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Article
White Woods and Blue Jasmine: Woody Allen Rewrites A Streetcar Named Desire
Literature/Film Quarterly
  • Verna Foster, Loyola University Chicago
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2015
Pages
188-201
Publisher Name
Salisbury University
Publisher Location
Salisbury, MD
Abstract

The film's reviewers almost invariably commented on the parallels with Streetcar, many noting, too, that Cate Blanchett, who plays the title character, Jasmine, had also successfully played Blanche Dubois in Liv Ullmann's 2009 production of the play at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.2 But for all the similarities in character types and plot structure and for all the allusions to specific lines in Streetcar, the themes of Blue Jasmine are very different from those of Williams's play because the story that Allen tells also channels the fall of Bernie Madoff and his wife, Ruth. The flashbacks are a filmic equivalent for Williams's gradual exposition of Blanche's story recounted by Stanley, Stella, and Blanche herself! Since many of the flashbacks represent what Jasmine is remembering when she detaches herself from the present (talking to herself, staring into space), they also correspond to Williams's expressionist use of visual and aural effects-the glaring light of the passing train, the music of the Varsouviana-to convey Blanche's consciousness, her memory of the night her young husband shot himself.

Most of Woody Allen's allusions to Tennessee Williams in his films and writings have been to A Streetcar Named Desire.1 So it is not surprising that Streetcar (1947) is written all over Allen's recent film, Blue Jasmine (2013). Allen goes beyond adopting and adapting plot lines and characters from Williams's play. He has so deeply assimilated the earlier work that motifs and lines of dialogue, often transferred to different characters or situations, become the imaginative counters with which he constructs his own screenplay. The film's reviewers almost invariably commented on the parallels with Streetcar, many noting, too, that Cate Blanchett, who plays the title character, Jasmine, had also successfully played Blanche Dubois in Liv Ullmann's 2009 production of the play at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.2 But for all the similarities in character types and plot structure and for all the allusions to specific lines in Streetcar, the themes of Blue Jasmine are very different from those of Williams's play because the story that Allen tells also channels the fall of Bernie Madoff and his wife, Ruth. In this essay I will review the similarities between Blue Jasmine and A Streetcar Named Desire, explore the implications of the allusions and the changes Allen makes, and suggest how the post-World War II play works in the postMadoff film.

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Author Posting. © Literature/Film Quarterly, 2015. Reprinted with permission of Literature/Film Quarterly @ Salisbury University, Salisbury, MD 21801. The article was published in Literature and Film Quarterly, Volume 43, Issue 3, 2015.

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Citation Information
Verna Foster. "White Woods and Blue Jasmine: Woody Allen Rewrites A Streetcar Named Desire" Literature/Film Quarterly Vol. 43 Iss. 3 (2015)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/verna-foster/22/