There were strong candidates: Thornton Wilder’s Our Town, Eugene O’Neill’s The Iceman
Cometh, Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, Edward Albee’s Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Tony Kushner’s Angels in America, Tracy Letts’
August: Osage County, August Wilson’s entire 10-play Pittsburgh Cycle.
It’s hard to argue against any of those choices. But I did. Because for me, standing slightly above all of them is Arthur
Miller’s Death of a Salesman. No
play wrestles more affectingly with not only the American Dream of getting
ahead but the American longing to be liked, or as the play’s tragic hero Willy
Loman might say, to be “well liked.”
Miller’s masterpiece, which mixes poetry (there are lines in
the play as lyrical as any ever written for the stage) with a flint-eyed look
at the quiet desperation of mid-century Americans that resonates deeply in our own
unstable times, is now being revived in a much-acclaimed production at the Ethel
Barrymore Theatre through June 2.
It’s a high-wattage production, directed by Mike Nichols,
who has said that seeing the original 1949 production was a seminal moment in
his life (click here to read one of the many interviews he’s given about that).
And Nichols has paid tribute to the memory of that experience with the wonderful decision to use the impressionistic set that the great Jo Mielziner designed for the original production and the moody interstitial music that the equally great Alex North composed for the play under the direction of the supremely great Elia Kazan.
And Nichols has paid tribute to the memory of that experience with the wonderful decision to use the impressionistic set that the great Jo Mielziner designed for the original production and the moody interstitial music that the equally great Alex North composed for the play under the direction of the supremely great Elia Kazan.
The roles of the down-on-his-luck title character, his
long-suffering wife Linda and their hapless grown sons Biff and Happy who all
come together in the family’s small Brooklyn home on what will be the last day
of Willy’s life provide big shoes for actors to fill. And several of the fits are slightly off
in this production.
Philip Seymour Hoffman stands the most uneasily in Willy’s brogues. Although he is one of the most
emotionally honest actors I’ve ever seen on screen, I’ve rarely believed
Hoffman’s stage performances, which have veered towards the self-conscious as
Konstantin in The Seagull, Jamie in Long Day’s Journey into Night, and a listless Iago in the Public’s recent production of Othello.
Hoffman does get some things right as Willy—the downtrodden
gait, the bewilderment at life’s disappointments—but it’s hard to believe that his Willy was ever the powerhouse who single-handedly opened up the New
England territory for the company that’s now ready to let him go.
Linda Emond is more comfortable on stage but
her Linda is so strong and capable that it’s hard to believe that she would
have put up with Willy or the boys for all those years and far easier to think
that she would have taken a correspondence course, got herself a job as a
secretary and left them behind as the she moved into a nice little studio
apartment in the East ‘50s along with other career gals of the time.
Finn Wittrock, a recent Juilliard grad who is making his Broadway debut, does nice
work as the second-string son Happy (click here to read an interview with him) but the critics and nominators for most of the big theater awards, including the Tonys, have singled out Andrew Garfield, the young movie actor (he's taking over the Spider-Man franchise this summer) who's also making his Broadway debut in the role of the family's tarnished golden boy Biff.
It was hard for me to imagine Garfield as either the football hero son for whom Willie had such big dreams or the has-been roustabout that Biff has become. Still, he gives an intense performance that clearly moves people. And I was moved too, although I wish Garfield, who is conservatory trained, had relied a little more technique to help ground his histrionics.
It was hard for me to imagine Garfield as either the football hero son for whom Willie had such big dreams or the has-been roustabout that Biff has become. Still, he gives an intense performance that clearly moves people. And I was moved too, although I wish Garfield, who is conservatory trained, had relied a little more technique to help ground his histrionics.
But no matter.
It’s Miller play that’s the thing. And it remains great. And will so as long as there are those of us in the 99 percent.
2 comments:
Hey Jan,
This was my first time seeing Death of a Salesman onstage and I enjoyed it and I'm glad I had the experience. Although it may be one of those plays that's so devastating, I don't know whether I want to see it again.
I liked Philip Seymour Hoffman although I've heard that criticism, that he doesn't do the exuberance as well as the dejection. I did believe him in both. Andrew Garfield didn't seem right physically but I thought he was effective in the flashbacks as a teenager.
I'm also glad I got to see you and Bill and I'm glad we had that discussion. It made me think about what makes an American play "American." Some of the elements that I thought about in connection with Salesman were: Willy's optimism, the way in which we're defined by our jobs and the outsized role that sports plays in our society.
I'm not sure this is the definitive best American play but I think Willy Loman may be the best American role for an actor.
Thanks for commenting, Esther. I hope you will see Death of a Salesman again. I think this production may be the fifth one I've seen and it's moved me and shown me new things each time.
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