Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman premiered in 1949 and won the Pulitzer Prize and the Tony Award. It's a complex and layered look at the life of a man named Willy Loman who worked hard his whole life for his family, but never quite achieved the success that he desired. He's at the end of his career as a traveling salesman, recently refused a promotion and reduced to commission only, and he's tired and slowly beginning to lose his mind and his grasp on reality. He often talks to himself, but he's really reliving memories in his mind, or conjuring up his brother and the opportunity he passed up. His wife Linda loves him desperately and wants to help him but doesn't know how. His two grown sons are a disappointment to him, and because of that mostly stay away. When the whole family is under the same roof again, issues from the past resurface. Willy remembers happier days when the boys were football stars with bright futures ahead of them, as well as the event that changed all of that. This tragic story could only have a tragic ending, and it's devastating to watch the inevitable unfold.*
Willy and the boys in happier times (Jason Peterson, Patrick Coyle, and Damian Leverett, photo by Justin Cox Photography) |
I always remember Death of a Salesman as a four-person play, but of course it's much larger than that, and the core four are supported by an excellent ensemble, some of whom only have a few minutes on stage. Patrick O'Brien and Alex Brightwell are the annoying uncle and cousin who are "not well-liked," but it turns out they're the success story that the Loman family isn't. David Coral is the haunting presence of Willy's brother and the road not taken, Carolyn Pool is a woman from Willy's past, and Matt Wall, Tara Borman, and Abby DeSanto fill multiple roles, adding more depth to Willy's story.
Linda and Willy (Laura Esping and Patrick Coyle, photo by Justin Cox Photography) |
This classic story of hard-working dreamer Willy Loman and what happens when the American dream turns into the American nightmare is brought to new life with beautiful and devastating effect by Yellow Tree Theatre (continuing through October 16).
*Plot summary borrowed from what I wrote about the 2013 production at Lyric Arts.