Appearance/Illusion versus Reality

Scene 1

Stella on falling in love with Stanley:

‘I assure you I wasn’t blinded by all the brass.’ (p.12)

·  The brass is the medals and uniform he had after the war.

·  Stella loves Stanley for who he really is – there is no illusion about their relationship

Scene 3

Blanche talking to Mitch and asking him to put the paper lantern on the light:

‘I can’t stand a naked light bulb, any more than I can a rude remark or a vulgar action.’ (p.39)

·  Blanche is trying to hide her true appearance and age from Mitch, so avoids harsh light

·  She is also promoting a false image – that she is respectable and ladylike – not the real her

Scene 9

When Mitch questions Blanche on why he has never seen her in the light.

‘I like it dark. The dark is comforting to me.’

·  She’s hiding from the light and from reality

·  She feels safe when no one can see the real her

Blanche admits that she lives in a fantasy world because she doesn’t want to face the truth:

‘I don’t want realism. I’ll tell you what I want. Magic! […] I misrepresent things. I don’t tell the truth, I tell what ought to be the truth.’

·  Blanche puts on a front, a show – she acts the way she wishes things could be

·  She clearly says that she doesn’t want realism

·  She’s happier living in a fantasy world and in a world where she lies to people

Scene 10

Stanley knows that Blanche is lying about Shep and Mitch:

‘There wasn’t no wire at all! There isn’t no millionaire! […] There isn’t a goddamn thing but imagination.’

·  Stanley is being realistic

·  He brings her back to reality after she called him and his friends pigs

·  Tears her fantasy apart, begins to destroy her

Stanley admits that he has never believed anything she has said.

‘Not once did you pull any wool over this boy’s eyes!’

·  Stanley understood exactly what Blanche was like right from the beginning

·  Stanley is the complete opposite from Mitch because Mitch was gullible enough to believe everything Blanche told him

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