Synopsis
The Theatre Essays of Arthur Miller
Robert A Martin - ed - Foreword Arthur Miller
Published by Methuen
Above all, they give eloquent expression of his belief in "the theatre as a serious business, one that makes or should make man more human, which is to say, less alone"
In reading this definitive collection of the playwright's pieces, covering some thirty years, and subjects ranging from Willy Loman's fall to After the Fall, from Ibsen to O'Neill, from the commercial hit-flop approach to subsidised theatre, you are exhileratingly aware of a social critic, as well as playwright, who knows what he's about" ~ Studs Terkel, Chicago Tribune
"Arthur Miller understands that serious writing is a social act as well as an aesthetic one, that political involvement comes with the territory. A writer's work and his actions should be of the same cloth, after all. HIs plays and his conscience are a cold burning force" ~ Edward Albee
"The greatest American dramatist of our age" (Evening Standard)