The
play, Death of a Salesmen (DOS) by Arthur
Miller takes place in mostly New York (once in Boston), probably in the mid 1900s.
It revolves around Willy Loman, a salesmen and his family. The play goes back
and forth between the present and Willy's memories as the audience finds out
the event that destroyed Willy and his family.
Act II starts with breakfast at the Loman’s, Linda
reminding Willy that the boys are taking him out tonight. Enthralled, Willy
decides this is the day he asks for a job in New York from his boss, Howard.
However, when Willy is at Howard’s office, Howard denies his request and this
sends Willy on a tangent about his time spent at the company and why he dream
of being a salesmen in the first place. Howard tells him to take some time off
and sends him out of his office where Willy begins to
hallucinate/daydream/I’m-never-sure-which-one-he’s-doing about Ben, Alaska,
Linda and his sons, being well liked and Biff’s football game and Bernard. Eventually,
he is brought out of his daydream by an older Bernard, successful and a lawyer.
Disappointed, he wonders out loud how come Biff failed and Bernard alludes to
Biff’s failure in his math course. Willy begins to get defensive and Charley
enters to see Bernard. Willy asks for more money but Charley offers Willy a job
(again) but Willy refuses. Charley then yells at Willy for always needing to be
well liked but gives him the money.
At the diner, the boys wait for their father to arrive
and they flirt with girls. It’s revealed that Biff waited for six hours to talk
to Bill Oliver and Bill didn’t even recognize him. When his father arrives,
Biff tries to tell him the truth but Willy isn’t listening as he daydreams
again. Finally, Biff explodes and yells at him the truth. Biff just stole a pen
from Bill’s office and he’s realized that the salesmen life isn’t for him. Biff
helps at distraught and crazy Willy into the restroom and leaves, Happy already
gone with two girls.
In the restroom, Willy remembers the time when he is in
Boston, having an affair with a woman. Biff comes to him, after failing his
math course and finds him in the affair, realizing what a fake Willy is, that
the father he knew and looked up to wasn’t what he told him he was. A waiter
helps Willy out of the restroom and he walks him, but not before buying seeds.
The family reconvenes at home, Linda scolding her sons
for leaving their father. Biff leaves to go find Willy and he does, outside in
the garden, daydreaming, talking to Ben about a 20K proposition. Willy goes
inside and he and Biff argue, when Biff begins to cry, Willy is taken aback,
surprised that his son is crying over him. Everyone goes to bed except Willy
who goes back to talking to Ben about the 20K proposition. The family hears
Willy speed off in his car, presumably committing suicide.
In the requiem, Charley and Willy’s family stand at his
grave. Biff states he believed that Willy had the wrong dream, Charley thinks
Willy was a salesman and died in the way all salesmen had. Happy hopes to
continue Willy’s vision. It ends with Linda, saying that she paid the last
mortgage payment that day.
______________________
Characters:
Willy Loman- The father
and patriarch to the Loman family, Willy is an old man in his sixties. He lives
on the hopes of a dream, to become a salesmen he had once met, one that was
highly successful and “well liked”. He also has a brother who he admires that
went off to Alaska and got rich and never really got to know his own father. He
is, however, hard on his sons, especially Biff who conflicts with him often.
Willy is also prideful, childish and prone to “dramatize” things. It’s funny,
because his name is Low Man. Represents the average man trying to attain the
American Dream.
Linda Loman- The wife
of Willy and mother Biff and Happy, she is the dedicated and faithful wife. It
seems like she either genuinely loves Willy to the deepest depths of her heart
or (my personal interpretation of her) chooses to stay with him because she has
no other place to go and really, she’s known about his affair all along and
puts up with it. She’s the more realistic and morthers Willy.
Biff Loman- Argueably
Willy’s favorite son, was a star football player in high school and failed a
math course that eventually halted his career. He’s a kleptomaniac because of
the pressure that Willy puts on him, constantly telling him what he has to be.
After discovering that his father was a fake, Biff loses sight of his dreams
and beliefs, working job to job. He also “likes to work with his hands” and
while I’m tempted to make a dirty joke out of that, it’s more likely referring
to Biff’s love of agriculture and ranching. He’s representative of the
farmers/people that don’t try to achieve the American dream in America.
Happy Loman- Brother to
Biff, he’s sort of like the second best/first loser. Was a lame-o in HS but
then he whipped himself up and now he’s a total lady killer. He isn’t a success
in terms of money either and this upsets Willy too but not to the same degree
as Biff. He acts as a buffer between Willy and Biff, often trying to calm their
arguments and compromising. After Willy’s death, he promises to carry out his
father’s dreams and become a salesmen.
Charley- Willy’s
successful neighbor that’s been loaning him money for quiet some time. He sees
the world for what it is, unlike Willy, he often acts as a voice of reason to
Willy’s insanity. (I’m tempted to call them foils but…) Willy seems jealous of
him or what he has and seems to compete with him, all the while calling him his
“only friend.”
Bernard- The successful
son of Charley, he successes only because his father never pressured him and
left him to grow by himself. While Willy’s delusions make him out to be a soft,
wimpy, whiney boy, his own recollection (which I trust more than Willy’s) makes
him out to be more of an equal to Biff than an underling.
Narrative Voice
Since
DOS is a play, there really isn’t a point of view. The tone is definitely interesting,
you get this ominous feeling that you’re waiting for the ball to drop (It is
called Death of a Salesman after all), you feel Willy’s anxiety and the suspense
created by his daydreams. I think that a major component to the tone is the
flute that’s played, it works as symbolism to signal the start of Willy’s
daydreams.
Symbols
Seeds/Flowers: Willy
goes looking for seeds after Biff abandons him at the restaurant and he speaks
of flowers and how his neighborhood now
does not have any. The lack of growth that surrounds Willy symbols the lack of
growth within himself, his money or his sons. His need to go and buy seeds in
the middle of the night shows his desperation to try and succeed in something.
Diamonds/Wealth like
the radio: Symbolizes the American dream that Willy is trying to achieve yet
never does.
Stockings: Willy’s
guilt and his affair with the woman in the hotel.
Quotes:
“He’s a man way out
there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine . . . A salesman is got to
dream, boy.” This explains who Willy is and why is he the way he is,
specifically the dream in which he is trying to achieve. It also highlights the
gritty truth behind the job of a salesman, all he has is what’s in his hands
and his hopes.
“A dime a dozen” In
contrast with the quote above, Biff states that they’re just a dime in a dozen.
Meaning that they’re not really that single special snowflake but in fact, many
and plenty. This destroys Willy’s idea of being that salesman who walks in and
is greeted and loved, Biff has realized this and that’s why he says that he’s “a
nobody.”
Theme:
Miller uses the
dysfunction of a family and the death of a salesman to critique the illusion of
the American values and dreams.
(All the stuff mentioned above proves the theme
so I won’t reference any specifics that’s already been mentioned) The problem
that Miller is trying to address isn’t the American dream itself or even it’s
failures so much as the idealism and mistaken perfection behind it. Willy’s American
dream is that if you’re well like enough that you’ll get somewhere in life,
that if people love you enough, the sales will make themselves whereas Charley
and Bernard shows that it’s hardwork that proves to be a success in the American
society. He’s also, at the same time critiquing the dysfunction of a family caused
by the American society through Willy’s affair and his struggle with Biff and
Happy.
It is perfectly Ok that this blog is as long as it is. I appreciate the details. I also like the extensive list of charecters. It is very detailed. I am also planning to use DOS as my open prompt so I like all the details.
ReplyDelete