Busted!
Dangit! Here I was, thinking I was being discreet.....mumble, mumble, mumble....
hey Dennis, do they call wherever you're from "the cradle of civilization"?
Not since the New Regime's Revisionist History Project, wherein all things "civilized" come from these here United States. Y'know, English, the Bible, Democratic Theory, Voodoo Economics....
Not since the New Regime's Revisionist History Project, wherein all things "civilized" come from these here United States.
And nothing bad or immoral has ever happened here, except for that gay plague. Seriously, I'm reading obituraies of Arthur Miller, and they're barely MENTIONING the whole HUAC hounding. Makes baby Jesus cry. In order to avoid it, some are even going so far as to not talk about The Crucible.
Seriously, I'm reading obituraies of Arthur Miller, and they're barely MENTIONING the whole HUAC hounding.
You must be reading different obits than I am, 'cause there's three things in every single one I've read so far:
- Death of a Salesman
- HUAC/The Crucible
- Marilyn Monroe
Seriously, it's all, "Blah blah blah, Death of a Salesman at age blah, fallout with blah over naming names, HUAC, The Crucible, Marilyn, break, The Misfits, divorce, Death of a Salesman revival blah blah blah." And it's not the usual case of Standard AP Copy. These are the obits they trot the actual writers out for--they're just all covering the same three things.
Sometimes, they manage to work in the part where The Crucible deals with HUAC *and* the temptations of a young, nubile (read: Monroe) woman, and if they're feeling really ambitious, they also work in After the Fall and the negative reaction to it, but I haven't seen one that doesn't highlight HUAC.
My memory is iffy on this... but did they talk about his son's death during WWII due to a defective aircraft part or something, and how that inspired a play that I forgot the name of?
My memory is iffy on this... but did they talk about his son's death during WWII due to a defective aircraft part or something, and how that inspired a play that I forgot the name of?
The play would be All My Sons, but Miller was in his 20s for WWII, and his first marriage was in 1940, so he wasn't drawing from his own life for that.
OK, then the death of the son is what happened in the play, right? The father was a military contractor that sold defective parts during the war IIRC, and his son dies as a result?
eta: anyway, since Miller didn't actually lose a son, that explains why that "fact" was not mentioned....
Tommyrot, I think that's the basic premise. It's a Miller I've never read nor seen, though.
Part of my brain is telling me that play was based on an Ibsen play.
The Master Builder,
maybe?
At the first college I went to, there was a bronze bust of Ibson on a high pedestal. Somewhere I have a photo of him wearing my hat, wraparound sunglasses, and striped red and blue polo shirt.
The Ibsen play that Miller adapted was Enemy of the People.