Death of a Salesman

By Arthur Miller

Directed by David Green

TBC

Performed Autumn 2010

Cast

Willy – Paul Baker
Linda – Yves Green
Biff – Mark Burridge
Happy – Peter Long
Bernard – Mike Davison
The Woman – Dawn Symonds
Charley – Steven Phipps
Uncle Ben – Patrick Quorn
Howard Wagner – Simon Evans
Stanley – Ben Willmott
Miss Forsythe – Emma Martin
Letta – Alice Mottram
Jenny – Rachel Kellett

Production Team

Directed by David Green
Stage manager - Stefan Kubala
Sound - Bev Lawton
Lighting - Mike Allmey / Roy Goodwin
Costume - Suzannah Platt

‘A fine ensemble’

— David Porter

Behind the Scenes

Review - David Porter, EADT

 

That a man at 63 is too old and weary to be effective in business is at odds with today’s 60 being the new 40, but an older person losing his grip resonates still.

Paul Baker presents Willie Loman, a once highly successful travelling salesman, staunch believer in the American Dream and hard work, liked and respected, with a well-judged mix of anger, frustration, confusion, with sparks of the younger worker, husband and father.

The ever-impressive Yves Green is his wife, handling memories with joy and his decline, their quarrelsome sons and the fractured father/son relationship with stoic resignation (Mark Burridge and Peter Long, both good). 

The supporting cast, especially Patrick Quorn and Dawn Symonds, are spot on.

But, for what is a painful, poignant and funny, bitter and distressing journey, full credit goes to Director David Green for exploring the marriage, the brotherly relationship, the father/son issues in a well-paced, sympathetic yet forensic way.

The tragic conclusion, that a man who is broke and no longer able to earn a living, decides his life assurance policy payout will give his son a fresh start, is heartbreaking. That it arrives without sentimentality is the mark of a fine ensemble, which Open Space are.