![]() ![]() ![]() Miller was 16 and walking to high school with his father, who was so broke that he asked his son for a quarter to take the subway back into Manhattan. The biographer recalls a moment from Miller’s adolescence, which in many ways shaped his future life as a writer. (Courtesy of Yale University Press/ Jewish Lives Series) ‘Arthur Miller: American Witness,’ by John Lahr. Set in late 1940s Brooklyn, the two-act tragedy tells the story of Willy Loman, a nervous traveling salesman in despair with a mediocre life that has failed to match his ambitious expectations. ![]() When it first opened on Broadway in 1949, “Death of a Salesman” ran for 742 performances straight and won numerous prizes, including the Pulitzer Prize, the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award and the Tony for Best Play. “When we first entered the small cabin, Miller pointed to his desk, where he had sat down 50 years earlier and wrote the first act of ‘Death of a Salesman’ in eight hours,” Lahr tells The Times of Israel from his home in London. ![]() Miller was then 83 years old and brought Lahr to his writing studio in Roxbury, Connecticut. People who succeed are loved because they exude some magical formula for fending off death,” says Lahr, who was The New Yorker’s chief drama critic from 1992 to 2013. “I remember Miller told me: The whole idea of people failing is that they can no longer be loved. John Lahr is recalling an afternoon he spent with American playwright Arthur Miller in December 1998. ![]()
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