Tennessee
Williams Annual Review
Number 5 2002
Table of Contents | Archives | Print Versions
"Make
the Lie True": The Tragic Family in
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and King Lear
David A. Davis
Standard Version | PDF Version
Time goes by so fast. Nothin'
can outrun it. Death commences too early
almost before you're half-acquainted with life
you meet the other . . .
Tennessee Williams, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (117)
Men must endure
Their going hence even as their coming hither,
Ripeness is all.
King Lear (V. ii. 9-11)
Families,
perhaps the most complicated of human relationships, seem naturally to lend
themselves toward tragedy. Tennessee Williams's family tragedy of greed, loyalty,
and mendacity, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955), has much in common
with another timeless family tragedy, William Shakespeare's King Lear
(1605). Although different in setting, staging, and style, Williams's play reflects
powerful elements of characterization and dramatic technique from Shakespeare's
pattern, exploring the conflicts between parents and children, between husbands
and wives, and between jealous siblings. As with King Lear, Cat on
a Hot Tin Roof concerns the imminent inheritance of an enormous piece of
land and the wealth and power that accompany it, the personality of the family
patriarch who established the family fortune, and his irresponsible children
who will inevitably destroy it with their greed.
Although
usually iconoclastic, Williams had great respect for Shakespeare, and he frequently
returned to Shakespeare's plays. In an interview in 1974, Williams said, "I
began to read [Shakespeare] when I was a child. My grandfather had all of Shakespeare's
works, and I read them all by the time I was ten" (Devlin, Conversations
269). Precocious in his youth and fascinated with language, Williams found Shakespeare
inspiring, and he reread Shakespeare repeatedly during his adolescence, frequently
identifying with Shakespeare's tragic characters. In one of his earliest attempts
at writing, Williams tried to improve upon Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet,
revising the play into rhyming couplets (Williams and Mead 27). Williams did
not complete his project to rewrite Shakespeare, but he certainly learned much
about dramatic technique at an early age. Later, in 1935, when Williams was
twenty-four, he discovered the plays of Anton Chekov, who Williams would always
claim had the greatest influence on his style, but by that time he had already
developed a taste for Shakespeare.
During
the spring of 1938, his final year at the University of Iowa, Williams had a
different kind of encounter with Shakespeare. All students majoring in drama
were required to participate in a play, and that year the head of the department
chose Shakespeare's I Henry IV. Williams, who, despite his dramatic genius,
had little talent as an actor, found himself in a tediously minor role, a member
of Falstaff's "Charge of Foot." The director, realizing Williams's
lack of talent, saw to it that he only delivered one line. About the experience,
Williams recalls:
throughout the scene in which I appeared I had to sit on the forestage, polishing a helmet, all the while my throat getting tighter and tighter with apprehension at delivering that one line. I simply had to say that somebody had arrived at the gates. But when my cue came, the sound that issued from my constricted throat was quite unintelligible and would always bring down the houseit was like a mouse's squeak. They said it was effective, however. (Memoirs 46)
Probably this production
squelched any latent ambition Williams held for acting, but he identified with
Prince Hal, the profligate heir to the English throne who would soon inspire
the imagination of his people.
Critics
have noted Shakespearean overtones to Williams's plays, indicating that Shakespeare
influenced his dramatic technique, characterization, and dialogue. David Everett
Blythe notes that Williams uses a bit of Shakespearean dialogue from Othello
in Night of the Iguana. Jacob Adler, in "Williams and the Bard,"
explores "analogous interests, patterns, and techniques" between the
two, and he points out similarities in the ways both playwrights incorporated
history, violence, insanity, outsiders, and humor into their drama (38). Ultimately,
Adler concludes that Williams found Hamlet most affecting because of
the parallels between Hamlet's life and Williams's life, such as, "A mentally
ill girl. A hated (step)father. A young man of exceptional intellect, totally
uncomfortable in the world in which he finds himself. A man who (perhaps) pretends
to mental illness. A man who in the end is almost attracted to violence"
(48). Perhaps Williams's personal identification with Shakespeare's most intriguing
character explains his tendency to incorporate Shakespearean allusions into
his drama.
