A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) – Marlon Brando Stanley
Framed photo of "A Streetcar Named Desire 1951 - Marlon Brando Stanley" — Black-and-white fine art print on Fine Art paper Fine Art 70x50 cm
- ✓ Solid wood frame: 75 × 55 × 2 cm | 3 mm glass
- ✓ Limited edition of 30 numbered and signed pieces (Certificate of Authenticity + Hologram)
- ✓ Handmade in our workshop | Ships within 48 hours
- ✓ Photo under license
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About this photo
A Streetcar Named Desire - Marlon Brando Stanley Kowalski's apartment
On the set at Warner Bros. Studios in 1951, Elia Kazan was directing Marlon Brando in this film adaptation of Tennessee Williams’ play. The actor, who had already played Stanley on Broadway for two years, brought a revolutionary raw intensity to Hollywood cinema, breaking the codes of traditional theatrical performance with his naturalistic method inherited from the Actors Studio.
The film grossed $8 million at the box office and earned Brando his first Oscar nomination for Best Actor at just 27 years old. His explosive performance alongside Vivien Leigh redefined the archetype of the male antihero in cinema. Kazan, who had already won an award for *Gentleman's Agreement*, cemented his status as a master of psychological drama with this film, which won four Oscars out of twelve nominations.
The ultimate embodiment of tortured masculinity that revolutionized American theater.