A Streetcar Named Annette: Difference between revisions

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<gallery>
<gallery>
File:We Close.jpg|link=We Close|'''''[[We Close]]''''' is a 1944 existentialist French sex farce by Jean-Paul Satyr.
File:Blade Rubber.jpg|link=Blade Rubber|'''''[[Blade Rubber]]''''' is a 1982 coming-of-age film about a developmentally delayed police officer (Harrison Ford) who tracks down a woman (Miss November) he only knows from a pre-war magazine.
File:Blade Rubber.jpg|link=Blade Rubber|'''''[[Blade Rubber]]''''' is a 1982 coming-of-age film about a developmentally delayed police officer (Harrison Ford) who tracks down a woman (Miss November) he only knows from a pre-war magazine.


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* ''[[Prelude to Bisexuality]]''
* ''[[Prelude to Bisexuality]]''
* [[Virtual Cosmology Health Spa]]
* [[Virtual Cosmology Health Spa]]
* ''[[We Close]]''


== Nonfiction cross-reference ==
== Nonfiction cross-reference ==

Revision as of 15:20, 16 November 2021

Earliest known playbill for A Streetcar Named Annette.

A Streetcar Named Annette is a play written by Tennessee Williams 1.1 first performed on Broadway on December 3, [REDACTED].

It is loosely based on the novel The Grifters by Jim Thompson.

Description

The play dramatizes the experiences of the titular Annette, a Southern belle from the future who, after encountering a series of personal triumphs, leaves her privileged background to move into a shabby apartment in New [REDACTED] rented by her younger self and brother-in-law.

Williams 1.1's most scandalous work, A Streetcar Named Annette will be one of the most critically divisive plays of the twenty-third century. Even now ranks among his most abrasive plays, and has inspired much irritated commentary in appproximately [REDACTED] percent of quasi-adjacent causal domains.

Anagrams

"Benignant Tenne" = "Annette Benning"

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links

  • Post @ Twitter (16 August 2021)