- Death of a Salesman
-
This article is about the play. For other uses, see Death of a Salesman (disambiguation).
Death of a Salesman
1st edition cover (Viking Press)Written by Arthur Miller Characters Willy Loman
Linda Loman
Biff Loman
Happy Loman
Bernard
Charley
The WomanDate premiered 10 February 1949 Place premiered Morosco Theatre
New York CityOriginal language English Subject The waning days of a failing salesman Genre Tragedy Setting Late 1940s; Willy Loman's house; New York City and Barnaby River; Boston IBDB profile Death of a Salesman is a 1949 play written by American playwright Arthur Miller. It was the recipient of the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and Tony Award for Best Play. Premiered at the Morosco Theatre in February 1949, the original production ran for a total of 742 performances.[1]
Contents
Plot
Willy Loman returns home exhausted after an aborted business trip. Worried over Willy's state of mind and recent car "crashes", his wife Linda suggests that he ask his boss Howard Wagner to allow him to work in his home city so he will not have to travel. Willy complains to Linda that their son, Biff, has yet to make good on his life. Despite Biff's promise as an athlete in high school, he flunked senior year math and never went to college.
Biff and his brother, Happy, who is also visiting, reminisce about their childhood together. They discuss their father's mental degeneration, which they have witnessed by his constant vacillations and talking to himself. When Willy walks in, angry that the two boys have never amounted to anything, Biff and Happy tell Willy that Biff plans to make a business proposition the next day in an effort to pacify their father.
The next day, Willy goes to ask his boss for a job in town while Biff goes to make a business proposition, but neither is successful. Willy gets angry and ends up getting fired when the boss tells him he needs a rest and can no longer represent the company. Biff waits hours to see a former employer who does not remember him and turns him down. Biff impulsively steals a fountain pen (an expensive symbol of status worth far more than a ball point pen). Willy then goes to Charley's office where he runs into Bernard (now a successful lawyer), who tells him that Biff originally wanted to do well in summer school, but something happened in Boston when Biff went to visit Willy that changed his mind.
Happy, Biff, and Willy meet for dinner at a restaurant, but Willy refuses to hear bad news from Biff. Happy tries to get Biff to lie to their father. Biff tries to tell him what happened as Willy gets angry and slips into a flashback of what happened in Boston the day Biff came to see him. Willy had been in a hotel on a sales trip with a young woman when Biff arrived. From that moment, Biff's view of his father changed and set Biff adrift.
Biff leaves the restaurant in frustration, followed by Happy and the two call girls that Happy acquired. They leave a confused and upset Willy behind in the restaurant. When they later return home after spending time with the call girls, their mother angrily confronts them for abandoning their father while Willy remains talking to himself outside. Biff goes outside to try to reconcile with Willy. The discussion quickly escalates into another argument, at which point Biff forcefully tries to convey to his father that he is not meant for anything great, that he is simply ordinary, insisting that they both are. The feud culminates with Biff hugging Willy and crying as he tries to get him to let go of the unrealistic dreams he still carries for Biff and wants instead for Willy to accept him for who he really is. He tells his father he loves him.
Rather than listen to what Biff actually says, Willy realizes his son has forgiven him and thinks Biff will now pursue a career as a businessman. Willy decides to kill himself in a car accident so that Biff can get enough money to start his business. However, at the funeral Biff retains his belief that he does not want to become a businessman. Happy, on the other hand, chooses to follow in his father's footsteps.
Characters
Willy Loman: The salesman. He is old and very unstable, tending to imagine events from the past as if they are real. He vacillates between different perceptions of his life. Willy seems childlike and relies on others for support. His first name, Willy, reflects this childlike aspect as well as sounding like the question "Will he?" His last name gives the feel of Willy being a "low man," someone low on the social ladder and unlikely to succeed.
Linda Loman: Willy's wife. Linda mostly just smiles and nods when Willy talks unrealistically about hopes for the future, although she seems to have a good knowledge of what is really going on. She berates her sons for not helping Willy more, and supports Willy lovingly, despite the fact that Willy sometimes ignores her opinion over that of others.
