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The Catastrophe of Success and Hollywood

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Essay title: The Catastrophe of Success and Hollywood

The Catastrophe of Success and Hollywood

The play, "The Glass Menagerie", birthed Tennessee Williams into the world of the successful. This was a life of luxuries, vanities, and a sense of dependency on the worlds "unsuccessful" to clean all of life's dirty diapers. To some this may sound ideal, but Williams found that this life was numb to reality and did not bring the happiness and fulfillment ever so advertised as a product of success. He discovered that abrupt success did not lead to "happily ever after" like Cinderella convinced us all to believe. Williams writes of his dealings with success in his essay, The Catastrophe of Success.

"This winter marked the third anniversary of the Chicago opening of

"The Glass Menagerie," an event that terminated one part of my life

and began another about as different in all external circumstances as

could well be imagined. I was snatched out of virtual oblivion and

thrust into sudden prominence, and from the precarious tenancy of

furnished rooms about the country I was removed to a suite in a first-class Manhattan hotel. My experience was not unique."

Some may argue that his essay is just hot air coming from his twisted views, but the validity of Williams findings is ever-present in many of today's Hollywood's successful.

Hollywood is the focus of today's entertainment hungry society. Therefore, success is many times defined as becoming an actor or actress, a songwriter or a rapper, but are they really

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