Become a Member
Theatre

A Streetcar Named Desire

A revival both stylish and 'Street' smart

August 7, 2014 15:16
Gillian Anderson in Streetcar

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

1 min read

As Blanche Dubois, Gillian Anderson - a star whose career was defined by the unflappably cool Scully in The X-Files - turns in a superb performance of brittle fragility that captures the full monumental tragedy of Tennessee Williams's heroine.

This the latest in a series of classic plays at the Young Vic that have been liberated from what Australian director Benedict Andrews calls "chocolate box" naturalism.

One of them was Andrews's revival of Three Sisters which was memorably - for some, unforgettably - set in modern Russia with a soundtrack that featured Nirvana. His revival of Streetcar (1947) is also a modern take with bursts of exhilarating rock and episodes of jazz that cools the New Orleans heat.

The most startling feature of Magda Willi's design of the cramped flat, in which the play is set, is not the Ikea-type white furniture, nor the absence of walls.