front 1 Blanche sharing how she got to Stella's house | back 1 ‘They told me to take a streetcar named Desire, then transfer to one called Cemeteries' |
front 2 Blanche talking to herself when she steals some of Stella's alcohol | back 2 ‘I've got to keep hold of myself.’ |
front 3 Blanche on vanity and looks | back 3 ‘I still have that awful vanity about my looks even now that my looks are slipping.’ |
front 4 Blanche on how much losing Belle Reve impacted her. | back 4 ‘I, I, I took the blows in my face and my body!’ |
front 5 Blanche to Stanley, pause shows her guilt and continued sadness on her husbands death. | back 5 ‘The boy - the boy died.’ |
front 6 Stella on how much she loves Stanley, and how much she misses him when he is gone. | back 6 ‘When he’s away for a week I nearly go wild!' |
front 7 here Stella knows that her love for Stanley impacts the way she views him, so she can't provide a realistic description. | back 7 ‘Oh, you can’t describe someone you're in love with.’ |
front 8 Stanley on comfortability. | back 8 ‘Be comfortable is my motto.’ |
front 9 Blanche on mixing blood after losing Belle Reve | back 9 ‘But maybe he is what we need to mix with our blood now that we've lost Belle Reve.’ |
front 10 Blanche on her feelings of uncertainty and the dash maybe shows her reluctance to admit this. Means a lack of certainty of guidance, can also show her anxiety about Stella having a baby in those surroundings. | back 10 ‘The blind are - leading the blind.’ |
front 11 Blanche about the type of man Stanley is. | back 11 'You're simple, straightforward and honest, a little bit on the primitive side I should think.' |
front 12 Stella on Blanche's weaknesses to do with her looks. | back 12 ‘And admire her dress and tell her she is looking wonderful. That's important with Blanche, her little weakness.’ |
front 13 Stella questioning Stanley's behaviours and way he is treating Blanche. | back 13 ‘You have no idea how stupid and horrid you’re being!’ |
front 14 Stanley on the Napoleonic code. | back 14 ‘ whatever belongs to my wife is also mine, and vice versa.’ |
front 15 Stanley on how different he is to Stella's family. | back 15 ‘The Kowalskis and Dubois have different notions.’ |
front 16 Stanley on not being interested with women fancy clothes and glamour. | back 16 ‘Some men are took in by this Hollywood glamour stuff, and some men are not.’ |
front 17 Stanley on him as a man needing to get involved in his wife's affairs, even more so if she is having a baby. | back 17 ‘A man has to take interest in his wife's affairs, especially if she is going to have a baby.’ |
front 18 Blanche's reaction on meeting Mitch for the first time. | back 18 ‘That one seems - more superior to the others… I thought he had a sort of sensitive look.’ |
front 19 Blanche about hating naked light bulbs. | back 19 ‘I can’t stand a naked light bulb, any more than I can a rude remark or a vulgar action.’ |
front 20 Stella after Stanley hits her on her thigh infant of his friends. | back 20 ‘It makes me so mad when he does that in front of people.’ |
front 21 Stella asserting her strength and standing up against Stanley. | back 21 ‘It’s my house and I will talk as much as I want to.’ |
front 22 Stanley rudely calling the women hens | back 22 ‘You hens cut out that conversation in there!’ |
front 23 Eunace to Stanley after he beats Stella. | back 23 ‘You can’t beat on a woman an’ then call ‘er back! ... And her goin’ t’ have a baby … you stinker!’ |
front 24 Mitch about poker and women. | back 24 ‘Poker should not be played in a house with women.’ |
front 25 Blanche questioning if Stanley being sorry after makes his violence acceptable | back 25 ‘And that - that makes it all right?’ |
front 26 Stanley making Blanche seem like a fake performer in her romances. | back 26 ‘The same old lines, same old act,’ |
front 27 Blanche saying that if Shep wasn't married she would have made sure she became his wife, as he is very rich. | back 27 ‘Would I be here if the man weren’t married?’ |
front 28 Blanche about desire. | back 28 ‘Brutal desire - just - Desire! - the name of that rattle-trap street-car.’ |
front 29 Blanche pleading for Stella not to stay with Stanley and calling him a brute. | back 29 ‘Don’t - don’t hang back with the brutes.’ |
front 30 Stella on how she felt after Stanley smashed all the lightbulbs with her slipper. | back 30 ‘I was -sort of - thrilled by it.’ |
front 31 Stella saying she doesn't want to leave Stanley. | back 31 ‘I’m not in anything I want to get out of.’ |
front 32 Stella questioning Blanche's supers attitude. | back 32 ‘Don’t you think your superior attitude is a little out of place?’ |
front 33 Blanche on how to survive she has had to be seductive because she is soft. | back 33 'make a little - temporary magic just on oder to pay for - one night's shelter!' “And so the soft people have got to – shimmer and glow – put a – paper lantern over the light” |
front 34 Blanche after she kisses the paper boy, about better behaving herself. | back 34 ‘I’ve got to be good and keep my hands off children.’ |
front 35 Blanche showing that she can be dishonest to get what she wants, lying to Shep. | back 35 'Myself, myself, for being such a liar! I'm writing a letter to Shep.' |
front 36 Quotes from Eunace's and Steve's fight which normalises the behaviour of Stanley and Sella. | back 36 'You hit me! I'm gonna cal the police! - Eunace 'That hunk!' -Steve |
front 37 Blanche about her star sign. | back 37 'Virgo is the Virgin.' Stanley: 'Hah!' |
front 38 Blanche lying to Stanley using her posh persona when he questions her about her dirty past. | back 38 'The Hotel Flamingo is not an establishment I would dare to be seen in!' |
front 39 Blanche about how men only acknowledge her existence when she has sex with them. | back 39 'men don't - don't even admit your existence unless they are making love to you. And you've got to have your existence admitted by someone, if you're going to have someones protection.' |
front 40 Blanche about deceiving Mitch. | back 40 'he thinks I'm sort of - prim and proper, you know! I want to deceive him enough to make him - want me ...' |
front 41 Blanche on the nature of the womens role. | back 41 'the lady must entertain the gentleman - or no dice!' |
front 42 Blanche on her 'ideals' trying to get Mitch to believe her dignified lady act. | back 42 ‘I have - old fashioned ideals!’ |
front 43 Blanche about her fantasies when she is with Mitch. | back 43 ‘We are going to pretend that we are sitting in a little artist’s cafe in Paris!’ |
front 44 Blanche talking about Mitch's body. | back 44 'You have a massive bone struture and a very imposing physique.' |
front 45 Blanche to Mitch about how horrible Stanley is. | back 45 'He is insufferably rude. Goes out of his way to offend me.' 'And I have to ask him to close the bathroom door. That sort of commonness isn't necessary.' |
front 46 light used to be a symbol for passion and love for Blanche and not a representation of unwanted truth. | back 46 'It was like you suddenly turned a blinding light on something that had always been half in shadow...' |
front 47 Mitch asks if it could be him and Blanche that are meant to be together. | back 47 ‘You need somebody… Could it be - you and me Blanche |
front 48 Stella explaining to Stanley that they grew up in a different world to him and shows taht taht does have an impact on them as people. | back 48 ‘Blanche is sensitive and you've got to realise that Blanche and I grew up in very different circumstances than you did.’ |
front 49 Stella refusing to believe what Stanley is telling her about Blanche. | back 49 'What - contemptible - lies!’ |
front 50 Stellla knows about Blanche's sensitivity to her age and stops ata certain number when putting on candles. | back 50 ‘I’ll stop at twenty-five.’ |
front 51 Stanley strips Blnche of her high status as he mockingly repeatedly calls her Dame Blanche. | back 51 'they were so impressed by Dame Blanche that they requested her to turn in her room key - for permanently!' |
front 52 We can tell that Stanley is being defensive and guarding his territory in the way he shouts at Blanche to get out the bath-room. | back 52 ‘Get OUT of the BATH-ROOM! |
front 53 When Blanche's first love died a part of her died as well. | back 53 'never for one moment since has there been any light that's stronger than this - kitchen - candle.' 'she had an experience that - killed her illusions!' |
front 54 Stanley on how close him and Mitch are, there bond with each other is too strong for Blanche. | back 54 'We were in the same outfit together... We work in the same plant and now on the same bowling team.' |
front 55 Blanche points out Stanley's languadge when telling her story to emphasise her superiority above him any chance she gets. | back 55 ‘Knew more vulgar expressions than Mr Kowalski.’ |
front 56 Blanche on why she takes hot baths. We also know it is to try cleanse herself. | back 56 ‘I take hot baths for my nerves.’ |
front 57 Stella showing her strength and speaking with authority to Stanley. This backfires terribly, as well as questioning his cruelty. | back 57 ‘Your face and fingers are disgustingly greasy.' 'You needn't have been so cruel.' |
