Glass Menagerie, The The Theme of Escape in the Play


The Glass Menagerie - Escape Theme

"The Glass Menagerie" is set in the apartment of the Wingfield

family. By description, it is a cramped, dinghy place, not unlike a

jail cell. It is one of many such apartments in the neighborhood. Of

the Wingfield family members, none of them want to live there. Poverty

is what traps them in their humble abode. The escape from this

lifestyle, this apartment and these relationships is a significant

theme throughout the play. These escapes may be related to the fire

escape, the dance hall, the absent Mr. Wingfield and Tom's inevitable

departure.

The play opens with Tom addressing the audience from the fire

escape. This entrance into the apartment provides a different purpose

for each of the characters. Overall, it is a symbol of the passage

from freedom to being trapped in a life of desperation. The fire

escape allows Tom the opportunity to get out of the apartment and away

from his nagging mother. Amanda sees the fire escape as an opportunity

for gentleman callers to enter their lives. Laura's view is different

from her mother and her brother. Her escape seems to be hiding inside

the apartment, not out. The fire escape separates reality and the

unknown.

Across the street from the Wingfield apartment is the Paradise

Dance Hall. Just the name of the place is a total anomaly in the

story. Life with the Wingfields is as far from paradise as it could

possibly be. Laura appears to find solace in playing the same records

over and over again, day after day. Perhaps the music floating up to

the apartment from the dance hall is supposed to be her escape which

she just can't take. The music from the dance hall often provides the

background music for certain scenes, The Glass Menagerie playing quite

frequently. With war ever-present in the background, the dance hall is

the last chance for paradise.

Mr. Wingfield, the absent father of Tom and Laura and husband to

the shrewish Amanda, is referred to often throughout the story. He is

the ultimate symbol of escape. This is because he has managed to

remove himself from the desperate situation that the rest of his

family are still living in. His picture is featured prominently on the

wall as a constant reminder of better times and days gone by. Amanda

always makes disparaging remarks about her missing husband, yet lets

his picture remain. Tom always makes jokes about his dad, and how he

"fell in love with long distances." This is his attempt to ease the

pain of abandonment by turning it into something humorous. It is

inevitable that the thing which Tom resents most in his father is

exactly what Tom himself will carry out in the end...escape! Through

his father, Tom has seen that escape is possible, and though he is

hesitant to leave his sister and even his mother behind, he is being

driven to it.

Tom escapes reality in many different ways. The first and most

obvious is the fire escape that leads him away from his desolate

home. Another would be the movies that Amanda is always nagging him

about. She thinks he spends too much time watching movies and that he

should work harder and find a suitable companion for Laura. The more

Amanda nags, the more Tom needs his movie escapes. They take him to

another world for a while, where mothers and sisters and runaway

fathers do not exist. As the strain gets worse, the movie watching

becomes more frequent, as does Tom's drinking. It is getting harder

and harder for Tom to avoid real life. The time for a real departure

is fast approaching. Amanda eventually pushes him over the edge,

almost forcing him out, but not without laying overpowering guild

trips on him. Tom leaves, but his going away is not the escape that he

craved for so long. The guilt of abandoning Laura is overwhelming. He

cannot seem to get over it. Everything he sees is a reminder of her.

Tom is now truly following in the footsteps of his father. Too late,

he is realizing that leaving is not an escape at all, but a path of

even more powerful desperation.

Williams uses the theme of escape throughout "The Glass Menagerie"

to demonstrate the hopelessness and futility of each character's

dreams. Tom, Laura and Amanda all seem to think, incorrectly I might

add, that escape is possible. In the end, no character makes a clean

break from the situation at hand. The escape theme demonstrated in the

fire escape, the dance hall, Mr. Wingfield and Tom's departure prove

to be a dead end in many ways. Perhaps Tennessee Williams is trying to

send a message that running away is not the way to solve life's

problems. The only escape in life is solving your problems, not

avoiding them.



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