Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
By: Tommy • Essay • 265 Words • January 19, 2010 • 1,177 Views
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Elia Kazan was wrong to ask Tennessee Williams to rewrite the third act of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. First, it significantly weakens Big Daddy's character when he returns to discuss elephants. Big Mama has already dealt with Gooper's proposal and does not require Big Daddy's assistance. He seems to provide little more than comic relief in this scene, and that is not what Williams constructed him to do. Big Daddy prods the other Pollitts; he uncovers the origins of Brick's alcoholism and his fortune reveals Gooper and Mae's avariciousness. Second, the news of Margaret's pregnancy is much more important when he is not there. The reader understands that this child allows Big Daddy to will his property to Brick. In Act II, he clearly says, "I hate Gooper and his five same monkeys and that bitch Mae! Why should I turn over twenty-eight thousand acres of the richest land this