Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The tradition of social drama
- 3 The early plays
- 4 All My Sons
- 5 Death of a Salesman and the poetics of Arthur Miller
- 6 Conscience and community in An Enemy of the People and The Crucible
- 7 A View from the Bridge
- 8 The Holocaust, the Depression, and McCarthyism
- 9 Miller's 1970s "power" plays
- 10 Miller in the eighties
- 11 Miller in the nineties
- 12 Arthur Miller and the cinema
- 13 Arthur Miller's Fiction
- 14 Critic, criticism, critics
- 15 Arthur Miller
- Index
10 - Miller in the eighties
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The tradition of social drama
- 3 The early plays
- 4 All My Sons
- 5 Death of a Salesman and the poetics of Arthur Miller
- 6 Conscience and community in An Enemy of the People and The Crucible
- 7 A View from the Bridge
- 8 The Holocaust, the Depression, and McCarthyism
- 9 Miller's 1970s "power" plays
- 10 Miller in the eighties
- 11 Miller in the nineties
- 12 Arthur Miller and the cinema
- 13 Arthur Miller's Fiction
- 14 Critic, criticism, critics
- 15 Arthur Miller
- Index
Summary
Personally, the 1980s were stable years for Arthur Miller. Sixty-five when the decade began, Miller had long since established himself as a, if not the, major figure in the American theatre. Having returned to playwriting in 1964 with After the Fall, a play that may well have helped him come to terms with his first two marriages and the suicide of his second wife, Marilyn Monroe, the Miller of the 1980s shared a comfortable life in Roxbury, Connecticut, with his third wife, Inge Morath, a professional photographer who co-produced three handsome travel accounts with her husband: In Russia (1969), In the Country (1977), and Chinese Encounters Miller had purchased the Roxbury farm during his marriage to Monroe, but he seldom used the residence until he married Morath. By the 1980s, the couple had raised a daughter there and sent the young Rebecca to Yale. Miller, who, like Willy Loman, longed to work with his hands, found the eighteenth-century frame house a hospitable setting for his hobby, which, since the age of six, was carpentry.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Arthur Miller , pp. 152 - 167Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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