Tennessee Williams: Author and cinematic writer Thomas Lanier Williams was born in Miss, Columbus on 26th March 1911. Williams wrote a novel or script, but he was praised mainly for his play. Thomas is Cornelius Coffin and Edwina Dakin Williams' s first son and second child. He was named after his grandfather and claimed to be called Tom at the age of ten. His brothers and sisters include sisters Rose and brother Dirkin. As Williams was emotionally and mentally unstable, he spent a lot of time with his older sister Rose.
Playwright Tennessee Williams was born in Columbus, Missouri on March 26, 1911 and is the second of three children, Cornelius and Edward Williams. Williams was raised mainly by his mother and has a complex relationship with his father He is a demanding salesman who likes work rather than raising children. His parents' marriage certainly did not help. Often nervous, Williams' house may be a place to get nervous to live in. "This is just a mistaken marriage," Williams wrote later. However, the situation of the family is giving driving power to the artists of the playwright. His mother was a foolish but powerful Amanda Winfield model at The Glass Menagerie and his father represented the aggressiveness of driving Big Daddy with a cat on a hot iron roof.
Hot tin roofed Tennessee Williams and cat Tennessee Williams are the most prominent playwrights in the United States and are explained as being one of the most outstanding playwrights (Bloom, p. 2). He was praised by critics for sympathetic understanding of mentally oppressed people (Gale Databases, p. 8). One of his most famous plays, "a cat on a tin roof", is represented as his most powerful drama and includes taboo topics of homosexuality at the time (Becker, 2 pages) . - Tin Timothy Williams' love love for tin roof, greed, truth cat is a script about social experience. These experiences include male death, communication and honesty. Big Daddy has everything you need. When he was young, he got everything he wanted. But Big Daddy later learned from Brick that there is no secular property that can satisfy Brick's longing for his father's love.