Much
of the critical dialogue concerning Williams and Shakespeare has focused specifically
on one of Williams's most intriguing characters, Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar
Named Desire. Esther Merle Jackson says that "like Hamlet, Blanche
Dubois reveals her inner nature by playing out her conflicted roles: school-teacher,
Southern belle, poet, sister, savior, and prostitute," and she suggests
that the unbearable tension between these polarities leads both Hamlet and Blanche
to their imminent destruction (84). Jacob Adler also finds that Hamlet and Blanche
have much in common. He says:
Neither Blanche nor Hamlet can bear the world as it is. Both have ideals that make meaningful action in an imperfect world almost impossible. Blanche loses her mind, and Hamlet at least pretends to. Blanche dreams of an ideal world of Southern aristocratic culture, as Hamlet had assumed and expected an ideal world of nobility. Much in Hamlet's soliloquies would not be inappropriate to Blanche's feelings. . . . Blanche is that character in Williams who, like Hamlet in Shakespeare, most clearly becomes an archetype. (43)
Philip Kolin, on the other
hand, makes a case for Shakespeare's Cleopatra as a source for Blanche DuBois,
and he comments on the parallels between their vanity, coquetry, and destructive
sexual desires. Likely, Blanche has been the focus of so much critical attention
precisely because she has become an archetypal character, and critics conclude
that she, like many Shakespearean characters, symbolizes a particular and perennial
aspect of the human condition.
Although
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof has received less critical attention than A Streetcar
Named Desire, especially from Shakespearean critics, it nonetheless occupies
a privileged position in the American imagination, and it has its own archetypal
quality. Most of the criticism of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof focuses on the
relationships between the play's three main characters and the roles they play
within the family. As George Crandell asks rhetorically, "Is Cat primarily
a story about a troubled marriage (Maggie and Brick), a possibly homosexual relationship
(Brick and Skipper), a father and son's inability to communicate (Big Daddy and
Brick), or a family squabble over an inheritance (Brick and Maggie versus Gooper
and Mae)?" (117). Actually, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is a seminal family
tragedy about truth, judgment, and greed, and it has much in common with Shakespeare's
King Lear. Both plays portray a charismatic family patriarch facing his
mortality; both plays concern the tension between an unscrupulous set of siblings
and a favored sibling; both plays focus on the transmission of an enormous piece
of land; and both plays lead to emotionally traumatic conclusions. Of course,
the plays have major dramatic differences. King Lear sprawls across numerous
settings, involves a military invasion, and includes graphic physical violence,
but Cat on a Hot Tin Roof takes place entirely on a battlefield more suited
to the twentieth century, a bedroom, and includes graphic psychological violence.
Another significant difference separates these two plays. King Lear climaxes
with Lear's tragic death over the body of his beloved daughter Cordelia. Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof, on the other hand, climaxes with the prospect of a new
generation, mitigating the play's sense of desolation.
King
Lear's central
character lends his name to the play, but Cat on a Hot Tin Roof has three
central characters, Brick, Maggie, and, of course, Big Daddy. Although he appears
on stage only briefly, Big Daddy's presence looms large over all of the characters
in the play; they constantly talk to him, about him, or behind his back. C. W.
E. Bigsby calls Big Daddy "the image of power, of materiality, of authority,"
and, indeed, he does rule over his plantation and his family like a king (89).
Charismatic and ambitious, Big Daddy acquired his plantation through diligent
effort and patience, and, as his relationships with Dr. Baugh and the Rev. Tooker
suggest, the community respects his authority, in spite of his coarse demeanor.
