Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Analysis of ââ¬ÅDeath of a Salesmanââ¬Â opening stage directions Essay
Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s ââ¬ËDeath of a Salesmanââ¬â¢ (1949) opens with an extensive description of the Loman house. Miller uses extremely precise and detailed stage directions, including prop placement, sound and lighting, giving heavy significance to each of these elements and painting an unchangeable picture to ensure that it is preserved in every interpretation of his work. Throughout the opening stage directions of Act 1, despite the structure and tone being very factual, composed of short, clear sentences, Miller hints at underlying themes and messages through a range of stylistic devices, preparing the audience for the play, and setting the scene. As the play is set in Brooklyn, New York some years after the great depression, many references are made already at this early stage to idealism and the American dream; the desperate and yearning vision of many Americans at that time of a better life. This permeating theme becomes apparent formerly even to the introduction of the characters, as the mere scenery and props act as symbolic elements, which reflect this motif. Miller however subliminally makes it evident that this dream is purely an illusion, through emblematic phrases in his stage directions such as ââ¬Ërising out of realityââ¬â¢ and physical representations, for instance the broken boundaries where ââ¬Ëcharacters enter or leave a room by stepping through a wall onto the forestageââ¬â¢ which create an aura of delusion. The first stage directions include a melody played on a flute, ââ¬Ëtelling of grass and trees and the horizonââ¬â¢. This natural imagery encompassing three physical elements accompanied by the soft and harmonious sound, sets a serene tone which is then highly juxtaposed with the following depiction of the house and itââ¬â¢s neighborhood, featured with darkness and hostility. This heavy contrast may be symbolic of the conflict between the dreams to which the individual aspires and the actual harshness of societyââ¬â¢s reality. The description of the surrounding cluster of apartment blocks seems almost to have a greater prominence than the house itself, as this is the first thing the audience ââ¬Ëbecomes aware ofââ¬â¢. The tall and ââ¬Ëangularââ¬â¢ silhouette of Manhattan that lies in the backdrop has expressionistic features andà surrounds the Loman house in a way that suggests some metaphorical form of oppression or confinement. The ââ¬Ëglow of orangeââ¬â¢ that falls upon the ââ¬Ëfragile-seemingââ¬â¢ house is personified as ââ¬Ëangryââ¬â¢, perhaps reflecting the hostile times in which the play is set. This enclosing and intimidating hostility is in part what makes the home appear so fragile, a fragility that may represent weakness in family bonds or equally, weakness in he who represents the house, condemning him immediately to the role of a tragic protagonist. Willy clings to his dreams just as ââ¬Ëan air of the dream clings to the placeââ¬â¢. This idea becomes present again in the description of Lindaââ¬â¢s feelings towards her husband and his traits. ââ¬Ëhis massive dreamsââ¬â¢ are the source of his tragic nature, dreams that he shares with the rest of society, but that for him become an unhealthy obsession. Willy is cursed with the incessant desire to pursue his dreams ââ¬Ëto their endââ¬â¢ and these words forebode a fate that unfolds as a result of this fixation. Overall the opening of this play provides the audience with a sense of the themes that will permeate throughout, by cleverly using stage schemes and elements that insinuate profounder significance of what is to come.
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