Street Scene: Analysis of Setting
"Street Scene: Analysis of Setting" focuses on the depiction of an ordinary brownstone tenement in Manhattan, which serves as the backdrop for the play "Street Scene" by Elmer Rice. This setting encapsulates the essence of life in New York City during the 1890s, portraying the daily realities faced by its residents. The brownstone is characterized as an "ugly" yet authentic representation of an urban living space, housing approximately a dozen families. Its prominent features include a stoop with stone steps, an open vestibule, and multiple windows that reveal glimpses of the lives inside.
The visual elements are complemented by an immersive auditory experience, with the city’s sounds—from elevated trains to everyday chatter—creating a vibrant atmosphere. This attention to detail in the setting reflects the principles of social realism, aiming to authentically convey the struggles and interactions of diverse communities in a bustling metropolis. The specific design choices not only ground the narrative in a tangible location but also highlight the interconnectedness of urban life. Through its setting, the play invites audiences to engage with the complexity of the human experience within the urban context.
Street Scene: Analysis of Setting
First published: 1929
First produced: 1929
Type of work: Drama
Type of plot: Social realism
Time of work: 1929
Places Discussed
Manhattan apartment building
Manhattan apartment building. Ordinary brownstone tenement, crowded with roughly a dozen families in New York City’s Manhattan borough. Although the stage directions indicate the geographic location only as “a mean quarter of New York,” Elmer Rice later revealed in his autobiography that he and designer Jo Mielziner had modeled this particular facade on an actual brownstone located on Sixty-fifth Street. The stage directions further indicate that this is an “ugly brownstone” built in the 1890’s, surrounded by a storage warehouse on stage left and a building being demolished on stage right. The most prominent features of this street scene are “a ‘stoop’ of four shallow stone steps flanked on either side by a curved stone balustrade,” the apartment’s vestibule just inside the front door (always open) at the top of the steps, the windows of the janitor’s basement apartment, and the six narrow windows of the first-floor apartments, through which some of the residents can be seen. The windows of the apartments located on the upper floors are not visible.
As an example of social realism, Street Scene relies on its detailed stage setting to evoke an atmosphere of everyday life in New York, not only visually but aurally. According to the stage directions, the sounds of the city should be heard as constant background noise, from the distant roar of elevated trains and rattling trucks, to the barking of dogs and murmurs of New Yorkers at work and play over the course of twenty-four hours on a sweltering June day.
Bibliography
Durham, Frank. Elmer Rice. New York: Twayne, 1970. Discusses the long career of Elmer Rice as a microcosm of the history of dramatic writing in the United States. Centers on Rice’s employment of types and techniques as an accommodation of the changing tastes and artistic demands of the theater.
Gould, Jean. “Elmer Rice.” In Modern American Playwrights. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1966. Focuses on Rice’s background in law and its incorporation in his plots. Considers his experiments with form as efforts to find a new method of dramaturgy. Asserts that both The Adding Machine and Street Scene are indictments of overmechanization.
Hogan, Robert. The Independence of Elmer Rice. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1965. Laments the “unhealthy” effects of the theater as a commercial vehicle on all playwrights, especially Rice. Assesses Rice’s achievements in relation to other playwrights and within the limitations of the theater itself.
Krutch, Joseph Wood. The American Drama Since 1918. New York: George Braziller, 1957. Classic survey of trends in U.S. drama from 1918 to 1956. Believes the dignifying of human beings in Street Scene is the antithesis of The Adding Machine, which posits people as ciphers victimized by the machine age.
Rabkin, Gerald. “Elmer Rice and the Seriousness of Drama.” In Drama and Commitment: Politics in the American Theatre of the Thirties. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1964. Evaluates Street Scene, The Adding Machine, and The Subway as indications of the prevailing fear that mechanistic civilization dehumanizes people. Argues that Street Scene, although despairing of modern life, is optimistic.