Popular Culture Review Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer 2005 | Page 13

Tennessee Williams and Sports presence of others. He had bought a rubber swinuning cap wiiich he carried up to the beach with him to a secluded spot where he could put it on unobserved and take a swim by himself, for he felt that a man wearing a swimming cap was somewiiat ludicrous-looking and not in the bright tradition. (193) But, as he loses his looks after marrying a girl called Gretchen, w4iom he later abandons, ''the manly assurance petered out of Jimmie and he began to lie around the apartment in shorts. . . not even much caring to go to the beach anymore” (194). Such would have been Williams’s own fate had he succumbed to losing his looks, his health, and his desire for fame. "The Interval” reads like a gloss on Williams’s fears over his short-lived career as an MGM screenwriter, translated through Jimmie’s initial delight in sports because of the attention he hoped they would gamer and then in his pudgy and sorrowful retreat fi’om them (Kolin "Williams’s 'Interval’”). Like Jimmie, Chance Wayne in Sweet Bird o f Youth is an aspiring Hollywood star wliose previous achievements in sports only deflate his current dreams by contrast. Attached to movie star Princess Kosmonopolous by a most tenuous service contract. Chance returns to his hometown of St. Cloud wliere he is remembered as a handsome diver by Miss Lucy, Boss Finley’s mistress: Y’know this boy Chance Wayne used to be so attractive I couldn’t stand it. But now I can, almost stand it. Every Sunday in summer I used to drive out to the municipal beach and watch him dive off the high tower. I’d take binoculars with me and then he put on those free divin’ exhibitions. You still dive. Chance? Or have you given that up? (87) Though Chance admits that he still dives, his ambitions for stardom, like his name, have waned. With "thinning” hair, fleeting youth, and degrading rumors about his being a "beach boy” in California, Chance is hardly the golden athlete Miss Lucy fantasizes about. Williams gives Chance a sport—diving—that has ominous, Freudian implications for this stud-star wlio will be castrated by Boss Finley for violating his daughter Heavenly. By the end of the play. Chance will not be able to go "diving” as he once did in his youth in St. Cloud. The sport fits the dream, and the crime, in Williams’s play. An early (circa 1943) Williams poem, "Dark Arm, Hanging Over the Edge of Infinity,” celebrates the body of an athlete who has neither aged nor been maimed. Addressed to a "Sleeping Negro” pitcher whose "fingers” are "dangling emptily” {Collected Poems 87) just after he had made a masterly throw, Williams’s poem exhorts this baseball powerhouse to grasp the significance of his next move. Sexualizing the black athlete’s body, Williams