Act 1, Scenes 1 and 2
Act 1, Scenes 3 and 4
Act 1, Scenes 5 and 6
Act 2, Scenes 7 and 8
Miscellaneous
100

What area did Amanda grow up as a young lady

The South

100

What magazine subscription does Amanda sell to  earn extra money

Copies of The Homemaker's Companion

100
The one trait that any potential suitor cannot have
Drinks alcohol/Being a drinker
100
What occurs as dinner ends and why
The lights go out because Tom did not pay the electric bill
100
The glass menagerie symbolizes this
How fragile Laura is
200
What D. A. R. stands for
Daughters of the American Revolution
200
The type of warehouse Tom works in with Jim
A shoe warehouse
200
The type of class Jim O'Connor takes at night school
Public speaking
200
What Amanda and Jim offer to Laura after dinner
Dandelion wine/Chewing gum
200
What happens to the unicorn
Jim hits it and the horn breaks off
300
The city and state where the action of the play occurs
St. Louis, Missouri
300
What Tom gives Laura and why
The magician's scarf because he knocked over her glass collection/menagerie
300

What does Tom call Amanda in anger

A witch

300

The play Jim appeared in

(HINT: It's tricky to pronounce!)

The Pirates of Penzance

300

What character do the jonquils symbolize

Amanda

400
The number of gentlemen callers Amanda had in one afternoon
Seventeen
400
The trick that Tom most identifies with and why
The coffin trick because he is in a bad situation
400
The one home improvement that Amanda did not have enough time to complete
Papering the walls/Wallpapering
400

What organization did Tom use the electric bill money to pay dues for

Union of Merchant Seamen

400
Jim's dream job and the name of his fiancee
A job in television/Betty
500
The way Tom recalls the action of the play
Through memory
500

The novel that Tom was reading was returned to the library by Amanda because she thought it was “filth" was written by

D.H. Lawrence

500

What Amanda criticizes about Tom's appearance

His hair/Cowlick

500

Five actions Jim takes to show his affection toward Laura

He gives her advice regarding her confidence, signs her yearbook, says that she is pretty, dances with her, and kisses her

500

Some of the main themes of the play are

Escapism, sacrifice, and dreams