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Death of a Salesman Director's Vision

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14 Pall Mart Belgravia London SW10 Pier 4 Hickson Road Walsh Bay NSW 2000 I write to you to propose the production of Arthur Miller’s classic “Death of a Salesman.” As the title suggests, the book is about the death of a salesman named Willy Loman. However, through my production, it is not the inevitable ending that will be remembered by the audience. It will be the processes that led to Willy’s conflicted mind that will resonate in the audience’s mind. The underlying values of blind faith in the American dream and the narrow-minded definition of success, which are exemplified in Willy Loman, combine to form an example of a self-inflicted demise. However, through my production, the reasons behind Willy’s adherence to these …show more content…

Props will be used as a beacon of reactions from the audience both in support and dissapproval of his actions. The seeds represent the worth of his labour, both as a salesman and a father. His desperately hopeless attempt to grow vegetables signifies his shame about barely having enough money to put food on the table. The seeds symbolise Willy's sense of failure with Biff, Willy's efforts to cultivate Biff went awry and realising that his American football-star of a son is just a lazy nobody who achieved nothing, Willy takes Biff's failure and lack of ambition as a reflection of his abilities as a father, shown by “Nothing’s planted. I don’t have a thing in the ground.” The connotations of the seeds can be both reacted with a sense of sympathy towards Willy’s failure as a father and salesman but also a criticism on his parenting skills, especially on Biff. The tape recorder in the play is also used to represent the end of Willy's career. It is introduced when Howard no longer needs Willy's services and without concern fires him. This, to Willy, was like, "eating the orange and throwing away the peel". The tape recorder instills sympathy to the audience over the uncompromising nature of the American dream but is also a criticism of Willy, who does not accept change and clings onto the past. However, characterisation is definitely the most important technique. The characters of Uncle Ben and Linda shape and maintain Willy’s views of life and are therefore, the force

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