The Wall Street Journal sent me to Washington a couple of weeks ago to check out the Kennedy Center’s revival of Tennessee Williams’ Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, directed by Mark Lamos and starring Mary Stuart Masterton, Jeremy Davidson, George Grizzard, and Dana Ivey as, respectively, Maggie, Brick, Big Daddy and Big Mama. My review appears in this morning’s paper, and it’s broadly similar to what I thought of last year’s Broadway revival: I didn’t like the youngsters, but the old hands knocked me out. As for the play itself, well, let’s just say eeuuww:
Mind you, I don’t much care for “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,” which I dismissed in my review of the Broadway revival as “a flabby, pseudo-poetic period piece that leaves you wondering what all the shouting is about–and there’s a whole lot of shouting going on.” For that matter, I don’t much care for Tennessee Williams in general, most of whose plays seem to me to be peopled by a peculiar race of sentimental, logorrheic mutants bearing no obvious resemblance to human beings. As far as I’m concerned, Mary McCarthy nailed it in a single sentence of her 1948 review of “A Streetcar Named Desire”: “Dr. Kinsey would be interested in a semi-skilled male who spoke of the four-letter act as