Arthur Miller interview on "The Death of a Salesman" (1999)

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  • čas přidán 7. 08. 2016
  • Arthur Miller on his career and the Broadway revival of his play, "The Death of a Salesman."
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Komentáře • 82

  • @ManufacturingIntellect
    @ManufacturingIntellect  Před 7 lety +8

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  • @AkashKunalGunputhNGU
    @AkashKunalGunputhNGU Před 2 lety +52

    I love these kinds of interviews. If this was in 2022, he would be having this conversation, 10 different jokes thrown in, or singing in carpool karaoke.

  • @MrEverth007
    @MrEverth007 Před 4 lety +49

    A legend. What a great mind

  • @Jaysin13
    @Jaysin13 Před 3 lety +18

    I have seen about a half a dozen Willies...teenage son can't stop giggling

  • @aranyakm
    @aranyakm Před 3 lety +20

    When I hear him talk I feel I have always known him.

  • @victor1963
    @victor1963 Před měsícem +1

    It’s interesting that he mentioned Anthony LaPaglia at the beginning of this interview. I just saw Death Of A Salesman for my first time yesterday in Sydney with Anthony LaPaglia playing Willy.

  • @azizulislamashiksm-1842
    @azizulislamashiksm-1842 Před 3 lety +30

    I am so glad that these are available on youtube. Thank you so much for uploading all these interviews!!

  • @shimone5198
    @shimone5198 Před 3 lety +14

    What a charismatic man!

  • @Lisa-lm2gw
    @Lisa-lm2gw Před 7 lety +7

    too good! Thanks for the upload!

  • @mohdilyas7473
    @mohdilyas7473 Před 6 lety +10

    I love his play

  • @infinitafenix3153
    @infinitafenix3153 Před 5 lety +7

    I really appreciate this. Thanks very very much!

  • @dwaneyocum1718
    @dwaneyocum1718 Před 6 lety +19

    I love this play. I've only seen the version with Dustin Hoffman on TV, and I plan to watch the old film with Fredric March. I wish I could locate a copy with George C.Scott. Times have changed since it was first penned, but for me, like the play, "Glengarry Glen Ross," it's about the world men live in, and how they must struggle to survive, and to be successful.

    • @billhaywood3503
      @billhaywood3503 Před 5 lety

      I saw it with George C Scott

    • @dwaneyocum1718
      @dwaneyocum1718 Před 5 lety

      @Bill Haywood - Where and how?

    • @alexmarques4432
      @alexmarques4432 Před 4 lety +4

      Take a look at Lee j Cob's TV version. It's very good too. He played Willie Loman when the play premiered on Broadway, I believe.

    • @kathleenharris3403
      @kathleenharris3403 Před 2 lety

      March is spellbinding in a slightly deranged interpretation.

    • @AllenFreemanMediaGuru
      @AllenFreemanMediaGuru Před 2 lety +2

      The Lee J Cobb TV version is on CZcams.

  • @mikec.9130
    @mikec.9130 Před 5 lety +27

    Miller was a cool guy...

