Author: Arthur Miller was a famous American
playwright and essayist. He attended the University of Michigan and has written
other famous plays including The Crucible
and All My Sons. He was considered to
be one of the greatest dramatists of the twentieth century.
Setting: This play is set in New York
City, mostly in the Lomans’ home and yard in Brooklyn. Their house has walls
missing so that it is partially transparent. Scenes are also in Howard’s office,
Charley’s office, Frank’s Chop House, and a hotel room in Boston. There is no
specified time period in which the play is set, but it is typically placed in
the 1940-50’s.
Plot: Act one begins with Willy returning
to his home after a long day of selling. He comes home to a worried Linda who
was in bed. She asks him if he got in another car accident to which he eventually
admits and blames himself. Linda blames other things and then asks him to ask
Howard for a stationary position. He agrees to do this and then begins talking
about Biff and complaining about the way he has lived his life. Willy then goes
down to the kitchen for some cheese.
Focus is turned toward Biff and
Happy at this point as they see Willy talking to himself in the kitchen. They
reminisce and talk about how Willy always “talks to” Biff. Willy then has a
flashback to when Biff and Happy were washing his car and Biff is a football
star who has a lot of influence over his friends. Bernard is also in the memory
and he is telling Biff that he needs to study for math. The boys leave the
memory and Linda and Willy talk. Willy first says he was very successful at
work but Linda gets him to admit that they soon will not be able to make all
the payments on the things they have bought and that he doesn’t think he is well
liked. Laughter is heard and a new memory takes place: he talks to the woman
and gives her stockings. The previous memory resumes and Willy is scolding
Linda for mending her stockings. Bernard enters looking for Biff. Linda criticizes
Biff’s behavior with woman and stealing and Willy gets furious at the two of
them. The memory ends, but Willy still talks to himself.
Happy comes downstairs to
console Willy who shouts about not going to Alaska with Ben (who got rich with
Diamond mines in Africa). Charley comes in because he could hear the yelling
from his house and Happy goes back upstairs. The two play cards and Charley
offers Willy a job, but he is insulted by it. Half in a daydream, Willy sees
Ben enter and is talking to him about going to Alaska. Charley doesn’t
understand who Willy is talking to and questions it. Willy gets mad and Charley
leaves. The scene becomes a full memory in which Linda walks in and meets Ben.
Willy asks Ben what his life is like and Ben talks about himself and their
father. Ben is about to leave and Charley and Bernard run in to tell Willy that
Biff and Happy are stealing lumber from the building site. Ben leaves but Willy
still talks to him.
The memory fades out and Linda
comes downstairs to find Willy outside. Biff and Happy come down too and they
talk to Linda about what’s wrong with their father. Linda gets mad and mentions
that Willy is trying to commit suicide and that she found the pipe. Happy
blames Biff and then Willy enters and yells at Biff until Happy suggests that he
and Biff start a sporting equipment company. This makes Willy happy and he
tries to give a lot of advice but this frustrates Biff. Willy gets mad and goes
to bed. Linda tells Biff to say goodnight and by the end of the night Willy is
excited for Biff.
Act two begins with Willy eating
the breakfast Linda made. Linda brings up their expenses and tells Willy that
this is their last house payment and asks Willy to ask for an advance. Willy
says he will go in and ask Howard for a stationary position and the advance.
Linda tells Willy that Happy and Biff will take him out to dinner that night at
Frank’s Chop House. Willy goes to the train to go to work and Linda gets a call
from Biff and reminds him to be nice to his dad.
Willy enters Howard’s office
while he plays with a wire recorder. His daughter, son, wife, and self are on
it. Willy finally asks about a New York job and Howard rejects the idea
entirely. Willy yells talking about how he named him and brings up the
successful Dave Singleman. Howard leaves, saying he will be back and Willy must
pull himself together. Willy gets mad and accidentally sets off the recorder
and yells for Howard who turns it off, fires him, and leaves again. Ben enters
and the reminiscing begins. He asks him to come to Alaska and Linda says he shouldn’t
go. Biff enters and Willy talks about how well liked he is. Ben leave and
Bernard enters and he fights with Happy over who will carry Biff’s helmet to the
big game. Charley enters as well and jokes around to Willy.
Now in the present Willy is at
Charley’s office where Jenny (the secretary) and Bernard are. Willy tells them
that Biff is working on a big deal, but then asks Bernard why Biff ended up so
bad and Bernard asks what happened in Boston because that changed everything.
Willy gets defensive, Charley enters, and Bernard leaves. Willy asks Charley
for more money than usual and Charley offers him a job again which he continues
to refuse. Charley accuses him of being jealous and Willy exits angrily.
Happy is at the restaurant
talking to Stanley. He then starts flirting with Miss Forsythe. Biff enters and
the girl goes to meet her friend. Biff says that Oliver didn’t recognize him and
that he was never a salesman, but a shipping clerk. Biff stole Oliver’s pen.