Unfortunately for Lear, on the other hand, he relinquishes his kingdom to his
avaricious daughters in the first scene of the play, diminishing his power and
authority for the remainder of the play, but, based on the loyalty his faithful
servants show him and the length of his rule, he appears to have been a wise and
strong king. The decision, then, to divide his kingdom must have been made under
special circumstances, likely precipitated by the impending marriage of his youngest
daughter and his advancing age. Big Daddy and Lear find themselves facing exactly
the same problem in their respective plays, their legacy. As they face their mortality,
they see their families in crisis and their lands in jeopardy, which forces both
of them into emotional turmoil.
Big
Daddy and Lear share another unique quality that few other people could understandthey
both possess enormous wealth. When talking with his son Brick, Big Daddy gloats
that he is worth "close on ten million in cash an' blue chip stocks, outside,
mind you, of twenty-eight thousand acres of the richest land this side of the
valley Nile!" (65). Considering that the play would have taken
place soon after World War II, Big Daddy's wealth seems almost absurd, and his
children, particularly his sons' wives, lust for their share of the family fortune,
which Big Daddy realizes. He says to Brick, "You git a piece of land, by
hook or crook, an' things start growin' on it, things accumulate on it, and the
first thing you know it's completely out of hand!" (61). In the
first scene of King Lear, Lear, hoping to prevent future squabbles among
his children, divides his kingdom among his daughters based on the pledge of love
and affection, and he describes the virtues of each of the three parcels. He gives
Goneril an area "With shadowy forests and with champains rich'd / With plenteous
rivers and wide-skirted meads," he gives Regan land of equal size and quality,
and he proposes to bestow an even richer tract upon Cordelia, which indicates
that his holdings are exceptionally vast (I.i.64-65). Indeed, as the
king of Ancient Britain, Lear would have been one of the wealthiest men in Northern
Europe at the time, and the size of his entourage after his abdication speaks
to his largesse. Moreover, the loyalty he inspires in his subjects implies that
his rule has been just and benevolent. But for Lear, as for Big Daddy, his fortune
and power become his greatest liability.
Big
Daddy and King Lear represent the old regime in their respective plays, and, by
the time of the dramatic action, they both face their imminent mortality. For
three years Big Daddy has suspected that the pain in his gut came from a cancerous
tumor, and over that time he has relinquished partial control of the plantation
to Gooper and Big Mama, allowing them to usurp power where he ordinarily would
not. But in the morning preceding the play's action, the day of his sixty-fifth
and, inevitably, his last birthday, he has visited the Ochsner Clinic for a biopsy.
Mae and Gooper have conspired to withhold the true diagnosis from him until after
his birthday party, so for a brief moment Big Daddy believes that he suffers from
nothing more than a spastic colon, despite the wolf's teeth in his guts. He tells
Brick:
Ignoranceof mortalityis a comfort. A man don't have that comfort, he's the only living thing that conceives of death, that knows what it is. The others go without knowing which is the way that anything living should go, go without knowing, without any knowledge of it, and yet a pig squeals, but a man sometimes, he can keep a tight mouth about it. Sometimes he[there is a deep, smoldering ferocity in the old man.]can keep a tight mouth about it. (68)
Although he feels relieved at the positive diagnosis, Big Daddy has obviously begun to consider his mortality and to consider the disposition of his assets. This latter issue, his estate, seems to concern him even more than his death, because his favorite son, Brick, has become an alcoholic and, thus, could not maintain the plantation, which forces Big Daddy into a dilemma. Big Daddy explains to Brick:
A little while back when I though my number was upbefore I found out it was just thisspasticcolon, I thought about you. Should I or should I not, if the jig was up, give you this place when I gosince I hate Gooper an' Mae an' know that they hate me, and since all five same little monkeys are little Maes an' Goopers.And I thought, No!Then I thought, Yes!I couldn't make up my mind. I hate Gooper and his five same little monkeys and that bitch Mae! Why should I turn over twenty-eight thousand acres of the richest land this side of the valley Nile to not my kind?But why in hell, on the other hand, Brickshould I subsidize a goddamn fool on the bottle?Liked or not liked, well, maybe evenloved!Why should I do that?Subsidize worthless behavior? Rot? Corruption? (81-82)
To defeat his dilemma, Big
Daddy hopes to use his remaining time to resolve Brick's problem, to find the
reason behind his alcoholism, and to secure the plantation's future. But, while
he gets to the heart of Brick's problem, he finds that he has more pressing problems
of his own. In the course of their heated conversation, Brick accidentally tells
Big Daddy that he will die soon and that Mae and Gooper, and Maggie, are conspiring
to take over the plantation. Big Daddy replies with genuine shock, "[slowly
and passionately]: CHRISTDAMNALLLYING SONS OFLYING
BITCHES . . . Lying! Dying! Liars!" (95). Big Daddy finds the
revelation of the plot he had suspected all along even more disheartening than
his own dire prognosis, which indicates that he cares for his family and his legacy
more than his health.
