Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Mark Steyn: Death of a salesman
The Spectator (U.K.) ^ | 02/19/05 | Mark Steyn

Posted on 02/17/2005 7:50:53 AM PST by Pokey78

New Hampshire

Attention must be paid. That’s the line. And if you missed it this last week, well, you weren’t paying attention. It was the headline in the Christian Science Monitor, and the New York Times: ‘Attention Must Be Paid.’ California’s Contra Costa Times went with: ‘“Attention Must Be Paid” To Playwright’. And the Chicago Tribune saved it for the slow-motion elephantine punchline of its opening paragraph: ‘The man who wrote Death of a Salesman died Thursday. And attention must be paid.’

In Britain, they paid even more attention. For a couple of decades, the National Theatre’s given the impression it would be happy to stage Arthur Miller’s Notes To The Milkman, preferably as a trilogy. There is, of course, an Arthur Miller Centre for the Advancement of American Studies at the University of East Anglia, which is located — as his most recent biographer Martin Gottfried puts it — ‘in Norwich, outside of London’. Close enough — and, proximity-wise, certainly closer than the British director David Thacker’s assessment of Miller as just below Shakespeare. ‘He is as great as any writer in the history of playwriting,’ declared Thacker.

The attention-getter comes from Linda Loman, in her famous speech rebuking her sons for disdaining their father, the eponymous salesman facing his eponymous death:

‘He’s not the finest character that ever lived. But he’s a human being and something terrible is happening to him. So attention must be paid. He’s not to be allowed to fall into his grave like an old dog. Attention, attention must be finally paid to such a person.’

If there were other memorable lines in the Miller oeuvre, his obituarists seemed disinclined to wander over to the dictionary of quotations and look them up. And in fairness — like ‘Bob Hope: Thanks For The Memories!’ and ‘Sinatra: He Did It His Way’ — the ubiquitous send-off did capture, in its relentless hectoring, something of the essence of the man and his writing. The other word was ‘moralist’: He was the ‘Moral Voice of the American Stage’ (the New York Times headline) with ‘A Morality that Stared Down Sanctimony’ (another New York Times headline: you can never run enough Arthur Miller appreciations). ‘Moralist’ in this instance is code for ‘leftie’. For some reason editors and critics were a little touchy about the suggestion that there might be any partisan political characterisation to his decade-in decade-out unchanging ‘indictment of the sad, hollow centre of the American Dream’ (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution).

That, by the way, would be a better name for his Centre for the Advancement of American Studies: the Arthur Miller Sad Hollow Centre of the American Dream, Norwich, near London. But that’s why attention’s paid: the author of The Crucible gave the American Left its enduring metaphor for the McCarthy era — the witch hunts — and, indeed, for the post-9/11 Bush-Ashcroft reign of terror, and for terrors yet to come. It’s the all-purpose portable metaphor for anti-Americanism.

I tired of his plays long before the politics. In London in the Eighties and Nineties, there seemed to be a new Arthur Miller every month, until they all blurred into one unending premiere — The Ride Down Mt Morgan, The Last Yankee, The American Clock, Broken Glass, The Last American, The Ride Down Broken Glass, The Last Yankee Down Mt Morgan, The American Yankee, Broken Clock, all playing like scenes that Elia Kazan or Jed Harris cut from the out-of-town try-outs of his early hits, all circling back not just to the same broad themes but the same plot — loss of respect of one’s children — and the same resolution — suicide — and, when the cupboard got really bare, the same character — his ever marketable ex, Marilyn Monroe. Broadway, wisely, decided that if every new Miller piece played like a revival, you might as well stick to reviving the old stuff.

On his trips to Britain, he liked to say that London still had ‘plays’ whereas Broadway only had ‘shows’. Given that at the time London had Cats and Starlight Express, and Broadway had nothing to compete, this didn’t seem a very helpful distinction. But it’s a useful insight into what’s wrong with his playwriting. All his plays could do with being a bit more of a show — that’s to say, fine, wallop us over the head with the big preachy indictment of the hollow American Dream for an hour or two, but then lighten up for ten minutes; give us something witty, playful, flirtatious. Vary the tone, vary the tempo. But, as Noël Coward might have observed after visiting the Arthur Miller Centre for Sad Hollow Indictments, ‘Very flat, Norwich.’

Happily for him, Miller’s utter humourlessness was taken merely as further evidence of his great ‘moral’ seriousness; his tin ear for the rhythm of American speech was mistaken for poetry; and nobody seemed to mind that, excepting Willy Loman, his characters were thin, and his female ones even more emaciated, especially the ones based on Marilyn. ‘It is astonishing,’ wrote the New Republic’s Robert Brustein in his review of After the Fall (1968), ‘that he could live with this unfortunate woman for over four years and yet be capable of no greater insights into her character.’ It requires some perverse skill to be able to demolish even Marilyn Monroe as a stage presence, but in his multiple attempts Miller never failed to snuff her candle in his windiness. In the reflected glow of their celebrity marriage, Marilyn humanised him to the American public a lot more than he ever managed to humanise her on stage.