Willy enters and Biff tries to tell him the truth but Happy cuts in saying he
was successful. Willy believes Happy and Biff gets angry that Willy will not
listen. Willy enters another memory with Bernard telling Linda that Biff failed
math, so in the present he brings it up. Then, back in the memory Willy is in a
hotel room with the woman until Biff says he will have lunch with Oliver
tomorrow. Biff gets mad that the lie interested him and yells. Back in the
memory, and Miss Forsythe and Letta enter the restaurant. Willy goes to the
bathroom. Biff storms out and Happy and the girls follow him out the door,
leaving Willy. Back in Willy’s memory he answers the hotel door to find Biff
telling him he failed math. Biff catches Willy and the woman and storms out. In
the present, Stanley helps Willy up and out of the restaurant, returning his
money. Willy asks him where to find a seed store and Stanley points him in the
right direction.
Back at the house, Biff and
Happy enter the kitchen. Linda is angry
with them for abandoning Willy and Biff goes to find him planting a garden with
a flashlight. Willy is talking to Ben about a $20,000 proposition. Biff tries
to bring him inside and Willy gets mad about Biff’s failure again. Happy tries
to pacify through lies and Biff and Willy explode at each other. Biff cries and
says goodbye to Willy. Willy is touched by Biff’s tears. Everyone goes to bed
but Willy, who is again talking to Ben following him out the door talking about
the insurance money. Linda calls out for Willy but he is gone and the car
speeds away to a crash.
Later Linda, Happy, Biff, and
Charley are at Willy’s funeral. No one else came. Biff says Willy had the wrong
dreams and Happy defends them. Charley also defends Willy as a victim of his
profession. Biff invites happy to go out west and Happy says no and that he
will become successful in New York so that his father did not die in vain. They
all step aside except for Linda who cries and says they finally made the last
of the payments and that they are finally free.
Characters: Willy (traveling salesman
in New York who is obsessed with success), Linda (Willy’s wife who worries
about him and pacifies him at all opportunities), Biff (Linda and Willy’s son
who was once envied by his father but never finished high school and went to
college so has become a failure), Happy (Linda and Willy’s other
underappreciated son. He has a steady clerical job in New York City but is not
overly successful. Neglected by his parents), Charley (Willy’s best friend and
neighbor who owns a business in the city. Charley is very laid back in his
parenting styles, contrary to Willy), Bernard (Charley’s son and successful
lawyer who was friends with Biff in high school and helped him cheat), and
Howard (Willy’s boss who is self-important and does not care about Willy’s
background with his father).
Style: There is not a narrator in this
play but we are often given sight into Willy’s mind and memories. The tone is
often hopeless in reference to Biff and Willy and regretful as well. Being that
it is a play, there is little need for imagery however the surroundings often
symbolize things within the play. The house is a key example of this. Many of
the walls in the house are supposed to have gaps in them that are completely transparent.
This symbolizes the transparency of Willy’s mind because the audience is
brought right into his memories. All material items also symbolize Willy
because they are all breaking down and falling apart as he feels that he is.
Quotes:
1.
“Linda: Well, the fan belt broke, so it was a
dollar eighty.
Willy: But it’s brand new.
Linda: Well, the man said that’s the way it is.
Till they work themselves in, y’know?” (35).
These lines are significant because it describes Biff.
Biff was only seventeen when he gave up on working toward success—he was
broken. From there, he didn’t know who he was. It was not until the end of the
play that he finally discovered himself. He had “worked himself in”.
2.
“We’re free and clear. We’re free. We’re free…
We’re free” (139).
This quote is significant because it has a lot of meanings.
The most direct of which, is that they are free of having to make any more
payments on the house. It also means that Willy is free of having to live in
his defeated state, that Biff is free of having to live up to Willy’s
standards, Linda is free of fearing for Willy, Happy is free of trying to
impress Willy (although he seems to continue to want to do this, despite his
death), and Charley is free of having to pay Willy. Since many of these things
are insensitive, they would never be directly stated however this line says it
all.
Theme: The theme of this play is that the
need to be the embodiment of the American dream will lead to destruction.
·
This is because Willy’s primary goal throughout
this play is to be successful and for his boys to be successful in American
business—the American dream. Unfortunately he becomes so obsessed with this
that it causes him to be a lesser father and husband, ending in conflict with his
family. It also causes him to develop false beliefs on good decisions—his suicide.
He kills himself so that his family will get the life insurance so that Biff
can start his own business.
This is really good work. You structured it well, had lots of details and didn't get off track. Well done!
ReplyDeleteNice post! I like how you changed it up from the American Dream post and indented here and there to mark different sections. It was indeed a lot easier to read. The quotes you used are also very interesting, I don't think i've seen many people pick those ones. One thing you maybe might add could be the symbols or motifs going on in this play. I remember that stockings, garden, and the house were pretty repetitious ideas.
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