  • @patocake6230
    @patocake6230 Před 6 lety +34

    whats more scary than real life.... i love death of salesman

    • @patocake6230
      @patocake6230 Před 6 lety +3

      edit: whats more scary than real life.... I love sales of a deadman

  • @rickartdefoix1298
    @rickartdefoix1298 Před 2 lety +20

    Death of a Salesman is one of the saddest playwrights I ever watched. Desperatengly sad, it's a capitalism hard critic and once more, the reverse of the once called American Dream. That a friend of mine said from then on should be called The American Nightmare. Miller tored it down into pieces, here, whatever dream there were left. It's a failure drama, and it's also about the issue aftermaths among the family members, affected by the main character failure. I consider it the hardest breaking down of the American Dream concept ever written, together with The Swimmer, the terrible great movie Frank Perry did, based upon the Cheever Short Story. Watched also The Price and not being a bad one at all, hadn't that terrible impact level. Miller was also known, inspite of not wanting it, for his Marylin Monroe affair. Think it possible that the critics about his behaviour with her, were justified. It was said he was a cruel and cold man. It was said he was jealous of Marylin's fame. Being her somehow more celebrated than him. Read his Memories but his explanations about the whole didn't go far. Though he surely never wanted to get deeper into. Could he had, anyway? - Try to watch his play After the Fall, considered another of his better ones. Though never catched it on show. Have to read it to see how he deals with this celebrated affair. He was brave and did it pretty well while the Witches Hunt. He gained a general applause because of his attitude while the audiences were taking place. The Front and then two or three Documentaries gave good testimony of all those ominous scoundrel times. As Lillian Hellman put it. Anyway, his story about Kazan, links perfectly how he knew Monroe and his broken friendship with Kazan, the well known movies Director and Screenwriter. Found both things weren't nice, but Marylin reuniting them again, later on, was a beautiful scene to be remembered. Though then their friendship was never the same one. They didn't recover from their breaking apart, as could be expected. There were others in the movie's industry who went even further against Elua Kazan surrender, face to McCarthy. Naturally. But all this is too well known as to keep on with. Marylin did not liked Miller's Misfits Screenwrigh. Though accepted to play the main actress role in the movie John Houston did with. She couldn't see herself reflected as kind of a wreck. As thought this movie would show her. Maybe it was Marylin affair with the French actor Yves Montand what put the nails in their coffin's relationship, I thought. Anycase, Miller will be also remembered for his Salem Witches work, a recreation of the Witches Hunt years. Metaphorically taken back into the States past. All cooperated to made Miller the wide world, well known Theater author he is. As a detail, have to add that I expected more of his View from the Bridge. A theater Play, that I also read. No doubt because this deals about the American Union's mobs. Something Kazan managed so well in his very good On the Waterfront, Screen writing, and movie. After having watched Kazan's Waterfront, I just wanted to know what a scary drama Miller could have written about the same subject. Kazan wrote also The Arrangement, an excellent novel that I liked even more than the amazing movie we know, as well. Where there again the American Dreams are duly cracked up, once again. So, Miller remains as another haunting and great, unforgettable American Author. With Eugene O'Neill, Tennessee Williams, and Edward Albee, the Father Founders of the American Theater. Don't miss their works. 💎❤️👍🤗🙏

    • @upthedown1
      @upthedown1 Před rokem +3

      Rick it's about the human condition. Willie Loman exists in every country, every culture.

  • @DavidSmith-qo1se
    @DavidSmith-qo1se Před 5 lety +7

    I've been looking for a version where Willy was played by George C. Scott, if it was ever filmed or recorded.

  • @frederick-nrunkkamara103
    @frederick-nrunkkamara103 Před 6 lety +6

    I can't remember a production of this play ever being down in the UK. I think Broadway is a fitting venue to see it

    • @elliekennion3623
      @elliekennion3623 Před 5 lety

      Frederick-Nrunk Kamara it’s always in the UK I’m seeing it in Manchester

    • @robovolk2350
      @robovolk2350 Před 3 lety

      I saw it just last year in london

  • @montanagal6958
    @montanagal6958 Před rokem +1

    Arthur Miller is one of the few who can make me laugh....

  • @thefakenewsnetwork8072
    @thefakenewsnetwork8072 Před 2 lety +2

    Legend arthur

  • @autofocus4556
    @autofocus4556 Před 7 lety +43

    I've seen a half dozen willies. haha

  • @helinkaya2473
    @helinkaya2473 Před 6 měsíci

    Yuhhhh dün hoca bu röportaji izlediğini soyledi bugün kesfete düştü özel hayat 0 💅💅💅💅

  • @upthedown1
    @upthedown1 Před rokem +4

    Dustin Hoffman was brilliant in the movie version.

    • @NostalgiNorden
      @NostalgiNorden Před rokem +3

      No he wasn't.
      He was way too young for the part and is "Playing" an old man with tons on "old man" make up.

    • @upthedown1
      @upthedown1 Před rokem +1

      @@NostalgiNorden That was not apparent they did a great make up job.

  • @clintcalvert9250
    @clintcalvert9250 Před 2 lety +3

    What would he think about our current nightmare?

  • @ernestmendez5487
    @ernestmendez5487 Před 6 lety +2

    I've never seen his plays performed, but out of all his plays, by far, I prefer his revision of Ibsen's An Enemy Of The People. All My Sons was my favorite completely by him tho. Aside from the epilogue in DOAS, I thought Loman was too aware of his own self-pity. And the flute is the worst musical instrument.

  • @thefakenewsnetwork8072
    @thefakenewsnetwork8072 Před 2 lety +2

    Long live democratic socialism and freedom

  • @scottspooner6070
    @scottspooner6070 Před 5 lety +1

    Was Arthur millers father or uncle , Willie....