But there were always the revivals. The playwright’s most lucrative year was 1984, when Dustin Hoffman starred in Salesman on Broadway. Miller may have disliked shows, but he understood show business. He and Hoffman cut themselves in as co-producers with Robert Whitehead, who did most of the actual producing. After the opening, the other two strong-armed Whitehead into agreeing to a dramatic reduction of his share of the take — Hoffman and Miller would each get 45 per cent of the production’s profits, leaving 10 per cent for Whitehead. ‘Arthur likes money,’ said Whitehead. And there are few surer get-rich-quick schemes than a savage indictment of the cheap hucksterism at the heart of the American Dream.

‘Willy was a salesman,’ says Charley at the climax of the play. ‘He don’t put a bolt to a nut, he don’t tell you the law or give you medicine. He’s a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine.’

Frances Fitzgerald lifted the line for her account of President Reagan in his Star Wars phase — Way Out There In The Blue, the simpleton salesman riding space-age fantasy missiles on a smile and a shoeshine. But missile defence is here and the empty suit, the ‘amiable dunce’, brought down the Soviet Union.

Even in his disparagement, Miller was right to grasp that the salesman is a critical American archetype. In the dictatorships he admired, from the USSR to Cuba, you don’t need them: there’s no competition, no choice, nothing on the shelves, and every checkout line in the supermarket is perforce for five items or less. And in a one-party state, politicians don’t need to be salesmen, either — or at least not to their own people: Gorbachev and Castro were very canny in the way they flattered Miller, understanding that a man of such unbounded self-regard judged the health of nations and political systems in the same way he did the health of the American theatre — by how fulsomely they acknowledge his genius. And Fidel and Gorby were applauding long after Broadway had fallen silent.

He wasn’t amiable enough to be an amiable dunce but he was the most useful of the useful idiots. It was a marvellous inspiration to recast the communist ‘hysteria’ of the 1950s as the Salem witch trials of the 1690s. Many people have pointed out the obvious flaw — that there were no witches, whereas there were certainly communists. For one thing, they were gobbling up a lot of real estate: they seized Poland in 1945, Bulgaria in ’46, Hungary and Romania in ’47, Czechoslavakia in ’48, China in ’49; they very nearly grabbed Greece and Italy; they were the main influence on the nationalist movements of Africa and Asia. Imagine the Massachusetts witch trials if the witches were running Virginia, New York and New Hampshire, and you might have a working allegory. As it is, Miller’s play is an early example of the distinguishing characteristic of the modern Western Left: its hermetically sealed parochialism. His genius was to give his fellow lefties what’s become their most cherished article of faith — that any kind of urgent national defence is, by definition, paranoid and hysterical. It was untrue in the Fifties and it’s untrue today. Indeed, the hysteria about hysteria — the ‘criminalisation’ of ‘dissent’ — is far more hysterical than the hysteria about Reds.

The Crucible will survive because it’s the modular furniture of left-wing agitprop: whatever the cause du jour, you can attach it to and it functions no better or worse than to anything else, mainly because it’s perfectly pitched to the narcissism of the Left. As for Salesman, I agree with the Wall Street Journal’s Terry Teachout that it works because, underneath its pretensions to forensic realism, it’s grossly sentimental. What else is that ‘attention must be paid’ moment about? But I’d happily have a bet with David Thacker that in 20 years even the subsidised Brits will have given up on their favourite heavy-handed doctrinaire American leftist. And round about 2020 the Arthur Miller Centre will be running a week of lectures headlined, ‘Why Is Attention Not Being Paid?’


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: arthurmiller; leftist; marksteyn; usefulidiots
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-86 next last
To: texasbluebell

He went to British schools.

Canadians who don't go to British schools don't have British accents.


21 posted on 02/17/2005 8:39:52 AM PST by somerville
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78

Steyn nails it again. BTTP


22 posted on 02/17/2005 8:40:41 AM PST by Richard Kimball (It was a joke. You know, humor. Like the funny kind. Only different.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: daviddennis

I think it is a glorification of post-War (WW2) Existentialism. It is rampant in 'modern' music, too, and movies. "Life is the pits; it is hollow, without meaning, without form and shape." And then they go about debunking heroes, sacrifices, anything that smacks of rising to the highest potential of the human condition. Popularly known as 'I may as well go eat worms.'


23 posted on 02/17/2005 8:46:46 AM PST by bboop
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
Re: “‘The man who wrote Death of a Salesman died Thursday. And attention must be paid.’”

