When the film adaptation of Tennessee Williams play, โSuddenly Last Summerโ premiered in 1959, critics struggled within mainstream newspapers to articulate exactly why it was so shocking. The storyโs coreโSebastian, a young poet who uses his mother, and later his cousin as bait, to attract young menโcould only ever be described in coded language. What could not be said hovered over every review.
The plot remains startling. When his mother can no longer serve as bait, Sebastian enlists his impressionable cousin Catherine Holly. The arrangement collapses into a mythic act of violence: the young men he has exploited turn on him, killing and cannibalizing him in a scene that Williams renders with hallucinatory intensity.
By the time many of us encountered the film, it had drifted into camp, a late-night staple whose once-unspeakable elements were gleefully recited in unison by knowing audiences. Today, in the wake of relentless public reckonings around sexual abuse and power, Sebastianโs fate reads less as myth and more as grimly legible consequence. The danger, in 2026, is that โSuddenly Last Summerโ flattens into a cautionary tale about predation, losing the strange, symbolic force Williams intended. No more reducible, finally, than the opera versions of โMedeaโ is to bad parenting or Straussโs โSalomeโ to a lesson in why beheading unresponsive monks you find hot is a bad life choice.
Bardโs commissioning program thrives on exactly this kind of friction. Courtney Bryanโs new operatic version brings together a notably cross-generational and disciplinary team. Director Daniel Fishโwhose radical reimagining of โOklahoma!โ made that canonical work feel newly dangerousโpartners with librettist Gideon Lester, who translates Williamsโs lush, baroque language into a singable form. Their collaboration extends from Lesterโs teaching at Columbia, where Bryanโa 2023 MacArthur Fellowโwas once his student in his class on cross-disciplinary artistic collaboration. Her score draws on the sonic textures of New Orleans, including church music, an apt counterpoint to Williamsโs persistent, fevered religiosity.
At the center of โSuddenly Last Summerโ is the clash between Violet Venable and her niece Catherine: one desperate to erase the past, the other compelled to speak it. Fish frames this as a battle between competing needsโtruth versus its suppression. The device of a truth serum, which ultimately unlocks Catherineโs testimony, feels inherently operatic; after all, this is an art form where potions, curses, serums, and other enchantmentsโfrom โTristan und Isoldeโ to โRigolettoโโroutinely determine fate.
In a striking formal choice, only Catherine (sung by Mikaela Bennett) performs vocally; the remaining characters speak, their dialogue underscored by the Young Peopleโs Chorus of New York City. Bennettโs rangeโspanning standard repertoire, contemporary work, and American songโpositions her as an experienced anchor within the production, a lone lyrical presence in a largely spoken landscape seducing us with Bryanโs always strong music. Among younger composers, Bryan has shown a rare ability to transform political language into emotionally resonant performance. Her recent work โWe Dissent,โ inspired by the dissenting opinions of Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, wove excerpts from the rulings into a choral composition that turned legal argument into something urgent, human, and unexpectedly lyrical.
One of the playโs most searing moments remains Violetโs account of watching baby sea turtles hatch, only to be devoured en masse by birdsโa vision Sebastian insists reveals the true, indifferent face of God. It is among Williamsโs most musical passages, and its spoken delivery, accompanied by choral undercurrent, could prove as devastating as when the play debuted in 1958.
As with any new commission, risk is the pointโand the anxiety. A single singer amid a cast of actors, a text so bound to its own rhetoric, a narrative that resists easy contemporary framing: all present challenges. Yet Fishโs โOklahoma!โ and Bardโs earlier staging of Sufjan Stevens canonical rock album Illinoise suggest that unlikely ideas can cohere into something thrilling.
Live performance, more than any other medium, exposes failure in real timeโone feels the discomfort of your fellow audience membersโbut it also rewards intrepid audiences with the thrill of the high wire act when it succeeds. โSuddenly Last Summerโ may well still unsettle, divide, or even anger some viewers. But it is precisely the kind of project worth showing up for: A chance to see a canonical work cracked open and made strange again.
This article appears in June 2026.









