The Tennessee Williams & New Orleans Literary Festival is held each spring in New Orleans' historic French Quarter. A few weeks ahead, Williams’ Pulitzer Prize-winning play “ Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” had presented in Le Petit Theatre, a local theater with a history of more than a century.
A promising young man from a rich family in southern America suffered from doubts about his sexuality and career low. In the meantime, his wife was deeply unsatisfied with their marriage. Unspeakable conflicts were exacerbated in the plantation house which had little privacy.
There were many characters and lines. Unfamiliar with southern accents (FYI, I am not a native English speaker), I did not get every sentence. Fortunately, the directing and acting were pretty clear so I could still keep up with the story.
The emotions were intense, and the suppression and resentment created an unsettling atmosphere. In the end, the characters got to blow off some steam but still had to compromise. No one achieved inner peace, and that was frustrating to me as an audience.