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Warden takes advantage of the situation by trying to seduce her. However, something comes up and the warden leaves. Just then, Jim enters. Eva tells him that she wants to leave the prison, no matter what it takes. Jim begins to devise a plan: they will meet in the southwest corner of the prison yard when it's dark out and attempt their escape together.
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leaving him to die. Both Butch and Jim storm into the Warden's office, Butch looking for the Warden, and Jim looking for Eva. This leads to a confrontation with the Warden, who begs for his life in a cowardly manner, "Stop! I'm a family man! I've got a wife! A daughter! A little-girrrrl." But, he is eventually killed by Butch with a whip.
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Jim enters with a bloody arm. He tells her that he walked too close to one of the cages and one of the inmate's grabbed hold of him. Jim tells her she should leave this place, as it's not safe, but she refuses. Her true feelings for Jim begin to show as she wants to wait until his parole comes up and
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The next day, Eva talks to Jim and asks him about the eating conditions at the prison. Jim says the food is terrible; however the warden enters, and says that the food is fine. In an effort to put Jim back in line he tells the story to Eva about when Jim first got to the prison and how he had to whip
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Warden Whalen enters in an unannounced, brash way. He is a short, fat, yet powerful man with a presence. Eva begins to beg him for a job; however the warden doesn't want to hear it, saying "A business executive is not interested in your personal misfortunes." In the end, after careful consideration,
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Meanwhile, Jim is being escorted back to his cell. Jim is a convict who helps out the Warden during the day. He enjoys the job because it gets him out of his cell all day. At nights when he returns, his cellmates are constantly calling him names such as
Allison and Canary Bird. Some of the notable
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Jim jumps into the water, but because of the height of the jump and the fact that it is late at night, Eva is unsure if he made it safely in the water. The police arrive in the tower and grab Eva to take her to safety, bringing the play to an end. They question her about a pair of shoes she's got
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Back upstairs, Eva is working with the warden alone in his office. The warden begins asking personal questions toward Eva and also starts being suggestive, even asking her to "come into the closet with him." Before anything can happen, Jim walks in with a report about the prisoners in "the hole,"
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Back down in
Klondike, Jim has joined the rest of the inmates; however, before Schultz, the head guard, can notice anything about Jim or the rest of the inmates, Butch grabs hold of the guard and Jim steals his revolver and keys. The inmates open the door and lock Schultz into the steaming cell,
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Meanwhile, Jim and Eva have met in the southwest corner of the yard; however, the guards and the Warden have caught them and have begun to haul off Jim and put him in
Klondike with the other prisoners. Warden also starts to blackmail Eva and ends up making a deal with her, that he will mail the
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At this moment, the Warden enters and tells Jim to take a file downstairs, thus leaving him alone with Eva once again. The Warden tells her that she can't leave since the building has been put on lockdown. This frightens Eva, getting her worked up, with additional tension from the fact that the
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Moments later, Jim and Eva are alone again in the Warden's office. Jim opens up to Eva about how he can't stand the prison, the inmates, the Warden, and the guards. Eva continues to remind him that once he gets parole in a month the two will be able to run away together, but Jim is no longer
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Down in the prison, the prisoners begin to get pains in their stomachs and have a hard time getting to sleep. Butch says that it's the poor food they are served everyday that is causing their pain, and suggests that they all go on a hunger strike. The men, all in pain, agree to the idea. Jim
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The act begins with the Warden talking with the
Prisons Chaplain, who is concerned about how the Warden is treating his prisoners. The Warden expresses his "my way or the highway" attitude toward the Chaplain. The Chaplain, not in agreement with the Warden's methods, decides to quit.
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The next morning, Mrs. Bristol returns to see the warden and this time she had brought more food for her son. She explains how she hasn't heard from her son in a while and is getting worried. The warden explains, in a coarse manner, that her son had gone insane and had to be killed.
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Afterwards, the Warden comes out and lets Jim and Eva know that if the hunger-strike continues, the men in Hall C will be moved to
Klondike, a boiler room used as a torture room for out-of-line inmates, where the temperatures in the room can reach up to 150 degrees.
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Suddenly, extra police forces arrive at the prison to deal with the prison riots. Jim comes up with a plan to jump out into the river and swim to shore away from all the riots and noise. He gives Eva his shoes and tells her to look for him in the personal columns.
390:. The play moved to the Alley Theatre in Houston running from June 5 to July 3, 1998. Talkin' Broadway called it "A World Class Production" and "A glimpse in the writing of Williams that would transform him from Tom to Tennessee". The next year it opened at the
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Moments after the scene begins, Jim walks through towards the warden's office and informs the women that the warden is out inspecting the grounds, and may not be back for a while. Mrs. Bristol can't stay and leaves the food on the warden's desk.