King
Lear, hoping to preserve peace in his family and perpetuate his own legacy, proposes
to divide his kingdom among his daughters before his death, but fate sends his
plans awry, leading to war, suffering, and the end of his line. In his first speech
onstage, Lear casts the die, explaining that his advancing years hasten his decision:
"Know that we have divided / In three our kingdom, and 'tis our fast intent
/ To shake all cares and business from our age, / Conferring them on younger strengths,
while we / Unburthened crawl toward death" (I.i.37-41). Obviously,
Lear has considered his plan well, having previously prepared the map of his kingdom
and assembled his daughters and their spouses as well as Cordelia's suitors. His
scheme favors Cordelia, his youngest and favorite daughter, because, in addition
to her third of the kingdom she also stands to marry a landed foreign nobleman,
either the Duke of Burgundy or the King of France, thus, joining two kingdoms.
Since his other daughters, Regan and Goneril, have already married English nobles
(Lear's own subjects), they only gain their portion of the kingdom as belated
dowry. However, Lear's plan to dispense his lands on a simple pledge of affection
falls apart when Cordelia refuses to indulge Lear with a cloying speech. Humiliated
and enraged, he banishes her and divides her portion of the kingdom between Regan
and Goneril. Like Big Daddy, he finds his family and his land in disorder as he
faces his mortality, and, rather than facing his twilight securely bound to his
beloved daughter, he leaves himself with only the begrudging mercies his Regan
and Goneril. Unwilling to indulge their father's lavish entourage, Regan and Goneril
quickly strip Lear of his knights and servants, leaving the once powerful king
helpless and pitiful before casting him out into the raging tempest. Like Big
Daddy, he curses his children's mendacity more than his own mortality, and he
bellows with impotent rage, "you unnatural hags, / I will have such revenges
on you both / That all the world shallI will do such things / What
they are yet I know not, but they shall be / The terrors of the earth!" (II.iv.279-282). Angry and forlorn, Lear charges into the storm, punishing only
himself.
The
storm, nature's disorder, has significant meaning in both plays. In the original
version of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Williams omitted the storm, but, on the
advice of director Elia Kazan, he added a major storm in the Delta for the Broadway
production. Just after Mae and Gooper inform Big Mama of Big Daddy's actual condition,
ominous storm sounds commence offstage, and servants can be heard frantically
preparing for the weather; as Williams's stage directions describe:
[Thunder clap. Glass crash, off L.
[Off UR, children commence crying. Many storm sounds, L and R: barnyard animals in terror, papers crackling, shutters rattling. Sookey and Daisy hurry L to R in lawn area. Inexplicably, Daisy hits together two leather pillows. They cry, "Storm! Storm!" Sookey waves a piece of wrapping paper to cover lawn furniture. Mae exits to hall and upper gallery. Strange man runs across lawn, R to L.