Biff Loman: Willy's son. Biff was a football star with lots of potential in high school, with a trophy of his success proudly on display in his parents room, but he failed math and didn't take summer school because of what he saw in Boston on a visit to Willy. He goes between going home to try to fulfill Willy's dream for him to be a businessman and ignoring his father and going out West to be a farmhand where he is happiest. He likes being outdoors working with his hands and yet wants to own something worthwhile so Willy will be proud. Biff steals because he wants evidence of success, even if it is false evidence, but overall Biff remains a realist, and informs Willy that he is just a normal guy, and will not be a great man.
Happy Loman: Willy's son. He is not as pressured as Biff by Willy, and seems to be almost ignored. He acts very immature and lived in the shadow of his older brother Biff most of his life. He is a womanizer and dreams of success but shows no real ambition. He is always looking for attention from Willy and Linda, but rarely gets any, and he even goes as far as to make things up just for attention, such as telling his parents he is going to get married.
Charley: Willy's neighbour. He pities Willy and frequently lends him money and comes over to play cards with Willy, although Willy often treats him badly. Willy is jealous of him because his son is more successful than Willy's. Charley offers Willy a job many times during visits to his office, yet Willy declines every time, even after he loses his job as a salesman.
Bernard: Charley's son. In Willy's flashbacks, he is a nerd, and Willy forces him to give Biff test answers. He worships Biff and does anything for him. Later, he is a very successful lawyer.
Uncle Ben: Willy's older brother. He is dead but Willy frequently speaks to him in his hallucinations. He went into the jungle when he was 17 and returned at 21 very rich. He is Willy's role model, although he is much older and has no real relationship with Willy. He represents Willy's idea of the American Dream success story.
The Woman: A woman who Willy cheated on Linda with. Willy likes her because she makes him feel important--she says she chose Willy out of all the other businessmen. She helps Willy get buyers in exchange for stockings.
Howard Wagner: Willy's boss. He was named by Willy, and yet he sees Willy as a liability for the company and lets him go, ignoring all the years that Willy has given to the company. Howard is extremely proud of his wealth, which is manifested in his recording machine, and his family.
Jenny: Charley's secretary.
Stanley: A waiter at the restaurant who seems to be friends or acquaintances with Happy.
Miss Forsythe: A call girl (prostitute) who Happy picks up at the restaurant. She is very pretty and claims she was on several magazine covers. Happy lies to her making himself and Biff look like they are important and successful. (Happy claims Biff is a star football player and that he attended West Point.)
Letta: Miss Forsythe's friend; also a call girl.
Style
The play is mostly told from the point of view of the protagonist, Willy, and the previous parts of Willy's life are revealed in the analepsis', sometimes during a present day scene. It does this by having a scene begin in the present time, and adding characters onto the stage whom only Willy can see and hear, representing characters and conversations from other times and places.
Many dramatic techniques are also used to represent these time shifts. For example, leaves often appear around the current setting (representing the leaves of the two elm trees which were situated next to the house, prior to the development of the apartment blocks). Biff and Happy are dressed in high school football sweaters and are accompanied with the "gay music of the boys". The characters will also be allowed to pass through the walls that are impassable in the present, as told in Miller's stage directions in the opening of ACT 1:
Whenever the action is in the present the actors observe the imaginary wall-lines, entering the house only through its door at the left. But in the scenes of the past these boundaries are broken and characters enter or leave a room by stepping 'through' a wall onto the fore-stage.
However some of these time shifts/imaginings occur when there are present characters onstage; one example of this is during a conversation between Willy and his neighbor Charley. During the conversation, Willy's brother Ben comes on stage and begins talking to Willy while Charley speaks to Willy. When Willy begins talking to his brother, the other characters do not understand to whom he is talking, and some of them even begin to suspect that he has "lost it". However, at times it breaks away from Willy's point of view and focuses on the other characters: Linda, Biff, and Happy. During these parts of the play, the time and place stay constant without any abrupt flashbacks that usually happen while the play takes Willy's point of view.
The play's structure resembles a stream of consciousness account: Willy drifts between his living room, downstage, to the apron and flashbacks of an idyllic past, and also to fantasized conversations with Ben. When we are in the present the characters abide by the rules of the set, entering only through the stage door to the left; however, when we visit Willy's "past" these rules are removed, with characters openly moving through walls. Whereas the term "flashback" as a form of cinematography for these scenes is often heard, Miller himself rather speaks of "mobile concurrences". In fact, flashbacks would show an objective image of the past. Miller's mobile concurrences, however, rather show highly subjective memories. Furthermore, as Willy's mental state deteriorates, the boundaries between past and present are destroyed, and the two start to exist in parallel.
Productions
The original Broadway production was produced by Kermit Bloomgarden and opened at the Morosco Theatre on February 10, 1949, starring Lee J. Cobb as Willy Loman, Mildred Dunnock as Linda, Arthur Kennedy as Biff and Cameron Mitchell as Happy. Albert Dekker and Gene Lockhart later played Willy Loman during the original Broadway run. It won the Tony Award for Best Play, Best Supporting or Featured Actor (Arthur Kennedy), Best Scenic Design (Jo Mielziner), Producer (Dramatic), Author (Arthur Miller), and Director (Elia Kazan), as well as the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for Best Play. Jayne Mansfield performed in a production of the play in Dallas, Texas in October 1953. Her performance in the play attracted Paramount Pictures to hire her for the studio's film productions.[2]
The play has been revived on Broadway three times since:
- June 26, 1975 at the Circle in the Square Theatre, running for 71 performances. George C. Scott starred as Willy.
- March 29, 1984 at the Broadhurst Theatre, running for 97 performances. Dustin Hoffman played Willy. In a return engagement, this production re-opened on September 14, 1984 and ran for 88 performances. The production won the Tony Award for Best Revival and the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival.
- February 10, 1999 at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre, running for 274 performances, with Brian Dennehy as Willy. The production won the Tony Award for: Best Revival of a Play; Best Actor in Play; Best Featured Actress in a Play (Elizabeth Franz); Best Direction of a Play (Robert Falls). This production was filmed.
A revival starring Philip Seymour Hoffman is planned to open in fall of 2011.[3]
It was also part of the inaugural season of the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Christopher Lloyd portrayed Willy Loman in a 2010 production by the Weston Playhouse in Weston, Vermont, which toured several New England venues.[4]
Adaptations
Main article: Death of a Salesman (1951 film)In 1951, it was adapted by Stanley Roberts into a film which was directed by László Benedek who won the Golden Globe Award for Best Director. The film was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Fredric March), Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Kevin McCarthy), Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Mildred Dunnock), Best Cinematography, Black-and-White and Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture.
- 1961: En Handelsresandes död starring Kolbjörn Knudsen - directed by Hans Abramson (in Swedish)
- 1968: Der Tod eines Handlungsreisenden starring Heinz Rühmann and directed by Gerhard Klingenberg
- Television
Main article: Death of a Salesman (1985 film)- 1966: starring Lee J. Cobb, Gene Wilder, Mildred Dunnock, James Farentino, Karen Steele and George Segal. It was directed by Alex Segal.
- 1985: starring Dustin Hoffman, Kate Reid, John Malkovich, Stephen Lang and Charles Durning. It was directed by Volker Schlöndorff.
- 1996: starring Warren Mitchell, Rosemary Harris, Iain Glen and Owen Teale. It was directed by David Thacker.
- 2000: starring Brian Dennehy, Elizabeth Franz, Ron Eldard, Ted Koch, Howard Witt and Richard Thompson. It was directed by Kirk Browning.
Awards and nominations
- Awards
- 1949 New York Drama Critics' Circle Best Play
- 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Drama
- 1949 Tony Award for Best Play
- 1984 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival
- 1984 Tony Award for Best Reproduction
- 1999 Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play
- 1999 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Revival of a Play
References
- ^ "Death of a Salesman". http://www.ibdb.com/production.php?id=2111. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
- ^ Sullivan, Steve. Va Va Voom, General Publishing Group, Los Angeles, California, p.50.
- ^ Healy, Patrick (20 October 2010). "‘Death of a Salesman’ Coming to Broadway With Philip Seymour Hoffman". The New York Times. http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/20/death-of-a-salesman-coming-to-broadway-with-philip-seymour-hoffman/. Retrieved 2010-12-24.
- ^ Itzkoff, Dave (25 August 2010). "Christopher Lloyd stars in 'Death of a Salesman'". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/26/theater/26lloyd.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
Further reading
- Hurell, John D. (1961). Two Modern American Tragedies: Reviews and Criticism of Death of a Salesman and A streetcar Named Desire. New York: Scribner. pp. 82–8. OCLC 249094.
