Annual festival examining the life and works of playwright Tennessee Williams. The 2023 festival will explore two Williams’ plays, The Unsatisfactory Supper and Twenty-seven Wagons Full of Cotton, upon which the controversial 1956 film Baby Doll was based.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12
Overview: Tour the Delta en route to Benoit. Lunch and Program in Benoit; Dinner and watch film in Clarksdale 10:00 AM | 109 Clark Street | Clarksdale Depart Cutrer Mansion 11:30 AM | Burrus House | 77 Burrus Road | Benoit Arrive Benoit | Tour the Burrus House where the 1956 movie Baby Doll was filmed 12:30 PM | Burrus House back patio | 77 Burrus Road | Benoit Lunch-N-Learn 1:00 PM to 2:45 PM | Burrus House back patio | 77 Burrus Road | Benoit Scholar Talks Depart Burrus House Arrive in Clarksdale | Cutrer Mansion, 109 Clark Street 5:15 PM to 7:15 PM | Cutrer Mansion lawn | 109 Clark Street Delta Dinner Party with Local Cuisine | A Toast to Dr. W. Kenneth Holditch | Featuring performances by the Coahoma Community College Choir under the direction of Dr. Kelvin K. Towers as well as local blues harmonica player, Deak Harp 7:30 PM | Clark House front lawn | 211 Clark Street Night Under the Stars | Screening of 1956 film Baby Doll | 114 min With a Special Surprise Introduction by Carroll Baker, taped in New York especially for our Festival (Next door to the Cutrer Mansion – bring your own lawn chair or picnic blanket) |
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13
Overview: Scholar Presentation and Performances Coahoma Community College (9:15 am to 12:15pm) Various locations in downtown Clarksdale (Afternoon) All events and performances are in Clarksdale 9:15 AM | CCC Georgia Lewis Theater | 3240 Friars Point Rd Presentation | W. Ralph Eubanks | Race and the Looming Civil Rights Movement in Baby Doll 10:15 AM | CCC Georgia Lewis Theater| 3240 Friars Point Rd Presentation | Dr. Michele Meek | Courting Controversy: Forbidden Desire in the Film Baby Doll 11:15 AM | CCC Georgia Lewis Theater | 3240 Friars Point Rd Performance | W.C., TENNESSEE, THE BLUES & ME | Written and Directed by Levi Frazier Jr. of Blues City Cultural Center 12:15-1:30 PM Lunch on your own at one of Clarksdale’s fine restaurants 12:30-2:30 PM | 106 Sharkey Avenue Tennessee Williams Rectory Museum open • Between 1917 and 1932, a young Tom “Tennessee” Williams lived with, and then regularly visited his grandparents in Clarksdale, Mississippi, where his grandfather Walter E. Dakin was rector of St. George’s Episcopal Church. Williams was deeply influenced by the Mississippi Delta, and featured Clarksdale people, places, and stories in some of his most famous plays, including The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Summer and Smoke, and Orpheus Descending. The museum is housed in the four upstairs bedrooms in the former rectory of St. George’s Episcopal Church, once occupied by Williams and his family.
1:30 PM | Carnegie Public Library | 114 Delta Avenue I Remember Kenneth: Panel, Tributes and More Honoring the Life of Dr. W. Kenneth Holditch Presentation | Karen Kohlhaas | A Hollywood Review: On Location in the Mississippi Delta. Karen will tell the story of the Hollywood movie whose production took over the lives of many residents in Benoit and Greenville, Mississippi when the cast and crew of Baby Doll came to town. 4:00 PM | Chapman, Lewis & Swan Law Office Porch | 501 1st Street Performance | The Long Stay Cut Short OR The Unsatisfactory Supper directed by Augustin J. Correro of the Tennessee Williams Theatre Company of New Orleans | Panel discussion to follow 5:30 PM | Home of Eva Connell Outdoor Wine & Cheese Reception & Performance | Performance starts at 6:30 pm | Performance: TRUMAN TALKS TENNESSEE” commissioned by the Southern Literary Trail for the Tennessee Williams Festival in New Orleans in March of 2015. |
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14
Overview: Student Drama Competition, Tennessee Williams Rectory Museum, Talk at St. George’s, Woman’s Club reception, and Porch Plays
All events and performances are in Clarksdale
9:00 AM | Norman Brown Commons Bldg, Cutrer Mansion| 109 Clark Street Student Drama Competition | Sponsored by Coahoma Community College • A festival favorite, the Student Drama Competition highlights students from around the region who will perform monologues, scenes and Stella calls competing for the opportunity to win trophies and $2,500 in award money for their school programs. Open to the Public.
10:30AM | Cutrer Mansion | 109 Clark Street Book Talk with Augustin Correro, author of Tennessee Williams 101. Doors open at 10:30 AM, talk begins at 11 AM . Book signing to follow.
12noon-1:30 PM Lunch on your own at one of Clarksdale’s fine restaurants •Student Pizza Party in the courtyard of the Cutrer Mansion
12:30-2:30 PM | 106 Sharkey Avenue Tennessee Williams Rectory Museum open • Between 1917 and 1932, a young Tom “Tennessee” Williams lived with, and then regularly visited his grandparents in Clarksdale, Mississippi, where his grandfather Walter E. Dakin was rector of St. George’s Episcopal Church. Williams was deeply influenced by the Mississippi Delta, and featured Clarksdale people, places, and stories in some of his most famous plays, including The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Summer and Smoke, and Orpheus Descending. The museum is housed in the four upstairs bedrooms in the former rectory of St. George’s Episcopal Church, once occupied by Williams and his family.
12:30-2:30 PM | 101 Sharkey Avenue Clarksdale Woman’s Club Reception & Performance 2:30 pm | St. George’s Episcopal Church, Sharkey Ave near 1st Street Tennessee Williams at St. George’s Church with the Rev. Charlie Deaton • The Reverend Charlie Deaton of St. George’s Episcopal Church talks inside the sanctuary where Tennessee Williams’ grandfather, the Rev. Walter E. Dakin, was rector from 1917 – 1932.
3:00-5:00 PM Porch Plays in the Historic District • 3 pm | 415 Court Street | Panny’s Porch |The Last of My Solid Gold Watches Performed by Johnny McPhail • Introduction by Susan McPhail
• 4:30 pm | 41 John Street | The Governor’s Mansion | 27 Wagons Full of Cotton. Light refreshments served. Tennessee Williams Theatre Company of New Orleans • Introduced and Directed by Augustin J. Correro After-Party at the “Hot Spot Café” | Yazoo Pass |