[Thunder rolls repeatedly.] (147)
The storm in the Delta has much in common with the famous storm on the heath in King Lear, but Big Daddy, unlike Lear, watches the storm from his veranda. Lear charges into the storm, raging to match the heavens. When asked the King's whereabouts, an observer says:
[He's] Contending with the fretful elements; Bids the wind blow the earth into the sea, Or swell the curled waters 'bove the main, That things might change or cease, tears his white hair, Which the impetuous blasts with eyeless rage Catch in their fury, and make nothing of . . . (III.i.4-9)
In addition to focusing the
audience's attention on the emotional trauma taking place on stage, the storms
underscore the magnitude of the changes taking place within the families and foreshadow
the violence, both physical and psychological to come.
The
storms also provide the audience with an objective correlative for the internal
upheaval taking place within the respective minds of King Lear and Big Daddy.
Lear emerges from the storm wet, rumpled, and quite mad. Faced with the precipitous
loss of his title, his kingdom, and his family, coupled with his tremendous guilt
for ostracizing his only faithful child, Lear reacts violently, incoherently babbling,
cursing his daughters, and blaming his fate on women. He says, "Down from
the waist they are centaurs, / Though women all above; / But to the girdle do
gods inherit, / Beneath is all the fiends': there's hell, there's darkness, /
There is the sulphurous pit, burning, scalding, / Stench, consumption" (IV.vi.124-129). Vilifying his ungrateful daughters, Lear traces their malevolent
nature to their gender, using the idiom for female genitalia. In a similarly curious
episode from the Broadway version of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Big Daddy wanders
back onstage to tell a highly inappropriate joke about a little boy at the zoo
watching an elephant:
So this ole bull elephant still had a couple of fornications left in him. He reared back his trunk an' got a whiff of that elephant lady next door!began to paw at the dirt in his cage an' butt his head against the separatin' partition and, first thing y'know, there was a conspicuous change in his profilevery conspicuous. . . . So the little boy looked at it and said, "What's that?" His Mam said, "Oh, that'snothin'!"His Papa said, "She's spoiled!" (151-152)
As Big Daddy tells his joke,
Big Mama falls into sobs and the other family members look on in amazement. Obviously,
Big Daddy does not seem to be in normal humor, and he certainly does not behave
like a man who just minutes before learned of his imminent death. Big Daddy, like
Lear, allows his circumstances to overwhelm his reason, which, considering the
impotence these usually powerful men feel, would be an appropriate defensive mechanism.
Brick
uses alcohol as his favorite defensive mechanism, a circumstance that greatly
complicates his relationship with Big Daddy. Brick and Cordelia share their respective
fathers' affection and favoritism, and they both manage to alienate their fathers,
thus contributing to the respective play's dramatic action. Brick seems to be
completely oblivious of anyone other than himself as he crawls deeper into the
bottle, and he acts surprised when Big Mama tells him that Big Daddy dotes on
him and that only he could continue the family legacy. She says, "Oh, Brick,
son of Big Daddy! Big Daddy does so love you! Y'know what would be his fondest
dream come true? If before he passed on, if Big Daddy has to pass on, you gave
him a child of yours, a grandson as much like his son as his son is like Big Daddy!"
(117). Gooper, Brick's older brother, bristles at the comment, but
he recognizes that Big Daddy has always favored Brick, and he hopes to take advantage
of Brick's alcoholism to stake his own claim on the plantation.
Similarly,
in the first scene of King Lear, Lear proclaims before everyone assembled,
including his daughters and their husbands, that Cordelia his been his joy and
that he "lov'd her most, and thought to set [his] rest / On her kind nursery"
(I.i.23-24). Cordelia's sisters profit at her loss, and, unsatisfied
to share dominion over the kingdom, each immediately begins conspiring to depose
the other, which makes one wonder if they would not have colluded to acquire Cordelia's
land had she received it. Brick and Cordelia, innocently, inhabit a treacherous
family dynamic, and only their father's protection prevents their siblings from
destroying them, either physically or financially.
Perhaps
because of their fathers' protection, Brick and Cordelia have developed idealistic
notions of truth that eventually lead to the climax of their respective plays.
