Литература двух Америк (Dec 2024)
John Lahr on Arthur Miller: the Structure and Effects of a Life in the Theatre (Lahr, John. Arthur Miller. American Witness. New Haven, CT; London: Yale University Press, 2022.)
Abstract
Theatre critic John Lahr writes Arthur Miller's biography as a meticulous study reminiscent of a fascinating novel. Relying upon extensive archival materials, correspondence, his own interviews with Miller and the works of his predecessors (K. Bigsby, M. Gottfried, M. Roudané, S. Abbotson), Lahr structures his book around several dominant motifs of an American playwright’s life. Miller was “building” (the book begins in his workshop in Roxbury) — his fictional worlds, families, and articulate political responses. Miller was “a witness”, which means he was present at the events, sharing his perceptive observations of them. Miller was tormented by a sense of guilt, but he turned this experience into something else: a constant reflection of responsibility. Miller refused to change: his dramaturgy did not undergo a stylistic transformation (unlike the plays of his brilliant contemporary, T. Williams). As a result, Lahr’s biography allows us to understand where we can look for Miller today. We should keep in mind that his dramas are for a socially engaged theater (with clear political statements) but also move further. A researcher of individual and collective experiences, Miller observed feeling subjects in their connections with the environments. It sounds highly relevant and difficult to theorize. How are emotions created and managed in dramas and performances? How does the playwright create an environment for their experience? Using classical American dramas, the audiences can learn to work with the feelings of others and receive emotional insights from the author, who carefully studied himself and his loved ones. John Lahr’s biography allows us to learn how Miller’s work was done and how the meanings we need today grow out of his “life in the theater.”
Keywords