Helpful Links to other American Drama Author Societies and Journals!
(please let me know if I can add your society/journal to this list)

Susan Glaspell Society    Eugene O'Neill Society      Thornton Wilder Society      David Mamet Society

August Wilson Society     Edward Albee Society (on Facebook)   American Theatre and Drama Society

Tennessee Williams Annual Review        William Inge Center/Festival

MILLER LINKS

Here we provide annotated links to sites that are related to Arthur Miller and his work (also check out the teaching guides section at the top of our works page that offers several links not referenced here that lend themselves specifically to teaching several of the plays). Please write in if you know of anything useful that we might add (please no sales sites).  I try and keep these up to date, so do let me know if a link is not working or if you know to where something has been moved: e-mail  Sue Abbotson.

Westport Playhouse put together this great Introduction to Miller short film; the first 11 minutes gives a brief background interspersed by comments from several leading scholars, then the last 7 minutes talks specifically about Broken Glass. Access on You Tube or through the Westport Playhouse website.

POD CAST on Miller’s Centennial broadcast on BBC Radio 5  from the Janice Forsyth Show (18 minutes); talking to the Rapture Theatre Director Michael Emans, about their two touring Miller productions this year, All My Sons and The Last Yankee, and to leading Miller scholar, Chris Bigsby. Includes a clip of Miller talking about All My Sons.

The Hook
: a YouTube video created to advertize the production and various productions stills from the 2015 production.

Overview of UK television productions of Death of a Salesman (1957, 1966 and 1996) by Amanda Wrigley.

The Guardian offers a small gallery of stills from past productions of Death of a Salesman.

Audio Recordings Check out the L. A. Theater Works catalog to order audio tapes or CDs of various Miller plays; now available in digital format.  They currently have The Crucible,Death Of A Salesman, A View From The Bridge, All My Sons, The Price, Incident At Vichy, The Man Who Had All the Luck, After The Fall, The Ride down Mount Morgan and Broken Glass and keep adding to the list. These are excellent resources with big name actors in the casts, so check them out at their website.

Teatro Vista video series on You Tube with actors taking part in their 2014 "All Latino" production of A View from the Bridge, talking about their conception of the roles: Eddie, Beatrice, Alfieri, Rodolpho, Marco, Catherine, and the Director (Ricardo Gutierrez).

View reviews and details of the 1995 Colony Theatre production of Incident at Vichy.

View photographs of the Russian production of The Price (Tsena), that opened in November 2012 and continues to play on select dates.

Concert In Athens, the tenth ECM release by Greek composer Eleni Karaindrou, incorporates moving performances by guests violist Kim Kashkashian, oboist Vangelis Christopoulos, and saxophonist Jan Garbarek. A primary emphasis is music written for theatre: including pieces for plays by Arthur Miller ("Requiem for Willy Loman"), Tennesee Williams and Edward Albee. Recorded November 2010.

Link to NY Post where David Amram tells about meeting with Miller to compose the music for After the Fall.  Also a link to a YouTube page that has four versions of David Amram performing "Waltz in D Minor," the music that he composed for After the Fall.

“It was at Igor and Sonia Sudarsky’s classic neighborhood delicatessen that I worked with Arthur Miller composing the music for his play ‘After the Fall.’ Miller loved Greenwich Village, and the Art was where anybody and everyone would go — there were no A tables, and Igor would make you a gigantic sandwich. He used to let me make my own behind the counter. Dustin Hoffman lived right around the corner, and after he did ‘Midnight Cowboy,’ he still went to the deli because Igor was so nice to him. Whenever he had an interview, he’d take them there, so Igor would have more customers.”

CBC interview with Arthur Miller soon after he published In Russia. He talks about the oppression he sees in all political systems, how he survived HUAC, and his love of America.

A short British documentary recently loaded to Youtube that covers Miller’s years with Marilyn Monroe. Includes interviews with Miller, in which he talks, fairly candidly, about his relationship. There are two parts--totalling around fifteen minutes. Part one. Part two.

UKs Guardian offers a series of photographs of Miller and Monroe during their marriage.

Christopher Bigsby dicusses Miller's reputation in America in this Guardian article.

Clip on YouTube has an excerpt of Miller on 60 Minutes in 1999 during which he reflects on Marilyn Monroe. The video showing the whole show has been removed.

Another British documentary on the Miller/Monroe match from YouTube.

Digital Theatre: 2010 Apollo Theatre’s West End production All My Sons will soon be available as a downloadable productions (or to stream) from £6.99 at the Digital Theatre website. Directed by Howard Davies and designed by William Dudley, with David Suchet as Joe Keller, Zoe Wanamaker as Kate Keller, Stephen Campbell Moore as Chris, and Jemima Rooper as Ann Deever.

Arthur Miller Trust. Only limited information, but this is from the official trust so should have up to date contact info. for performance rights and Miller's literary agent, as well as a brief bio., list of works, some major performances.

