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With the "going green" movement and the rising costs of operating a business, many companies are opting - or at least attempting - to go "paperless." ...
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With the "going green" movement and the rising costs of operating a business, many companies are opting – or at least attempting – to go "paperless." ...
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Willy Loman's lost father is at the core of Death of Salesman, whose debut made American authences sweat and weep and run to pay phones.3 Though never acted on the stage, this character is so deeply embedded in the play's structure that by means of him Miller not only awakens the shadow of his own future but also exhumes the ghost of our lost national character, probing our cultural ambivalence about identity and vocation and offering only uneasy resolution. Yet it has moved audiences in far-flung locations, packing theaters in China and Thailand, for example, even becoming a nightly ritual for Norwegian Arctic fishermen, and after the demise of the Soviet Union, offering special relevance for Russians seeking work.4 He is the first character to enter the stage, though in metonymic for...
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DUBLIN -- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/386790/edetailing_trends) has announced the addition of the "E-Detailing Tr...
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Carson reflects on the eight-year presidency of former US president Ronald Reagan. He says that Reagan is the man who destroyed America's sense of reality and demolished the American left.
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LEWISTON ? Powerful and important are the two words that sum up the current production of "Death of a Salesman" by Out of the Box Theater Company.
An outstanding cast captures and holds the audience with this high-power performance of Arthur Miller's classic play. Its presentation at the small Downstage venue of L/A Arts brings the emotion and action right to the front seats.
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Willy Loman (Rich Foucheux) is our nation's shambling, shuffle- gaited King Lear. The defeated hero of Arthur Miller's 1949 masterpiece, "Death of a Salesman," has nearly exhausted the positive patter that has sustained him for decades. Without a territory, without a spiel, Willy is a husk of a man; wandering in exile, lost in dreams and wasted potential.
Everything in Willy Loman's life has been just talk. His career, his home life, his inflated hopes for his adult son Biff (Jeremy S. Holm), a tarnished prodigy who has become rootless and a thief.
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NEW YORK - Attention must be paid.
The most famous line in "Death of a Salesman" one of the American theater's most famous plays could be applied to its author, Arthur Miller, one of the greatest playwrights of the 20th century.
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To me the theater is not a disconnected entertainment.... It's the sound and the ring of the spirit of the people at any one time. It is where a colle...
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Arthur Miller, a child of Jewish immigrants who grew up to become American playwriting's great champion of the common man, died Thursday night at his home in Roxbury, Conn. The legendary writer, who continued his engagement with art and politics until the end, was 89.
Miller rocketed to fame in the late 1940s with the Broadway productions of his dramas "All My Sons" (1947) and "Death of a Salesman" (1949), which won Miller a Pulitzer Prize.