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The new prison reverend enters the office and is instantly hired by the Warden, saying "I pride myself on being adjustable." He goes on to say that he won't interfere with what the Warden does because he's not in charge, he's just the reverend.
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even bringing them up to see him. After talking to them all, the warden decides they all need more time and he sends them back. Ollie, however, loses himself and doesn't want to go back; instead he rams his head into a wall and kills himself.
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The play begins outside the warden's office with Eva Crane and Mrs. Bristol. Eva is there for a job interview as the new secretary for the Warden, while Mrs. Bristol is here to give her son Sailor Jack some baked goods she made just for him.
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The act starts out in
Klondike where the prisoners from Hall C are beginning to feel the heat from the steam boiler room. Butch is doing whatever he can to keep the morale up among his men by singing and dancing, but it's having no effect.
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The play focuses on a group of inmates who go on a hunger strike. There is also a love story, with the characters Eva, the new secretary at the prison, and Jim, a handsome inmate who works for the warden and is trying to get out on parole.
379:. Redgrave later said, "Basically, anybody could have found the play. I was the only person who was determined to find it." She later contacted Williams' literary executor Maria St. Just, who was able to unearth the manuscript.
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supporting characters introduced are Butch, the unofficial leader among the inmates; Queen, a gay convict who's not all that smart; and Ollie, a smart black convict who's well respected by all the inmates.
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Out in the waiting room, life in the prison is getting restless, due in part of the hunger strike. Eva is answering phone calls left and right, while showing signs of stress during the process.
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optimistic about his parole. Eva reassures him that he will get out because she plans to go to the newspapers and tell them about all the terrible things that go on in the prison.
278:(which belongs to Jim), she replies "I picked them up somewhere. I can't remember", and continues to cling on to them. The audience remains unsure if Jim ever made it out safely.
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Redgrave brought it to Trevor Nunn who agreed to direct the play. His production debuted in London on March 5, 1998, to very positive reviews. The world premiere in London of
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The men agree and say they will hold off for a little longer, and instead go to dinner and cause a small prison riot. By doing so, they have all earned time in "the hole."
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Word reaches the prisoners and at this moment they can't take it anymore. They are fed up with everything that is going on at the prison and begin their hunger strike.
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letter of recommendation for Jim's release if she sleeps with him. Eva reluctantly agrees and episode three ends with the warden showing Eva to his "inner room".
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on March 5, 1998, was a collaboration of the Royal
National Theatre of Great Britain and Corin and Vanessa Redgrave's Moving Theatre, in association with the
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When they have a minute to talk, Eva and Jim discuss their future outside of the prison, how they're in love, and the many places they plan to travel to.
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re-enters the prison and tells the men to hold off on the hunger-strike as he feels with his upcoming parole he can "tear down the walls of this prison".
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him for 14 straight days to try to break through his rough exterior. This story is too much for Eva, and she ends up fainting at the end of the scene.
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The
Selected Letters of Tennessee Williams, Volume I: 1920–1945. Albert J. Devlin and Nancy M. Tischler, eds. New York: New Directions, 2000, p.135
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prison in August 1938, who had been placed in "an isolation unit lined with radiators, where four died from temperatures approaching 150 degrees.".
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on
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in New York City, but they rejected it. Not About
Nightingales remained unperformed and unpublished until the late 1990s when
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Williams, Tennessee. Plays 1937–1955. Mel Gussow and Kenneth Holditch, eds. New York: Library of America, 2000, p. 1029.
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Well respected convict who is very religious. He can't handle the system and takes his life.
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143:. He wrote the play late in 1938, after reading in a newspaper about striking inmates of a
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leave with him. They begin to move in for a kiss when the Warden enters and breaks it up.
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made it her personal mission to track the play down. It had its world premiere at the
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The new Reverend of the prison who doesn't mind getting pushed around by the Warden.
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Single woman who recently got a job at the prison as the Warden's secretary.
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623:"Talkin' Broadway on Broadway Review: "Not About Nightingales" 2/25/1999"
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The Chaplain of the prison who resigns for disagreeing with the Warden.
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Convict who's been at the prison for 10 years, he works for the Warden.
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New convict, former Olympic athlete, feels he will get out in no time.
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Smart talking convict, many look to him as the leader of the convicts.
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597:"Alley Theatre's Nightingales Closes July 3; Next Stop Broadway?"
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Image obsessed convict who is a homosexual, and not very bright.
569:"ARTS ABROAD: Finding Out How Tennessee Williams Got That Way"
428:
Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play
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Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play
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Outstanding Actor in a Play (Finbar Lynch, Corin Redgrave)
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Mexican Convict, who is constantly praying for a way out.
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Old sailor who went insane during his sentence in jail.
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Typical convict, viewed by many as a sidekick to Butch.
