Such is the power of the racial divide in America that simply casting a black family at the heart of Arthur Millers 1949 masterpiece presents it in a dark and troubling new light.
The Wires Wendell Pierce plays Willy Loman, the titular travelling salesman weighed down by economic hardship, social anxiety and a crippling desire for his eldest son to make a success of his life. But the fact Willy is a black man in a predominantly white world invites you to consider how many of his problems – real and imagined – are the direct result of institutional racism.
Why exactly has Willy, a veteran salesman with 34 years of pavement pounding under his belt, been turned over for promotion time and time again? Is it his rather troublesome personality – his pigeon-chested chippiness, his propensity to cave to his mortal desires – or is it the colour of his skin?
Are the pressures he places upon his athletic son the result of personal insecurity, or the knowledge that to achieve something in the world, young black men need to work harder than their white counterparts?
These questions are raised subliminally, without recourse to changing Millers text; the only direct acknowledgement that the family is black are musical interludes, during which the cast play and sing soulful gospel songs.
Director Marianne Elliott and Miranda Cromwell manage to broach all of thisRead More – Source