Ann-Margret doesn’t have the fondest memories from “A Streetcar Named Desire.”
The actress, 84, reflected on her experience playing Blanche DuBois in the 1984 TV movie based on Tennessee Williams’ iconic play during a recent Interview Magazine piece, calling the role “a rough one.”
“I knew it had to be as honest as I could be, and that was it,” she explained. “I did the very best I could.”


When asked about Williams wanting to cast Ann-Margret in the movie ten years before it was made, she said she was “thrilled that he liked my work and he wanted me to do it.”
“I was thrilled! My goodness, Tennessee Williams. I admired him so much,” she shared.
The Hollywood legend also addressed how she had a difficult experience making the film, confirming that on the last day of shooting director John Erman had to remind her it was “just a movie.”
“People saw me crying when I was all alone and that’s when he came in and said that, because I had gotten to such a point that I was always sad, so that’s when he came in,” she remembered.



“And it took you a while after filming wrapped to get out of that mindset as Blanche DuBois?” interviewer Andrew Hopf asked, to which Ann-Margret replied, “That is true.”
Hopf added, “That’s awful,” as Ann-Margret agreed, “Yeah, it was.”
“A Streetcar Named Desire” is about a former Southern belle who moves into an apartment in New Orleans after experiencing a series of losses.
The ABC TV movie, which also starred Treat Williams, Beverly D’Angelo, Randy Quaid and Erica Yohn, came out one year after Tennessee Williams died at age 71 in Feb. 1983.

Ann-Margret previously revealed that she sought help from a psychiatrist to handle filming “A Streetcar Named Desire.”
“I’m an emotional actress, not a technical one. I called her at 2 in the morning. I was losing it. She said, ‘Can you hear me?’ It was like she was speaking from another planet. I tried to focus on her and couldn’t,” she told The Washington Post in 1984.


“She said I was in a psychotic state and would remain there for a few hours. But she assured me I was still Ann-Margret Smith,” the actress recalled. “I had to stay in that state for five more hours. When the filming was over, John embraced me for a long time. He said, ‘It’s okay. You’re still Ann-Margret.’”
“It stayed with me for eight weeks,” she revealed. “I’d have flashbacks. I’d heard stories of actresses who’d been affected by parts. But I never knew anyone who’d been through that. I was Blanche. It still comes back.”
Ann-Margret is also famous for her roles in “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Viva Las Vegas,” “The Train Robbers” and more.
The post Ann-Margret looks back on ‘rough’ experience filming ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’: ‘Always sad’ appeared first on New York Post.