Excuse me, what was that you were saying, I wasn’t paying attention? You see I am a little focused on the death of a really important person. Sister Lucia de Jesus dos Santos, the child seer of Fatima. She died at the age of 97. I assure she was more valuable to humanity than any overrated play write, whose work was forced down the throats of every high school student. Does anyone like Miller’s work who isn’t trying to smooze the teacher for an “A”?

Re: “….British director David Thacker’s assessment of Miller as just below Shakespeare. ‘He is as great as any writer in the history of playwriting,’ declared Thacker.”

//Barf// Has literature in Britain really fallen that far down?!?!?! Well if that is the case we can officially declare the end of Western Civilization.

Re: “He was the ‘Moral Voice of the American Stage’ (the New York Times headline) with ‘A Morality that Stared Down Sanctimony’”

In a related obit, the “Moralist” Judas Iscariot dies after loosing a long battle with depression and suffering at the hands of an uncaring and controlling cult who drove him to despair.

Re: “‘that he could live with this unfortunate woman (Marilyn Monroe) for over four years and yet be capable of no greater insights into her character.’”

I don’t think her “character” was what was on Miller’s mind. Heah!!! Miller, eyes up about 8 inches buddy!

Re: Miller’s body of work

Has anyone seen where Reagan put that ash bin of history?
24 posted on 02/17/2005 8:47:44 AM PST by Mark in the Old South (Sister Lucia of Fatima pray for us)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: blanknoone
Imagine the Massachusetts witch trials if the witches were running Virginia, New York and New Hampshire, and you might have a working allegory.

Did you miss this line?

25 posted on 02/17/2005 8:50:59 AM PST by 7thson (I think it takes a big dog to weigh a hundred pounds!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: somerville

That explains it, I didn't think our neighbors to the north spoke like that!

He does seem to have an "Oxbridge" accent, very similar to Hitchens'.


26 posted on 02/17/2005 8:54:19 AM PST by texasbluebell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies]

To: 7thson
Did you miss this line?

Not at all...it is what I object to. The point was never what is going on elsewhere (witches in NY, Commies in Europe) the point was what WAS going on 'here' witches in MA and Commies in our government.

27 posted on 02/17/2005 8:56:59 AM PST by blanknoone (Steyn: "The Dems are all exit and no strategy")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78

Is there anybody or anything Steyn can't write intelligently about?


28 posted on 02/17/2005 8:59:13 AM PST by Gritty ("Lefties most cherished article of faith; national defence is paranoid and hysterical-Mark Steyn)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Gritty

Nope.


29 posted on 02/17/2005 9:00:10 AM PST by texasbluebell
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 28 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78

bump--Susan Sontag--now Arthur Miller. Oblivion awaits.


30 posted on 02/17/2005 9:01:43 AM PST by Mamzelle
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78

bump


31 posted on 02/17/2005 9:02:17 AM PST by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
Although I mainly agree with Steyn, no difficult chore, I feel compelled to say a few words in Miller's defense. Towards the end of his life Miller repudiated socialism, although admittedly it was a soft repudiation. He said, "There is hardly a week that passes when I don't ask the unanswerable question: what am I now convinced of that will turn out to be ridiculous? And yet one can't forever stand on the shore; at some point, filled with indecision, scepticism, reservation and doubt, you either jump in or concede that life is forever elsewhere." He was clearly referring to his socialist political views.

Miller also visited Cuba only a year or so ago and wrote, in The New York Times, a scathing critique of Castro, with whom he and his group met for hours. He called Castro a long-winded bore trapped in the fantasies of the past, or words to that effect.

Miller's politics changed over time, and he should be accorded some credit for that.

32 posted on 02/17/2005 9:02:43 AM PST by beckett
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: dead

The Dustin Hoffman performance in that play (as televised) was nothing short of brilliant. But that says much more about the actor than the play. I really don't know why more people know about Mark Steyn. He's like the H.L. Mencken of the 21st century.


33 posted on 02/17/2005 9:08:55 AM PST by katana
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: beckett
Miller's politics changed over time, and he should be accorded some credit for that.

Sort of like the credit a killer gets for not killing???

34 posted on 02/17/2005 9:10:28 AM PST by Common Tator
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 32 | View Replies]

To: blanknoone

It is a shame that some people get stuck on a point and can't see beyond it. Here's the deal. There were no witches in MA nor ANYWHERE ELSE IN THE WORLD! There were no witches in the MA government - from the town level to the colony level! There were and still are communists not only in the world but within our own country. That is what Steyn is refering to - it does not matter the communists were in the United States or overseas or everywhere. The fact is they existed and people in power knew so. The other fact is that witches did not exist anywhere so ignorant people were chasing their own demons.