In the second act of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Big Daddy presses Brick to
divulge the reason behind his drinking, and Brick, evasively, answers "Have
you ever heard the word 'mendacity'?," and he goes on to attribute his condition
to the accumulation of lies that his life has become and to the liars who surround
him, with the exception of Big Daddy (79). Yet, even in his relationship
with Big Daddy, neither party has been entirely forthcoming. While they have never
explicitly lied to each other, they, as Brick says, have "never talked
to each other" (83). Brick's emphasis on "talked"
suggests that his relationship has never developed the intimacy that Big Daddy
wished to have, and their one revelatory conversation leads them both to tremendous
emotional trauma: Brick faces his sexual confusion, and Big Daddy faces his mortality.1
Likewise, when Lear asks Cordelia to express her affection for him, she freezes,
unwilling to respond in the lavish terms that her unscrupulous sisters have used,
and so she simply says "Nothing, my lord" (I.i.87). Her reply
seems puzzling, because her sisters have used fawning language, but they speak
metaphorically. Goneril says she loves Lear more "than eyesight, space, and
liberty," and Regan says that Goneril's words "come too short"
to describe her love (I.i.56, 73). Regan and Goneril's conceits seem
quite transparent, but Cordelia takes them far too seriously, because she recognizes
the falsity between her sisters' love and their words, so she chooses to speak
literally, explaining that she loves her father at his due, but not with the elevated
language that her sisters use. Lear, offended, asks her "So young, and so
untender?," and she replies, "So young, my lord, and true" (I.i.106-107). In both plays, the favorite child's obsession with honesty contributes
to the play's tragedy.
In
each play, the unfavored siblings' malevolence also contributes to the dramatic
action; in effect, they become the antagonists who perpetrate violence, whether
physical or psychological, on the favored child and the father. Mae and Gooper,
while not so overtly vicious as their counterparts in King Lear, appear
quite repugnant. Alice Griffin says, understatedly, that they "have few redeeming
traits," and, indeed, they manipulate, spy, lie, and connive to get control
of the plantation (157). They have come from Memphis to the plantation with their
five "no-neck" children ostensibly for Big Daddy's birthday party, but
actually they have come expressly to profit from the news of Big Daddy's cancer.
Immediately after giving Big Mama the news about Big Daddy's prognosis, Gooper
presents her with a dummy trust and demands that she have Big Daddy to sign it,
effectively transferring control of the plantation to Gooper and Mae. Big Mama
objects, and Gooper callously says, "You jest won't let me do this in a nice
way, will yah? . . . I am asking for a square deal, and I expect to get one. But
if I don't get one, if there's any peculiar shenanigans going on around here behind
my back, or before me, well, I'm not a corporation lawyer for nothing, I know
how to protect my own interests" (113). Naturally, Big Mama feels
completely alienated by Gooper's behavior, and, since she has more influence on
Big Daddy than anyone save Brick, one could surmise that Gooper would only get
any share of the plantation through litigation. Regan and Goneril, in a similar
moment, learning that Cordelia and the army of France have invaded England for
the purpose of securing Lear, quickly mount military action against their sister
to prevent her from rescuing her father. Simultaneously, Regan and Goneril conspire
with their courtiers to overthrow each other, leading to general strife and mayhem
throughout the kingdom. In each case, the unfavored siblings attempt to use force
to exact their nefarious, greedy ends, and the resolution comes when their plans
have been thwarted.
During
the course of these insidious plots, Big Daddy and Lear each have one loyal friend
who valiantly represents their respective interests in spite of their cruel mistreatment,
Big Mama and Kent. Big Daddy constantly abuses Big Mama, calling her names in
public and telling her directly that he finds her repulsive, yet she always lavishes
him with love. He even castigates her in front of the family for helping to run
the plantation. He says, "Ain't that so, Ida? Didn't you have an idea I was
dying of cancer and now you could take control of this place and everything on
it?" (57). When she runs sobbing from the room, he shows no concern
for her, but, later, when she learns that he really is dying of cancer, she conclusively
reveals her devotion to him. In his stage directions, Williams describes how the
moment when Big Mama realizes Big Daddy's condition should be acted:
[In these few words, this startled, very soft question, Big Mama reviews the history of her forty-five years with Big Daddy, her great, almost embarrassingly true-hearted and simple-minded devotion to Big Daddy, who must have had something Brick has, who made himself loved so much by the "simple expedient" of not loving enough to disturb his charming detachment, also once coupled, like Brick's, with virile beauty.
