It’s been 17 years since Tennessee Williams’ 1947 play “A Streetcar Named Desire” was last produced professionally in San Diego. But it’s a pretty good bet that it’s never been staged like the intense production that opened downtown on Saturday.
Backyard Renaissance Theatre’s new production, directed by Rob Lutfy, is time-bending, packed with screeching street sounds and blasts of jazz music, and explicit in its portrayal of the play’s central theme of how humans are incapable of controlling their sexual urges.
In Lutfy’s production, the play is set in both “1947 and today.” There are contemporary costumes, hairstyles, props, scenic elements and characters’ line delivery, but central character Blanche DuBois seems to exist, both mentally and physically, in the more genteel South of the 1930s.
As the play begins, the mentally and financially broken Blanche shows up unexpectedly at the New Orleans apartment of her sister, Stella, and Stella’s crude, working-class husband Stanley Kowalski. The faded Southern belle puts on a good face for the couple, but eventually admits she has lost the DuBois family estate as well as her teaching job.
Megan Carmitchel, left, and Francis Gercke and Stella and Stanley Kowalski in Backyard Renaissance Theatre’s “A Streetcar Named Desire.” (Daren Scott)
Blanche acts demure and refined but she harbors secret desires. And she’s shocked by the animalistic sexual energy between Stella and Stanley and Stanley’s brutish violence toward his wife. Over the course of three-and-a-half hours (staged with two intermissions), the play explores themes of mental illness, addiction, domestic violence, toxic masculinity, homosexuality and more.
Staged on a two-story apartment building set designed by Yi-Chien Lee, Backyard’s “Streetcar” opens up the story beyond the three principal characters to show the lives of their neighbors and friends who sing, dance, argue and turn a blind eye to the violence taking place in the Kowalski apartment.
Jessica John delivers a fragile, emotionally haunting performance as Blanche DuBois. Megan Carmitchel’s gentle but affectionate Stella is the epitome of a traumatic abuse survivor. And the sinewy Francis Gercke’s Stanley is wolflike in how he stalks his prey, howls for his wife and devours her with sexual hunger.
MJ Sieber as Mitch and Jessica John as Blanche in Backyard Renaissance Theatre’s “A Streetcar Named Desire.” (Daren Scott)
MJ Sieber co-stars as Mitch, the softspoken and inexperienced mama’s boy Blanche hopes to lure into marriage. Blanche and Mitch’s heartbreaking flirtation in the play’s second act is the show’s most engrossing scene.
Also featured in the cast are actor/singer Faith Carrion, Layth Haddad, William Huffaker, Markuz Rodriguez and Dianne Yvette.
Co-sound designers Evan Eason and composer Steven Leffue create an impressive aural soundscape of clattering streetcars, street noise and music that effectively amplify the dissonance growing in Blanche’s troubled mind. Curtis Mueller designed lighting, and costumes were designed by Hannah Meade and Jessica John Gercke.
An upstairs party scene in Backyard Renaissance Theatre’s “A Streetcar Named Desire.” (Daren Scott)
Although the Pulitzer Prize-winning “A Streetcar Named Desire” was written 78 years ago, its themes of sexual obsession and domestic violence are just as relevant today, so Lutfy’s timeless take on the classic offers a potent reintroduction of the play for today’s audiences.
“A Streetcar Named Desire”
When: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays; 3 p.m. Sundays. Through July 12
Where: Backyard Renaissance Theatre at the Tenth Avenue Arts Center, 930 Tenth Ave., San Diego
Tickets: $20-$50
Phone: 760-975-7189
Online: backyardrenaissance.com