  • @NostalgiNorden
    @NostalgiNorden Před 6 lety +13

    Hot take:
    Dustin Hoffman was waaay too young to play Willie.

    • @arnekim1922
      @arnekim1922 Před 3 lety +3

      not very hot

    • @richardcampbell8498
      @richardcampbell8498 Před 3 lety +1

      Hoffman absolutely killed that role. That’s why it’s called ‘acting’, dipshit.

  • @scabbycatcat4202
    @scabbycatcat4202 Před 7 lety +11

    Surely the play was about EGO ! and theydon't even mention this

    • @cmhardin37
      @cmhardin37 Před 6 lety +3

      scabbycat cat or insecurity and the need for qualification, approval, and celebrity.

    • @doomsday6659
      @doomsday6659 Před 5 lety +5

      Dumbass, first of all the play is down to interpretation and second of all you really gonna tell the person that created the play to have the same interpretation of his play as you. Some people are very special in the head

    • @reeseriley225
      @reeseriley225 Před 4 lety +1

      I don’t think anything good has come from making work ABOUT ego. What would that look like, and what would it look like to mention it? I don’t think the word ego is that important scabbycat cat, let go of the word you might start seeing it all around.

    • @BruceHurley
      @BruceHurley Před 2 lety

      @@cmhardin37 Insecurity is at the foundation of nearly all negative behaviors. Willy Loman was insecure because of his fractured family and he passed that on to his children. Egotism derives from insecurity.

    • @butterflymoon6368
      @butterflymoon6368 Před rokem

      because miller has a lot of ego

  • @IndianaRose.
    @IndianaRose. Před 4 lety +7

    It's about a narcissist father caught up in the beginnings of societal narcissism and the effect of the truth on his two sons. Without the luxury of financial support after divorce, the wife is an enabler who insists his sons believe the lie - Loman's honour, work ethic and success -
    One gamma son decides to be like him despite Loman's malignant ego and the trusting other has to accept the lifetime of lies when the truth is revealed and try to survive without his role model.
    Without the luxury of financial support after divorce, the wife is an enabler who insists his sons believe the lie - Loman's honour, work ethic and success - and the tension of emotional blackmail that Loman might kill himself if they don't.
    Interesting that Miller can barely remember why he wrote this, what it was about and the 33 year old age he was when he recieved his showbiz prize. Selling ones soul has it's price

    • @eviefleming6570
      @eviefleming6570 Před 3 lety

      Linda and willy got divorced???

    • @IndianaRose.
      @IndianaRose. Před 3 lety +2

      @@eviefleming6570 No. She needed his money

    • @biffbutowski2447
      @biffbutowski2447 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes. Interesting, he forgot why and what he wrote?

    • @butterflymoon6368
      @butterflymoon6368 Před rokem

      an enabler? i mean, she has stockholm syndrome and they talk to her like sh1t.

    • @upthedown1
      @upthedown1 Před rokem +2

      Indiana Rose Pftttttttt

  • @marysheeran519
    @marysheeran519 Před rokem

    Howard doesn't love Willy...

  • @Eliot451
    @Eliot451 Před 6 lety +6

    Writers always seem silly when they talk about their work. A play or a novel or a short story should speak for itself without any further explanation.

    • @Jantonov1
      @Jantonov1 Před 5 lety +2

      They only seem silly when they act impressed by themselves while discussing their work.

    • @reeseriley225
      @reeseriley225 Před 4 lety +6

      Interesting that you chose to watch an interview with a writer given your opinion.

    • @richardcampbell8498
      @richardcampbell8498 Před 3 lety +10

      That’s a pretty narrow view. Any creative expression is open to interpretation and it’s always interesting to get the creator’s intent. And a play is vastly different from a novel or short story. It’s meant to be seen not merely read.

  • @numabourrus3268
    @numabourrus3268 Před 3 lety +1

    Pas ouf

  • @puppetoz
    @puppetoz Před rokem

    Another interviewer who constantly over talks the interviewee

  • @cjpreach
    @cjpreach Před 17 dny

    "The corruption of capitalism." So say the two millionaires in the TV studio. Yeah, right.

    • @gavleopardi70
      @gavleopardi70 Před dnem

      What a mean spirited thing to say. Miller wrote his masterpiece when he was 32, far from the millionaire you seem to think he always is and was. Get a life….or write something comparable to Miller’s immortal work.

    • @cjpreach
      @cjpreach Před dnem

      @@gavleopardi70 "Always is and was?" Don't think I said that.