In 1929, Williams enrolled at the University of Missouri to study journalism. His mother became the model for the foolish but strong Amanda Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie, while his father represented the aggressive, driving Big Daddy in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. The family situation, however, did offer fuel for the playwright's art. "It was just a wrong marriage," Williams later wrote. Often strained, the Williams home could be a tense place to live. His parent's marriage certainly didn't help. The carefree nature of his boyhood was stripped in his new urban home, and as a result, Williams turned inward and started to write. But life changed for him when his family moved to St. Williams described his childhood in Mississippi as pleasant and happy. Raised predominantly by his mother, Williams had a complicated relationship with his father, a demanding salesman who preferred work instead of parenting. Williams was born Thomas Lanier Williams on March 26, 1911, in Columbus, Mississippi, the second of Cornelius and Edwina Williams' three children. Many of Williams' plays have been adapted to film starring screen greats like Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor. On March 31, 1945, his play, The Glass Menagerie, opened on Broadway and two years later A Streetcar Named Desire earned Williams his first Pulitzer Prize. After college, Tennessee Williams moved to New Orleans, a city that would inspire much of his writing.
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