- Nacimiento
- Defunción10 de febrero de 2005 · Roxbury, Connecticut, Estados Unidos (cáncer, neumonía y una afección cardíaca)
- Nombre de nacimientoArthur Asher Miller
- Altura1.89 m
- Arthur Miller nació el 17 de octubre de 1915 en Manhattan, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos. Fue un escritor y actor, conocido por Las brujas de Salem (1996), Compás de espera (1980) y Death of a Salesman (1966). Estuvo casado con Inge Morath, Marilyn Monroe y Mary Slattery. Murió el 10 de febrero de 2005 en Connecticut, Estados Unidos.
- CónyugesInge Morath(17 de febrero de 1962 - 30 de enero de 2002) (su muerte, 2 niños)Marilyn Monroe(29 de junio de 1956 - 20 de enero de 1961) (divorciado)Mary Slattery(5 de agosto de 1940 - 11 de junio de 1956) (divorciado, 2 niños)
- Niños
- Padres
- FamiliaresJoan Copeland(Sibling)Kermit Miller(Sibling)
- After Miller's divorce from Marilyn Monroe, his father, Isidore Miller, was Monroe's date to President John F. Kennedy's birthday party at Madison Square Garden.
- Married Marilyn Monroe in a Jewish ceremony at the Westchester County Courthouse, White Plains, New York. The couple commissioned famed American architect Frank Lloyd Wright to design a home for their Roxbury, Connecticut property. Although the house was never built by the couple, the plans were purchased many years later by a country club in Hawaii and built as a clubhouse. The scale model is on exhibit at Taliesan West, Wright's winter compound in Scottsdale, Arizona.
- Divorced his first wife, Mary Slattery (mother of his children Jane Miller and Robert A. Miller) in Reno, Nevada, after a six-week residency period. It was while waiting for his divorce that Miller met a group of cowboys who inspired the short story "The Misfits", which he later adapted as a vehicle for his second wife, Marilyn Monroe.
- His "Death of a Salesman" was the first play to take the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, the Tony Award and the Pulitzer Prize.
- Miller died on the 56th anniversary of the opening night of his greatest success. "Death of a Salesman" opened at the Morosco Theatre on Feb 10, 1949 and closed on Nov 18, 1950, running for a total of 742 performances. The original production won two 1949 Tony Awards for Miller for Best Play and Best Author. It also won Tony Awards for Arthur Kennedy (Best Supporting or Featured Actor-Dramatic), Jo Mielziner (Best Scenic Design), Kermit Bloomgarden and Walter Fried (Producer-Dramatic), and Elia Kazan (Best Director). Cameron Mitchell won a 1949 Theatre World Award for Supporting Actor. Miller also was awarded the 1949 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. The play has been revived three times successfully on Broadway, in 1975, 1984 and 1999.
- The structure of a play is always the story of how the birds came home to roost.
- A good newspaper, I suppose, is a nation talking to itself.
- Maybe all one can do is hope to end up with the right regrets.
- By whatever means it is accomplished, the prime business of a play is to arouse the passions of its audience so that by the route of passion may be opened up new relationships between a man and men, and between men and Man. Drama is akin to the other inventions of man in that it ought to help us to know more, and not merely to spend our feelings.
- Look, we're all the same; a man is a fourteen-room house - in the bedroom he's asleep with his intelligent wife, in the living-room he's rolling around with some bareass girl, in the library he's paying his taxes, in the yard he's raising tomatoes, and in the cellar he's making a bomb to blow it all up.
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