front 58 Stella about the beauty of Blanche's soul before it got destroyed by the cruel world. | back 58 ‘Nobody, was tender and trusting as she was. But people like you abused her, and forced her to change.’ |
front 59 Stanley attacking Blanche's innocense laughing at the idea of her being a Nunn. | back 59 ‘But Sister Blanche is no lily!’ |
front 60 To win over Stella Stanley reminds her of how things used to be making it sound very romantic and blaming Blanche for their problems. | back 60 ‘Stell, it's going to be alright after she goes.’ ‘I pulled you down off them columns and how you loved it, having them coloured lights going.’ |
front 61 Stanley on his roots and shows his pride for it in the way he states it so openly and assertively. | back 61 ‘What I am is a one hundred per cent, American … So don’t ever call me a Polack.’ ‘I was common as dirt.’ |
front 62 Blanche on the polka tune in her head. | back 62 ‘You’ve stopped the polka tune I had caught in my head.’ ‘There now, the shot! It always stops after that.’ |
front 63 Blanche about realism and magic. | back 63 ‘I don’t want realism. I'll tell you what I want. Magic!’ ‘I don’t tell the truth, I tell what ought to be the truth.’ |
front 64 Blanche explaining to Mitch excuses why she had her intimacies with strangers. | back 64 ‘Intimacies with strangers were all I was able to fill my empty heart with.’ ‘Panic that drove me from one to another, hunting for some protection’ |
front 65 Mitch confronting Blanche on her alcohol problem. | back 65 ‘He says you have been lapping it up all summer like a wild-cat.’ |
front 66 Mitch confronting Blanche about not seeing her in the light. | back 66 ‘I don’t think I have ever seen you in the light.’ |
front 67 Mitch considers raping Blanche as he admits that he has been wanting sex from Blanche all summer. | back 67 ‘What I been missing all summer.’ |
front 68 Mitch views women as either good if they are virgins or as whores if they have had sex, which he perceives fine for men to do. He planned on having sex with Blanche anyway himself without marrying her. he believed in the old-fashioned idea that women have to save themselves for men. | back 68 ‘You're not clean enough to bring in the house with my mother.’ |
front 69 When Blanche and Stanley are alone she spells out the danger she is in. | back 69 ‘Does that mean we are to be alone in here.’ ‘Caught in a trap.’ |
front 70 This shows Blanche knows what is on Stanley's mind and suggests that he is interested in raping her. She is in a fantasy over a fake lover. | back 70 ‘It won’t be the sort of thing you have in mind. Thisman is a gentleman and he respects me.’ |
front 71 Blanche views herself highly and sees her breeding as something that adds value to her. Metaphor showing superiority, biblical reference, doesn't see Stanley and Mitch as worthy. | back 71 ‘A cultivated woman, a woman of intelligence and breeding.’ ‘But I have been foolish - casting my pearls before swine!’ |
front 72 Stanley refers to Blanche as a bird. | back 72 ‘Fine feathers.’ |
front 73 Blanche on cruelty. | back 73 'Deliberate cruelty is not forgivable.' |
front 74 Stanley destroying Blanche's fantasies, can hear his hate for imagination in this line. | back 74 ‘There isn’t a god damn thing but imagination.’ |
front 75 Stanley makes Blanche's outfit seem tacky and questions who she thinks she is. | back 75 "That worn-out Mardi Gras outfit, rented for 50 cents from some rag-picker!' |
front 76 Stanley paints a picture of her as Cleopatra mocking her superiority, but also her many men as Cleopatra is known for having multiple husbands. | back 76 'You are the Queen of the Nile!' |
front 77 Stanley on how he was never taken in by Blanche's act. | back 77 ‘Do you know that I've been on to you from the start, and not once did you pull the wool over this boy's eyes?' |
front 78 Stanley before he raped Blanche. | back 78 ‘Come to think of it - maybe you wouldn’t be so bad to - interfere with.’ ‘Tiger - tiger!’ |
front 79 Blanche feeling like the apartment is a trap and wants to leave. | back 79 ‘This place is a trap!’ |
front 80 Blanche's fear of men after Stanley raped her. | back 80 ‘I don’t want to pass in front of those men.’ |
front 81 Stella's regret after Blanche is taken away. | back 81 ‘I don’t know if I did the right thing.’ ‘Oh, God, what have I done to my sister?’ |
front 82 Mitch pinpointing the Blame of what happened to Blanche on Stanley. | back 82 ‘You! You done this … I’ll kill you!’ |
front 83 Stella on how the physical aspects and sexuality make all the other negatives of their relationship unimportant. | back 83 ‘There are things that happen between a man and a woman in the dark – that sort of make everything seem – unimportant.’ |