|
|
 |
Tickets
THEATER
|
The Glass Menagerie Tickets
|
|
For The Glass Menagerie Advance Ordering Schedule or The Glass Menagerie Advance Ordering tickets availability click above link
|
 |
Tickets--Tickets.Com is one stop online shop to buy The Glass Menagerie Tickets. Find detailed information to Buy The Glass Menagerie tickets or to Buy The Glass Menagerie THEATER tickets at our online store.
If you need Sports , Concert , Theater , Broadway Tickets ,SuperBowl, NBA, NFL, NHL, WNBA , Order online or call us today at 281-447-8833. You can see all your favorite events upclose and personal.
Use our search facility specially customized for you to get details of special hard to find events schedule infromation easily from comfort of your home. And once you are ready, order them with a click of a mouse or talk to us at 281-447-8833.
Do not have much time? No problem!! We will be happy to ship your tickets overnite right at your door.
Note : On-Line orders placed on the day of the show may not be filled. Please call us directly for 'same day' ordering and delivery options. We will be happy to help you. Thank you!
We appreciate your business and take great pride in serving you.
|
 |
| The Glass Menagerie Schedule |
| The Glass Menagerie Parking |
|
| The Glass Menagerie Events |
| The Glass Menagerie Refund Policy |
| The Glass Menagerie |
Advanced ordering for the The Glass Menagerie before the event goes
on sale is available. A fan may call to order for an event before it goes on
sale to the public. We can guarantee getting our Customers the seats they are
looking for. We do not Guarantee a row but we can guarantee an area. For the
The Glass Menagerie advanced ordering, a fifty percent deposit is required in
advance of the general public on sale. Call one of our sales associates
today at 281-447-1579 and place your The Glass Menagerie advanced order
today. There are no refunds for deposits once a deposit is placed. You may
request an up grade at any point and we can make every effort to accomadate
you. The Glass Menagerie advance ordering is the best way to lock in your
seats before the event sells out thru the general on sale. Its really the
best way to get the best seats for a premium.
|
The Glass Menagerie is a play by Tennessee Williams. The play premiered in Chicago on December 26, 1944, and in 1945 won the prestigious New York Drama Critics Circle Award. The Glass Menagerie was Williams's first highly successful play; he went on to become one of America's most highly-regarded playwrights.//The play is set in St. Louis, Missouri, United States, and deals with the troubled relationship between an aging mother, Amanda Wingfield, and her painfully shy daughter Laura Wingfield, as told by the son and brother, Tom Wingfield, who is supposedly recalling events from his memory. He states that the play is not completely realistic, because "memory takes much poetic license." In this "memory play", the time scheme moves freely between the past (the 1930s) and the present (1944-1945).Amanda is fixated on her idealized version of her Southern childhood, recalling days when as many as seventeen gentleman callers would visit her. She is, however, grimly aware of her current reality. Her husband, described as a "telephone man who fell in love with long distance," abandoned the family when Tom and Laura were children. Amanda has since made a meager living working in a department store and selling magazine subscriptions. Laura has a slight physical handicap: she wore a brace in high school, and has a slight limp now. She has become cripplingly shy as a result. The outside world frightens her. She prefers the comfort of her collection of glass animals and the sounds of her father's old victrola records. Although Tom provides financial support working long hours in a shoe warehouse (a job he hates), Amanda sees Tom as a "selfish dreamer" who irresponsibly retreats into movies, alcohol, and novels instead of doing more to provide for the family.Amanda soon discovers that Laura, instead of attending business college, dropped out after a few days. Sensing her mother's disappointment, Laura explains that she was frightened and embarrassed, becoming physically ill at her first typing test. Her hopes of Laura's employment dashed, Amanda resolves to find a suitable companion for Laura, fearing that she will become like the "barely tolerated spinsters" she recalls from her past. Laura is less enthusiastic, but nevertheless mentions a boy she liked in high school, named Jim
|
|