Opportunities that Laura missed at "Glass Zoo" "Glass Zoo" is a script on strong human emotions; frustration, despair, sadness, anger, shyness, regret. Perhaps the strongest scene of the show is that the gentlemen caller Jim O'Connor is finally here. In this scenario, all of their future is unresolved. Laura was actually as shy as being outside the family, and she actually started feeling better about herself. If Jim is not involved in someone else, the results of the show may be different.
At Tennessee Williams' theater 'Glass Zoo', the audience thought that the zoo only refers to the glass series owned by Laura Winfield. Laura lives with his brother Tom and his mother Amanda. As her mother wanted to get married, Jim introduced the play as a gentleman's sender. When Laura explains her glass animal to Jim, she uses the term "glass zoo" (Williams 414) by her mother. Every person is glass, but the animals are different, and the symbol in the glass zoo symbol plays an essential role in Williams' play "glass zoo". As an example of the use of symbolism, there are expressions of different characters of each character, as an escape from family, gramophone, escape, unicorn, symbol of Laura's uniqueity and father's picture. You can better understand the theme of the show by changing the position of these symbols. Overall game, Tom Winfield
The central symbol of the play is Laura's glass zoo. Her zoo is an escape from her reality and provides a safe area for her life. Events in Laura's glass collection have had a major impact on the emotional state of Laura. For Amanda, Laura's zoo represents her frustration for her daughter not becoming "ordinary". As Jim pointed out, the unicorns are "extinct" in the present age and are lonely because they are different from other horses. Laura is also very unusual, lonely, and does not adapt to the existence of the world she lives in. Unicorn's fate is a small version of Laura's fate in the scene seven. When Jim and Lola started dancing, they mistakenly broke the unicorn when they hit the table. Unicorns and rollers are parallel and so unique, they are very fragile. Jim immediately noticed this character of Laura and commented on: