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Role Playing: Tracy Michelle Arnold debunks madness as force that drives Blanche DuBois

Submitted by on Aug 31, 2015 – 5:55 pm | 1,675 views

Blanche DuBois (Tracy Michelle Arnold) sizes up her situation with Stanley (Eric Parks) in 'A Street Car Named Desire.' (Carissa Dixon)Interview: Actress argues for pluck and cleverness as the worn Southern belle in Tennessee Williams’ “A Streetcar Named Desire,” at American Players Theatre in Spring Green, Wis. Through Sept. 5.

By Lawrence B. Johnson

Tracy Michelle Arnold, who portrays a feisty and resourceful Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams’ “A Streetcar Named Desire” at American Players Theatre, doesn’t buy the common perception of this embattled woman as “a crazy person.” Arnold sees Blanche as a scarred fighter who never gives up her struggle to survive, even at the end.

“She has been through so much and yet she’s a survivor,” says Arnold. “The first time I played the role (as a graduate student at Northern Illinois University), I thought of her as someone who has been defeated. “But now I see her quite differently. She has suffered so much, but she just keeps getting up, coming back. She even mantains her sense of humor – as well as her appearance.”

Actress Tracy Michelle ArnoldBlanche shows up on the doorstep of her sister Stella’s meager, bare New Orleans apartment because she has been effectively run out of town at her last stop – fired from her job as a high school English teacher for seducing an under-age boy. She’s also hounded by a crimson reputation for hosting the soldiers at a local military base.

What pushed her down that path was a quick succession of traumatic events: discovering first-hand that her handsome new husband was gay, then blurting out a cruel comment that prompted him to put a gun to his head. Blanche saw the result and seemingly never got over it. She keeps trying to recapture her lost chance with other young boys, as if hoping for a different outcome.

“When Blanche arrives at Stella’s home, she has no money and no prospects,” says Arnold. “She has lost her job and her reputation is tarnished. She very quickly discovers that this option isn’t going to work, either. Yet she is exceptional in her drive and her fierce hope. She keeps her wits about her. She’s like a prize fighter who will not go down. She swings with her mind, her words, her sexuality. She must be exhausted.”

Stanley (Eric Parks) lets Blanche (Tracy Michelle Arnold) know she's in his world now. (Carissa Dixon)And of course she must contend with Stella’s (Cristina Panfilio) pugnacious husband Stanley (Eric Parks), a pugilist worthy of Blanche’s wiles.

“Blanche has no expectations of Stanley because she’d never met him,” notes Arnold, “so we had to figure out how their relationship would go. Blanche is used to the men she knew back home, and she’s met all types. She wouldn’t waste her time with a man who resorts to violence to get his way. Now she encounters this man who is crass, crude and unapologetic – even proud of it in a way. Then she sees him hit her sister, who is pregnant.

“So how does Blanche deal with Stanley? We discussed this a great deal in rehearsal. She’s very good with men. Her sexuality is one of the tools in her kit, and of course she would use that with Stanley – outside Stella’s presence. Eric and I have played opposite each other many times. We’re very comfortable that way, and not afraid to experiment. The first few weeks, I was working on Blanche as someone who was more afraid of him, intimidated by his animalism – by this creature who doesn’t want to allow me in his space. Then we decided to explore Blanche’s strength.

Blanche (Tracy Michelle Arnold) enjoys a drink and a laugh during a peaceful moment in her stay with her sister Stella (Carissa Dixon)“It’s fun to put on different versions of Blanche for Stanley. She’s wonderfully mercurial and constantly morphing. She’s like one of those germs that adapts and adapts again. ‘That way will kill me, so I’ll change.’ And she does this in front of the audience.”

At stake in the battle between Blanche and Stanley, says the actress, is Stella. Blanche is suffocating in this tiny dump of an apartment where she has slept for months on a cot off the kitchen, her privacy as thin as the curtain that separates her from Stanley and his poker night pals.

“The violence comes from a sense of ownership of Stella,” says Arnold, “and in her mind Blanche has prior claim. Blanche has few options left. She wants Stella to go away with her. But Stella has made a new life, and she’s sticking with Stanley.”

In the end comes the iconic line, as Blanche is being led away to an asylum by an older man and his assistant. Typically read as the distracted words of distraught woman who has lost touch with reality, Blanche says: “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” But Arnold puts a stunning spin on it, throwing what becomes an acerbic comment into Stella’s face.

Tracy Michelle Arnold (as Blanche) says the war between Stanley (Eric Parks) and Blanche is about who gets Stella (Cristina Panfilio). (Carissa Dixon)“From the first rehearsal, I knew I wanted to say that line to Stella,” the actress says. “She knows what she’s saying: ‘I have to look to strangers to take care of me. You left us all. You were never there when all those (family members) were dying and I had to find a way to pay for their funerals.’ I don’t think she’s had a psychotic break. I don’t think she’s out of her wits.

“This is a woman who has just been raped brutally by her brother-in-law and still had to live in that house with him for those few days – with the man who did that to her. That’s the woman you see in that last scene, trying with all her might to make lemonade. I suppose it’s the  easy way out to say she has gone insane, but I don’t believe it. I have so much sympathy for her. I know how intelligent she is, how hard she has fought. She’s just regrouping to battle again. Maybe she’ll work her wiles on this nice man who has her arm.”

While Arnold acknowledges that playing Williams’ troubled, aging Southern belle outdoors in APT’s Up-the-Hill arena takes a physical toll, she insists she can leave the emotional wreckage on the stage.

“Between the dehydration and having to project through wind and humidity, by the end of a performance my muscles are crazy aching,” she says. “But when a play is written as impeccably as this one, if you can get your dominoes lined up right, it isn’t really hard to perform. All you have to do is walk into that courtyard, and you’re good to go.

“The emotional part I can let go at the end. Anyway, now I can. The rehearsal process was where I carried Blanche with me all the time. But not now. Blanche doesn’t intrude into my life. I have a six-and-a-half-year-old son, a dog, a house. And flowers to water.”

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