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in Houston in 1998 and was published the same year by
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In February 1939, Williams submitted the play to the
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The Knightly Quest: a Novella and Four Short Stories
48:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
488:Outstanding Set Design of a Play (Richard Hoover)
479:Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play (James Black)
1459:
1045:Eight Mortal Ladies Possessed: a Book of Stories
1027:Three Players of a Summer Game and Other Stories
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560:
686:
672:
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482:Outstanding Director of a Play (Trevor Nunn)
1447:List of one-act plays by Tennessee Williams
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880:Will Mr. Merriweather Return from Memphis?
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494:Outstanding Lighting Design (Chris Parry)
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108:Learn how and when to remove this message
856:The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore
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461:Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play
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302:Warden of the prison, unlikeable man.
647:Not About Nightingales
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46:adding citations to reliable sources
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451:Tony Award for Best Lighting Design
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960:Something Cloudy, Something Clear
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438:Tony Award for Best Scenic Design
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1488:New Directions Publishing books
976:In Masks Outrageous and Austere
936:A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur
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170:, with a foreword by Redgrave.
33:needs additional citations for
1478:Plays set in the United States
1429:The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone
1322:The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond
1127:The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond
994:The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone
599:. Playbill.com. Archived from
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1357:Ten Blocks on the Camino Real
1258:The Roman Spring of Mrs Stone
1111:Ten Blocks on the Camino Real
1020:Hard Candy: A Book of Stories
1000:Moise and the World of Reason
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510:Outstanding Music in a Play (
1306:Last of the Mobile Hot Shots
864:The Seven Descents of Myrtle
392:Circle in the Square Theatre
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1473:Plays by Tennessee Williams
872:In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel
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1290:This Property Is Condemned
1146:The Catastrophe of Success
968:A House Not Meant to Stand
944:Clothes for a Summer Hotel
920:This Is (An Entertainment)
912:The Red Devil Battery Sign
652:Internet Broadway Database
500:Outstanding Sound Design (
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952:The Notebook of Trigorin
776:A Streetcar Named Desire
413:Tony Award for Best Play
145:Holmesburg, Pennsylvania
57:"Not About Nightingales"
1282:The Night of the Iguana
1170:In the Winter of Cities
848:The Night of the Iguana
139:is a three-act play by
904:The Two-Character Play
728:Not About Nightingales
621:McGillicuddy, Fergus.
402:Awards and nominations
384:Not About Nightingales
377:Not About Nightingales
344:Mother of Sailor Jack.
192:he gives Eva the job.
136:Not About Nightingales
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1389:Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
1381:Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
1226:Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
1095:Suddenly, Last Summer
808:Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
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1274:Sweet Bird of Yourth
1266:Period of Adjustment
1234:Suddenly Last Summer
1176:Androgyne, Mon Amour
896:Small Craft Warnings
840:Period of Adjustment
824:Suddenly Last Summer
42:improve this article
1405:Sweet Bird of Youth
1365:The Glass Menagerie
1349:The Glass Menagerie
1314:The Glass Menagerie
1194:The Glass Menagerie
1130:(1957, filmed 2008)
1063:The Glass Menagerie
832:Sweet Bird of Youth
752:The Glass Menagerie
367:1999 Broadway debut
124:First edition cover
1413:Orpheus Descending
1341:Three by Tennessee
816:Orpheus Descending
768:Stairs to the Roof
704:Candles to the Sun
689:Tennessee Williams
573:The New York Times
373:Orpheus Descending
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1103:The Fugitive Kind
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502:Christopher Shutt
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174:Plot summary
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40:Please help
35:verification
32:
15:
1138:Non-fiction
1055:Screenplays
1012:collections
1010:Short story
928:Vieux Carré
800:Camino Real
512:Steven Edis
455:Chris Parry
407:Tony Awards
335:Sailor Jack
1483:1938 plays
1468:1998 plays
1462:Categories
744:Auto-da-Fé
628:2011-05-03
607:2011-12-29
578:2008-03-22
519:References
68:newspapers
1218:Baby Doll
1087:Baby Doll
687:Works by
254:Act three
98:July 2011
1155:" (1947)
1148:" (1947)
353:Reverend
347:Chaplain
1440:Related
888:Out Cry
650:at the
222:Act two
179:Act one
130:, 1998)
82:scholar
1432:(2003)
1424:(1995)
1416:(1990)
1408:(1989)
1400:(1984)
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1317:(1987)
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1163:Poetry
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1074:(1951)
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1029:(1960)
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1002:(1975)
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987:Novels
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551:
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506:Winner
496:Winner
490:Winner
484:Winner
446:Winner
323:Swifty
84:
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55:
1298:Boom!
1119:Boom!
696:Plays
317:Queen
311:Ollie
305:Butch
89:JSTOR
75:books
549:ISBN
533:ISBN
61:news
359:Mex
329:Joe
293:Jim
287:Eva
44:by
1464::
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