- Sandage, Scott A. (2005). Born Losers: A History of Failure in America. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 067401510X.
External links
- Death of a Salesman at the Internet Broadway Database
- Character Analysis of Willy Loman
- Character Analysis of Linda Loman
- GradeSaver analysis, glossary, themes and quizzes on the novel
- Death of a Salesman: A Celebration by Joyce Carol Oates
- Death of a Salesman Reviews
- Director's Notes for "Death of a Salesman"
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a Play (1976–2000) The Royal Family (1976) · Entertaining Mr Sloane (1982) · Death of a Salesman (1984) · Joe Egg (1985) · The House of Blue Leaves (1986) · Our Town (1989) · Anna Christie (1993) · An Inspector Calls (1994) · The Heiress (1995) · A Delicate Balance (1996) · A Doll's House (1997) · A View from the Bridge (1998) · Death of a Salesman / The Iceman Cometh (1999) · The Real Thing (2000)
Complete list · (1976–2000) · (2001–2025) Pulitzer Prize for Drama (1926–1950) - Craig's Wife (1926)
- In Abraham's Bosom (1927)
- Strange Interlude (1928)
- Street Scene (1929)
- The Green Pastures (1930)
- Alison's House (1931)
- Of Thee I Sing (1932)
- Both Your Houses (1933)
- Men in White (1934)
- The Old Maid (1935)
- Idiot's Delight (1936)
- You Can't Take It with You (1937)
- Our Town (1938)
- Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1939)
- The Time of Your Life (1940)
- There Shall Be No Night (1941)
- The Skin of Our Teeth (1943)
- Harvey (1945)
- State of the Union (1946)
- A Streetcar Named Desire (1948)
- Death of a Salesman (1949)
- South Pacific (1950)
- Complete list
- (1918–1925)
- (1926–1950)
- (1951–1975)
- (1976–2000)
- (2001–2025)
Tony Award for Best Play (1948–1975) Mister Roberts (1948) · Death of a Salesman (1949) · The Cocktail Party (1950) · The Rose Tattoo (1951) · The Fourposter (1952) · The Crucible (1953) · The Teahouse of the August Moon (1954) · The Desperate Hours (1955) · The Diary of Anne Frank (1956) · Long Day's Journey into Night (1957) · Sunrise at Campobello (1958) · J.B. (1959) · The Miracle Worker (1960) · Becket (1961) · A Man for All Seasons (1962) · Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1963) · Luther (1964) · The Subject Was Roses (1965) · Marat/Sade (1966) · The Homecoming (1967) · Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1968) · The Great White Hope (1969) · Borstal Boy (1970) · Sleuth (1971) · Sticks and Bones (1972) · That Championship Season (1973) · The River Niger (1974) · Equus (1975)
Complete list · (1948–1975) · (1976–2000) · (2001–2025) Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play (1994–2000) An Inspector Calls (1994) · The Heiress (1995) · A Delicate Balance (1996) · A Doll's House (1997) · A View from the Bridge (1998) · Death of a Salesman (1999) · The Real Thing (2000)
Complete list · (1994–2000) · (2001–2025) Works of Arthur Miller Plays No Villain · They Too Arise · Honors at Dawn · The Golden Years (radio play) · That They May Win (one-act) · The Man Who Had All the Luck · All My Sons · Death of a Salesman · An Enemy of the People · The Crucible · A View from the Bridge · A Memory of Two Mondays · The Misfits · After the Fall · Incident At Vichy · The Price · The Creation of the World and Other Business · The Archbishop's Ceiling · The American Clock · Up from Paradise · Elegy for a Lady · Some Kind of Love Story · Everybody Wins · The Last Yankee · The Ride Down Mt. Morgan · Broken Glass · Mr. Peters' Connections · Resurrection Blues · Finishing the PictureNovels Focus · Homely Girl: A LifeShort stories The Misfits (short story and screenplay) · I Don't Need You Anymore (short stories) · Presence: Stories (short stories)Non-fiction Situation Normal · In Russia · In the Country · Chinese Encounters · Salesman in Beijing · Timebends (autobiography)Categories:- 1949 plays
- Plays by Arthur Miller
- Broadway plays
- Drama Desk Award winning plays
- New York Drama Critics' Circle Award winners
- Pulitzer Prize for Drama
- Tony Award winning plays
- Plays adapted into films
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.