This seems odd, because it deals with topics likely to make censors nervous: sexual promiscuity, domestic violence, and rape.
Not to mention its strong gay connection.
1. Faded Southern belle Blanche is reduced to living in her sister Stella's two-room apartment in New Orleans after losing the family estate. She is traumatized by the long-ago death of her husband Alan, a "poetic" (that is, gay) boy who probably didn't realize that he was gay until she confronted him. He went out and committed suicide, one of Tennessee Williams' stable of dead gay guys.
2. Stanley, Stella's brutish, violent husband, has a coterie of male friends who like him...a lot. Notable is Mitch, who is mother-obsessed and not particularly interested in women (two signifiers of gay identity in the 1950s). He courts Blanche, but badly, not at all sure what he is doing, and then dumps her when he discovers that she has a history.
After Mitch dumps Blanche, Stanley sexually assaults her, leading to her descent into insanity and famous last line: "I have always depended on the kindness of strangers."
3. Stanley takes his shirt off -- a lot -- most notably when he is flirting with Blanche, and when Stella flees to the upstairs apartment after an abuse incident, and he yells up at her: "Stella!"
1. (Top Photo) William L. Peterson, star of soap operas and CSI, at the Stratford Festival in Canada, 1984.
2. (Second Photo) Joe Manganiello, star of True Blood, is currently playing Stanley on Broadway.
3. New York actor Miebaka Yohannes (left) at the Boal Barn Playhouse in State College, Pennsylvania, 2010.
4. Marlon Brando (left), the original Stanley on Broadway and in the 1951 movie version.
5. Alex Baldwin, who starred in the 1992 Broadway revival and in the 1995 tv movie version.
6. Stephon O'Neal Pettway in an all-black version of Streetcar at Pace University in 2009.
More after the break