Popular Culture Review Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer 2005 | Page 9

Tennessee Williams and Sports When we think of sports (and athletes) in American literature, a crew of authors and their sports-driven works come to mind. Probably the quintessential American author-sportsman is Ernest “Papa” Hemingway whose fiction glamorized, almost in epic proportion, fishing, bullfighting, prizefighting, and other manly contests. Running a close second in the race for author as sportsenthusiast is Jack London whose The Call o f the Wild sledges through dog sledding, hunting, and other outdoor adventures; he who also penned a volume entitled Jack London: Stories o f Boxing, Other American authors who highlight sports in their work include William Faulkner whose Bear is frequently anthologized in volumes on sports and literature; Bernard Malamud’s The Natural (1952), a hard-hitting baseball story; Clifford Odets’s drama Golden Boy (1939) focuses on prizefighting; and the series of John Updike’s Rabbit Angstrom novels covering a variety of sports, especially basketball, golf, and sailing. Even more recently, Steven Pressfield’s novel The Legend o f Bagger Vance, mythologizing golf, has been made into a popular movie starring Matt Damon and Will Smith. By contrast, Tennessee Williams hardly seems in the same league with these sports-drenched writers. In the popular imagination, Williams’s plays are consumed with tales of sexual grotesqueries involving mad artist-maidens and outcast stud lovers, all set in a lyrical, moon-drenched South. Closer to the truth, though, sports and references to them play a symbolic role in Williams’s plays, fiction, and even in a few of his poems contributing to the development of his characters and plots. Williams incorporates a wide assortment of sports to capture and to deconstruct the popular ethos surrounding them, including swimming (“The Interval”; A Streetcar Named Desire; Suddenly Last Summer), diving {Sweet Bird o f Youth; Night o f the Iguana), bowling {Streetcar), bicycling {The Confessional), cock fighting {Summer and Smoke), croquet (“Three Players of a Summer Game”), motorcycling {Now the Cats with Jeweled Claws), track and/or football {Spring Storm; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof), and prizefighting (“The Palooka”; Camino Real), With the uncanny skill of an aficionado, Williams almost always seems to match his characters with just the right sport at which they must win or, more often than not, lose. Sadly but significantly, there are very few heroic sports victories in his canon. Yet perhaps the most telling use of sports in Williams’s works is to glorify the body beautiful or to encode its decline, a dichotomy that numerous Hollywood versions of his scripts played upon as he did himself in the performance of his own life and dreams. Despite a sickly childhood, diphtheria, eye problems, an innate shyness, and his relatively small frame, Williams was no stranger to the sporting arena. He was encouraged, indeed alternately goaded and threatened, into them by his blustering father, Cornelius Coffin Williams, who denigrated Williams as “Miss