Unfortunately, Mann doesn't play directly to the strengths of the text, choosing to linger instead on the incidental beats between each scene, playing up the atmospheric music (newly scored by Terence Blanchard) and throwing together silent little vignettes of the neighborhood that seem only to break the momentum of the production. While Parker's portrayal of Blanche and her deepening melancholia are able to stay fully charged (the stage directions keep her rather busy, and her actions are unassailable), Underwood's Stanley occasionally appears to be goading himself to the ever-greater depths of brutishness required of his role: the iconic "Stella!" sequence is a perfect example a man pushing himself to action, and the rape scene only half-connects (the horror of it, not the emotion of it). As for the miscast Rubin-Vega's Stella, well, it's too difficult to tell what she's thinking: suffice to say that each time she slinks back into Stanley's arms appears identical to the last.
Despite these issues, A Streetcar Named Desire still sweats a rawness that's undeniably powerful, tinged as it is by sorrow, delusion, and naked needs. And when two powerful actors collide -- as with Wood Harris's reversal-filled Mitch and Parker's ailing and flailing Blanche -- the audience is liable to break out in sweats, too.
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