[Big Mama has a dignity at this moment: she almost stops being fat.] (103)
When Gooper
presents his dummy trust, Big Mama refuses him, saying "CRAP," just like
Big Daddy would. Instead, she begs Brick to have a child who will perpetuate
Big Daddy's legacy, leading Maggie to announce her pregnancy prematurely. In
King Lear, the embattled Kent steps forward to preserve Cordelia from
Lear's unjust banishment, drawing Lear's wrath upon himself. Only Kent dares
to speak to Lear with reason. He says, "Reserve thy state, / And in thy best
consideration check / This hideous rashness. Answer my life my judgement, /
Thy youngest daughter does not love thee least, / Nor are those empty-hearted
whose low sounds / Reverb no hollowness" (I.i.149-154). Kent foreshadows the
play's tragic trajectory, and Lear threatens Kent's life, then banishes him
from the kingdom. Knowing that he will be needed more now than ever, Kent contrives
to disguise himself as the beggar Caius and to find his way into the King's
service. Kent uncovers the conspiracy between Regan and Goneril to eliminate
Lear, and he summons Cordelia with the army of France to save Lear. At the play's
end, Lear dies in his arms. In these plays of duplicity and intrigue, the loyalty
and love of Big Mama and Kent offers a brief glimmer of redemption.
Redemption
aside, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and King Lear are tragedies, but
they have their moments of comic relief. Lear's irreverent fool mocks his condition
openly and with impunity, and his absurd commentary foreshadows the play's tragic
conclusion. Hearing that Regan and Goneril have exchanged letters concerning
the King, the Fool says, "Fathers that wear rags / Do make their children
blind, / But fathers that bear bags / Shall see their children kind. / Fortune,
that arrant whore, / Ne'er turns the key to the poor. / But for all this, thou
shalt have as many dolors for thy daughters as thou canst tell in a year"
(II.iv.47-55). The Fool rightly prophesies that, since King Lear has forfeited
his power, his daughters will inflict terrible sadness on him within the year.
Like the Fool, Reverend Tooker offers a bit of uncomfortable humor to Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof. Ostensibly at the plantation house to offer a bit of
comfort to the family, he constantly talks of memorial windows and bequests
to the parish, revealing himself to be as greedy and mendacious as Mae and Gooper.
In one particularly disturbing moment, Big Daddy overhears Reverend Tooker say
to Doc Baugh, "the Stork and the Reaper are running neck and neck!"
(54). Obviously, Reverend Tooker knows of Big Daddy's prognosis, which he probably
heard from Doc Baugh, and he seems to be equating Big Daddy's death with Mae's
sixth pregnancy. But his statement, by the end of the play, proves to have more
prophetic import when Maggie reveals her (tentative) pregnancy with an heir
to the plantation.
While
almost all of the characters in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof have corollaries
in King Lear, one character stands apart, Maggie the Cat. On one hand,
Maggie has little in common with the other Pollitts, but, on the other hand,
she seems to be an amalgam of Big Mama's devotion, Big Daddy's charisma, Mae
and Gooper's underhanded determination, and Brick's coolness. Unlike the Pollitts,
however, Maggie's multi-faceted personality makes her both tremendously complex
and quickly adaptable. Maggie's goal, as revealed in the first act of the play,
seems extremely difficultto make her distant husband love her, to get
pregnant, to deal with Brick's alcoholism, and to preserve Brick's interest
in the plantation. Amazingly, at the end of the play, she appears to be on the
verge of succeeding in all of her goals, which indicates that she, more than
anyone else, drives the play. Like many of William's most intriguing characters,
as Albert Devlin points out in "Writing in 'A Place of Stone': Cat on
a Hot Tin Roof," she finds herself on the verge of dispossession, but
unlike T. Lawrence Shannon, Blanche Dubois, and Amanda Wingfield, she faces
her circumstance with cunning. In a sense, she exists separately from the Lear-esque
frame play taking place around her. When the plantation appears to be in utter
crisis, she assumes control of the situation, leading to the play's ultimate
climax. In a blatant lie, she announces to the family that she carries Brick's
child, virtually willing herself to be pregnant. At that moment, Mae and Gooper's
plan to take the plantation crumbles, Big Daddy's last wish is fulfilled, and
Brick shows a glimmer of interest in life outside his booze. Alone with her
husband, she tells him that they are "going to make the lie true"
and conceive a child (158). For the first time in possibly years, Brick agrees,
passively, to make love to his wife, and Maggie, with an outsider's perspective,
comments on the tragic Pollitts: "Oh, you weak, beautiful people who give
up with such grace. What you need is someone to take hold of yougently,
with love, and hand your life back to you, like something gold you let go ofand
I can! I'm determined to do itand nothing's more determined than a cat
on a hot tin roof" (158). Ultimately, if anyone triumphs in Williams's
play, it is Maggie.
Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof and King Lear conclude with the prospect of a new
generation. At the end of King Lear, with Lear and all of his daughters
dead and no one remaining with a rightful claim to the throne, the Duke of Albany,
Goneril's widower could have asserted his own claim on the kingdom, perhaps
to be challenged by the King of France. Instead, Albany transfers authority
to Kent and Edgar, the faithful defenders of the old regime. Kent, recognizing
his own advanced age, defers, giving Edgar sole rule of Lear's troubled kingdom.
Edgar accepts his new position with proper solemnity, saying, "The weight
of this sad time we must obey, / Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say:
/ The oldest hath borne most; we that are young / Shall never see so much, nor
live so long" (V.iii.324-327). In the wake of terrible suffering and bloodshed,
Edgar's ascendancy to the throne gives the play a note of redemption as a new,
just regime resolves the anguish plaguing the nation. Maggie's pregnancy lends
a similar tone of redemption to Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, especially in
the Broadway version of the play. The original version ends with Brick, as jaded
as ever, merely acquiescing to make love to Maggie, but in the Broadway version,
Brick shows genuine interest in Maggie. He even says, as he approaches the bed,
the battleground that dominates the stage, "I admire you, Maggie"
(158). The play ends here, with Maggie's speech about these weak, beautiful
people, but she obviously has assumed power over the entire family at this point.
With Big Daddy's death imminent and Mae and Gooper completely out of the picture,
she figures, with or without Brick's active assistance, to take control of the
plantation and to raise an heir who will, eventually, receive Big Daddy's legacy.
Ultimately,
King Lear and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof are plays about succession.
As the old generation faces death, infighting among the young generation coupled
with greed, petty jealousy, and dishonesty, leads to tragic ends. In these plays,
family members become adversaries, death becomes an opportunity, and sex becomes
a weapon. Although remote in temporal and spatial setting, King Lear
and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof have many themes in common, and it seems that
Williams kept Shakespeare in mind while writing his play. Yet the similarities
between the two plays hardly need to be considered explicitly intentional. Williams
may have exploited the family dynamics of King Lear for his own purposes,
but the extreme relationships in this family have their own seminal value, and
almost every audience member in virtually every time, Elizabethan or contemporary,
can relate to or conceive of these archetypal characters because every family
has its own sense of tragedy.
Notes
1 For more on the theme of homosexuality, see Dean Shackelford's article "The Truth That Must Be Told: Gay Subjectivity, Homophobia, and Social History in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." Tennessee Williams Annual Review 1 (1998).
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