3 hours. Through Sept. 21. 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2:30 p.m. Sundays. $17-$22. 303-839-1361 or