Focus. Here you can view the 1962 NBC television version of Miller's 1945 book, Focus, with James Whitmore and Colleen Dewhurst. Miller did not write this strangely mangled production--but an interesting adaptation nonetheless. It certainly makes the 2001 movie version seem almost faithful, despite its altered ending.

Old Time radio: You can listen to Orson Welles in Miller’s radio drama Thunder from the Hills. A thirty minute treat in which Welles appears to be reading all the parts.

Links and lessons.  A fairly comprehensive selection of other links here to sites that have Miller biography, and specific materials on Death of a Salesman, The Crucible, All My Sons, and A View from the Bridge—many of these contain useful lesson plan material—especially the All My Sons study guide for GCSE level (that would be grade 8-10 in the US).  I'm putting a link to this one on our lesson plans page too. They keep adding, and now have a separate page for all of the material they have gathered on The Crucible.

Miller Archives:  University of Delaware library Special Collections Department.  Richard Hoffman-Brooklyn theater collector and bookdealer, built the Arthur Miller Collection over a period of fifty years.  Contains play scripts, screenplays, photographs, correspondence, financial documents, posters, flyers, periodicals, journals, theatre programs, news clippings, and ephemera. The collection is open for research, and you can check out a list of their holdings on-line.

"The Death of Arthur Miller," where you can hear a song written to commemorate Miller's passing.

NPR's On Point: Death of a Playwright, aired the evening following Miller's death on Feb. 11th 2005.  Harold Bloom, Marsha Norman, Jack Beattie and Sue Abbotson discusss Miller's legacy. Type in Arthur Miller to the search box when you link to the page to get to the interview.

A link to the BBC archives where one can hear the writer's voice when he was around 26 years of age. 

General Info  Charles A. Carpenter has put together an excellent resource here which gives you a descriptive chronology of Miller's plays, theatrical career, and dramatic theories , and good starter bibliographies for both primary and secondary sources.  Elsewhere, the site also offers an historic overview of Western theater which allows you see where Miller comes in that timeline and development.

Death of a Salesman This is the Eugene O'Neill Theater's site that offers a wealth of material about Death of a Salesman to go with their 1999 production of the play. Along with information on the O'Neill production, with biographies of the cast and creative team, you can access reviews of this production and key past productions, a variety of information on Miller, and study guide materials. You can even order tickets and souvenirs. On Miller they offer a fairly detailed chronology, brief bio. and biblio. of major critical works, and the script of Matthew Roudané's 1985 interview with the playwright. Under "study guide" you can access fairly lengthy excerpts of various books and articles relating to Death of a Salesman by Miller and other scholars. Study guides for students and teachers, and transcripts of on-line chats with Miller and Brian Dennehy. All told, one of the most useful sites on Miller currently on the web.

Salesman Concordances  SADLY NO LONGER WORKS--if you know where this can be accessed again, please let us know. Did you know the name Willy is spoken 128 times in the play, but Linda only 22?  This is a database with all of the acting dialogue (N.B.  none of the stage directions etc.) from Death of a Salesman in a full concordance format in which every wors is indexed and connected to its textual context. You can see alphabetical word lists, frequency of words, and the text of the acting dialogue.  A little confusing at first to navigate, but an interesting research tool once you get the hang of it..

General Miller Info.    This site offers a very brief five-paragraph biography by Malcolm Goldstein. A very basic introduction--doesn't even mention half the plays and is especially sketchy on recent years. The bibliography lists the obvious, and less than half of the links actually work. Of those that do, the most useful is the one to the Internet Movie Database http://us.imdb.com/, which gives production details of a number of TV and film projects at home and abroad, along with some fun trivia. Others include audio files of clips from The Crucible, a review of a 1995 theater production of The Crucible, a sketchy interview that appeared on Mr. Showbiz, and a 1988 New York Times article by Richard Bernstein on Kazan and Miller.

Curtain Up. Curtain Up offers an interesting site which is easy to navigate.  It gives some basic background to Miller, but, most importantly, a whole collection of reviews of recent productions of Miller's plays in New York and Williamstown, MA and they keep adding.  A useful study tool.

The Crucible  Historian Margo Burns tries to separate the fact from the fiction in Miller's play, pointing out historical details which differ from Miller's artistic recreation of events.  This is part of an historical site with an interest in 17th century colonist New England.  Burns lists historical inaccuracies in The Crucible, and points to resources where these details can be confirmed.  She ends by asking some interesting questions regarding how inaccurate historical recreations (often created in the name of art) might impact the historical awareness of the reader/viewer.

Basic background on Miller and his best known works from the UK, aimed at Secondary/High School students.

Reference Guide.  Offers links to pages on Miller and Kazan, America in the 1950s, and the Arthur Miller edition of American Drama (see above).  Also a brief list of main primary works (up to 1994), and a very selected bibliography, with separate sections on Death of a Salesman and The Crucible.  There is a brief comparison of Willy Loman and John Proctor by Robert Hogan, and a couple of study questions.  Maybe useful as a first step for high schoolers.

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Last updated: 26 July 2015