35 posted on 02/17/2005 9:13:01 AM PST by 7thson (I think it takes a big dog to weigh a hundred pounds!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies]

To: texasbluebell

I hope Mark Steyn isn't regularly reading the comments about his work on FR; his head will swell so big that his accent will come out with an echo!


36 posted on 02/17/2005 9:13:08 AM PST by Max in Utah (By their works you shall know them.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 29 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78
[The Crucible] was a marvellous inspiration to recast the communist ‘hysteria’ of the 1950s as the Salem witch trials of the 1690s. Many people have pointed out the obvious flaw — that there were no witches, whereas there were certainly communists.

Equating the Salem witch trials with congressional hearings into Soviet espionage is ridiculous. For one thing, witnesses before congressional committees have even more rights than do those in a court of law, in that they may invoke the fifth amendment (against self-incrimination) for each question they are asked. The Salem witch trials took place before there even was a fifth amendment, as Giles Corey, one of the defendants, found out--he was killed for refusing to testify.

Although there were no witches at Salem, Miller--and those who characterized the hunt for Russian spies, propagandists, and saboteurs as "witch hunts"--may have inadvertently made a point that witches and Communists do, indeed, have something in common: witches try to manipulate supernatural and cosmic forces (casting spells, turning people into frogs, etc.), whereas Communists claim to be manipulating social and historical forces to bring on the dictatorship of the proletariat, the withering away of the state, a classless society in which the New Soviet Man flourishes, etc.

37 posted on 02/17/2005 9:19:43 AM PST by Taft in '52
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: 7thson
It is a shame that some people get stuck on a point and can't see beyond it.

Let me ask you this...why did Miller write the Crucible? Was it to announce that there were no Commies in Europe? Or was it to alienate those pursuing the very real communists in Washington?

it does not matter the communists were in the United States or overseas or everywhere.

I would argue that it does matter. Very much. As a matter of fact, I think I could even make a point about people not seeing the point.

38 posted on 02/17/2005 9:20:06 AM PST by blanknoone (Steyn: "The Dems are all exit and no strategy")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: Pokey78; All
A Conference in New York

In March 1949, New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel played host to one of the strangest gatherings in American history. Less than four years after Allied troops had liberated Hitler's concentration camps, 800 prominent literary and artistic figures congregated in the Waldorf to call for peace at any price with Stalin, whose own gulag had just been restocked with victims of his latest purge. Americans, including Lillian Hellman, Aaron Copland, Arthur Miller, and a young Norman Mailer, joined with European and Soviet delegates to repudiate "US warmongering." Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovich told the delegates that "a small clique of hatemongers" was preparing a global conflagration; he urged progressive artists to struggle against the new "Fascists'' who were seeking world domination. American panelists echoed the Russian composer's fear of a new conflict. Playwright Clifford Odets denounced the ``enemies of Man'' and claimed the United States had been agitated into ``a state of holy terror'' by fraudulent reports of Soviet aggression; composer Copland declared "the present policies of the American Government will lead inevitably into a third world war."

The Waldorf conference marked another step in the Communist Information Bureau's (Cominform) campaign to shape Western opinion. A series of Soviet-sponsored cultural conferences beginning in September 1948 called for world peace and denounced the policies of the Truman administration. The conference at the Waldorf-Astoria, however, was the first to convene in a Western country and, not coincidentally, was also the first to meet organized and articulate opposition.

The Cominform could hardly have picked a riskier place than New York City to stage a Stalinist peace conference. New York's large ethnic neighborhoods were filled with refugees from Communism, and its campuses and numerous cultural and political journals employed hundreds of politically left-leaning men and women who had fought in the ideological struggles over Stalinism that divided American labor unions, college faculties, and cultural organizations before World War II.

Stealing the Show

A handful of liberal and socialist writers, led by philosophy professor Sydney Hook, saw their chance to steal a little of the publicity expected for the Waldorf peace conference. A fierce ex-Communist himself, Hook was then teaching at New York University and editing a socialist magazine called The New Leader. Ten years earlier he and his mentor John Dewey had founded a controversial group called the Committee for Cultural Freedom, which attacked both Communism and Nazism. He now organized a similar committee to harass the peace conference in the Waldorf-Astoria.

39 posted on 02/17/2005 9:22:11 AM PST by aculeus
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: dead

To people like my 85 year old father (whose father lost everything in the Depression), "Death of a Salesmen" speaks to him like no other play. It is an extremely hard-hitting piece of theatre.

The Crucible will last long after people have forgotten about "McCarthyism." Why? 'Cause it's a crackling good play about a very interesting time in our history.

No sense of humor? Read or see "The Price." Or think back on Miller's talk show appearances when he was always good for a funny anecdote.

One aside, as an essayist he was horrible. Not an original thought in his head, apparently. Sent me scurrying back to Gore Vidal.


40 posted on 02/17/2005 9:23:19 AM PST by miss marmelstein
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-86 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson