Arthur Miller's The Crucible
Introduction
Arthur Asher Miller is one of the most influential playwrights of the twentieth
century, whose plays have had resonance not only in America, but all over
the world. This renown as a playwright of depth and insight has increased
over his career, and he has been described as "a moralist, a playwright of
ideas, or a social dramatist." (Martin, R.A., & Centola, S.R., 1996, 1). Miller's
work has been firmly placed in the category of 'social plays', both by drama
critics, social commentators and by the man himself. For example, the original
edition of A View From the Bridge (Miller, A., New York: Viking, 1955, pp.1-18),
an essay entitled 'On Social Plays' appeared as a preface to the original
one-act version of this play (later expanded by Miller into a two-act version,
which is the one commonly performed on the stage today). In this essay, Miller
discusses how his understanding and use of dramatic structure has been strongly
influenced by his knowledge of classical Greek drama: "A Greek living in the
classical period would be bewildered by the dichotomy implied in the very
term 'social play'. Especially for the Greek, a drama created for public performance
had to be 'social'. A play to him was by definition a dramatic consideration
of the way men ought to live.But for him [the ancient Greek] these means [of
personal psychology and character] were means to a larger end, and the end
was what we isolate today as social. That is, the relations of man as a social
animal, rather than his definition as a separated entity, were the dramatic
goal." (Martin, R.A., & Centola, S.R., 1996, 51). Miller makes clear that
the category of 'social plays' would have been alien to Greeks living in classical
society of 5th century Athens particularly, where drama - and tragedy especially
- flourished with plays that have in many instances formed the mould for western
drama: The Oresteia, Oedipus Rex, Antigone, Electra and The Bacchai, to name
a few of those which have survived intact. If Miller himself views the category
of 'social play' as slightly suspect, then it is necessary to ask how Miller
came to have such a profound reputation a dramatist with a social conscience;
one who wrote about and commented on the times in which he lived, and one
whose plays still seem to have relevance for future generations.
Miller's stage career
In order to answer this question, it is instructive to briefly consider Miller's
career a writer for the stage. Miller was born in 1915, in New York City,
and started his playwriting career in 1936, aged 21, by writing No Villain
in only six days, during the spring holidays. In 1950, three years before
the first production of The Crucible, another screenplay of Miller's, The
Hook, about corruption in the unions on the waterfronts of Brooklyn failed
to reach production because Hollywood film-makers were being pressurised by
the House of Un-American Activities Committee (HUAAC). In 1953, The Crucible
opened at the Martin Beck Theater in New York City, in January, and was published
on April 1st. The play won the Antoinette Perry Award and the Donaldson Award
(Martin, R.A., & Centola, S.R., 1996, xi-xiv), both prestigious.
However, Miller's play did not open to wide acclaim: "On opening night, January
22, 1953, I knew that the atmosphere would be pretty hostile. The coldness
of the crowd was not a surprise; Broadway audiences were not famous for loving
history lessons, which is what they made of the play." (Miller, A., 1996).
Moreover, many prominent critics of the time were slow to recognise either
its literary achievement, or its relevance as a comment on the contemporary
climate of fear being created by Senator Joe McCarthy. It is interesting to
note that when The Crucible was performed a few years later in the early sixties,
critics responded with the praise that it so justly deserved; the climate
of fear had dissipated and the play could be judged without any of the complications
of the political climate of the early to mid fifties. (Martin, R.A., & Centola,
S.R., 1996, xxxiii) The play only ran for 197 performances on Broadway after
opening, (as a comparison, Death of a Salesman, which has less of a potential
for political allegory, ran for 742 performances). Miller himself was denied
a passport in 1954 to travel to Brussels for the premiere of the play, and
was forced to stand before HUAAC, on the charge of contempt of Congress in
1956 (though he was not imprisoned; the sentence was later quashed) for refusing
to name the names (or "call witch", as it is termed in the play itself) of
Communist sympathisers. (Bigsby, C., (ed), 1997, 3). Indeed, so controversial
were many of Miller's plays at the time, and none more so than The Crucible,
that it took until the late nineties for Hollywood to produce a film version
of the play; something which Hollywood studios were loath to do in the fifties
and sixties. Moreover, the only film version of the play produced in the interim
did not take place on American soil, so incendiary was The Crucible considered
to be at the time. Instead, Jean-Paul Sartre wrote a French film adaptation,
of Miller said that it: "blamed the tragedy on the rich landowners conspiring
to persecute the poor. (In truth, most of those who were hanged in Salem were
people of substance, and two or three were very large landowners.)" (Miller,
A., 1996). Sartre, often known at that time to hold Marxist sympathies, rewrote
the play with less emphasis on its supernatural aspect, and more on its potential
as political allegory. The Crucible clearly has manifold interpretations,
shown by the fact that it now regularly plays around the globe, and has often
been played in South America, especially at times of political unrest. (Martin,
R.A., & Centola, S.R., 1996, 464-465). In which case, I shall now investigate
further the political climate surrounding the performance of The Crucible.
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