Tricks and trauma: IRT's 'The Glass Menagerie' feels the burn of memory

We have seen productions of "The Glass Menagerie" in which Tom Wingfield as Tom regales his mother and sister with made-up tales of his dissolute ways character/narrator presents himself in the reflective manner of the Stage Manager in "Our Town." He looks back at familiar events and people in a sharing, confiding mode. He knows everything. That can be effective, as long as the right sparks are struck in scenes where Tom is fully a character, embedded in the pain of a three-member family and desperate to escape that pain. Indiana Repertory Theatre ''s current production, directed by James Still, goes in a fiercer direction. At his first appearance, Felipe Carrasco makes Tom's declaration that "the play is memory" electrifying, bitter and insistent, far from a soft-spoken guide to what the audience is about to witness. What happened long ago is still at issue for him, because Tom's memories themselves are still an unsettled issue. The au...