Picnic by William Inge
Reviewed by Gerti
No
one seems to remember William Inge, although back when our parents
were seeing plays, he was producing classics that we would know, like
“Come back, Little Sheba” and “Bus Stop”. “Picnic” is
another stereotypical play from the ‘50s, where repressed womenfolk
are just waiting to get a glance at a man with his shirt off. How
times have changed!
The
setting is a Labor Day Weekend, and we’re privy to the back yards
of two middle-aged widows, one who has to take care of her cranky,
elderly mother, and the other of with 2 daughters to get married off.
The latter is named Flo Owens, and she knows her elderly daughter’s
value; Marge is a beautiful girl, and Flo is hoping to marry her to a
local rich boy. The other woman is Helen Potts, who gets the prefix
Mrs., although she was only married for a few hours before her mother
had the union annulled. Since this also happens in “The Last
Picture Show”, I was familiar with the scenario. As a result,
though, Mrs. Potts is, shall we say, interested in having young men
help her around the yard. Hal Carter is one of those sexy young men,
and as he prances around shirtless, all the ladies in the area get a
thrill.
Among
those who turn on him when he rejects her advances is a spinster
school teacher who has given her all to a local salesman, and is just
waiting for him to marry her. Her histrionics are painful to the
modern reader. Mrs. Potts satisfies her lusts just feeding Hal and
watching him work, but young Millie, Mrs. Owens’ tomboy daughter,
is getting ready to become a woman and has her first crush on Hal.
She starts drinking (for the first time) to loosen some inhibitions,
but ends up getting ill. It’s her lovely older sister Marge who
snags the preening Hal, who we learn went to school with her intended
fiancé. The two were even in the same fraternity, but Hal turned out
bad, since he didn’t have any family money.
The
play ends as you might imagine from the work of a male author in the
‘50s; Marge falls so deeply in love with Hal, thinking him a
kindred spirit, she throws over her sure-thing boyfriend, much to the
chagrin of her scheming mother. But Inge wants us to cheer that
action, like anyone in 2016 believes that a woman will fall so much
in love within a few hours’ acquaintance that she’ll ruin her
entire life for a shirtless man based on a kiss and some
muscle-flexing. It’s pretty nauseating that women were once
considered so simple and sex-starved. It’s about as based in
reality as an episode of “Catfish”.
So
I would advise modern readers to pass up this time capsule of a play.
I could see how it could be updated, but why? I guess Inge’s
attitudes are the reason I can never watch Marilyn Monroe in “Bus
Stop” either. The “Picnic” seems in it’s own way to be more
old-fashioned than Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet”, in which
the poetic language also makes the out-of-date attitudes palatable.
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