In the early scenes discomfort and resentment ripple palpably through Biff. It’s a wrenching performance, exquisitely calibrated. On the last few pages of the play, Willy finally decides to take his own life ( and ).This Broadway revival of Arthur Miller’s 1949 modern classic is nominated for seven Tony Awards, including featured actor in a play for Mr. Not only out of desperation because he just lost his job, with which he was hardly earning enough to pay ordinary expenses at the end.
He does it primarily because he thinks that the life insurance payout will allow Biff to come to something, so that at least one of the Lomans will fulfill his unrealistic dream of great wealth and success. But even here in one of his last moments, while having a conversation with a ghost from the past, he continues to lie to himself by saying that his funeral will be a big event, and that there will be guests from all over his former working territory in attendance.
Yet as was to be expected, this is not what happens, none of the people he sold to come. Although perhaps this wrong foretelling could be attributed to senility, rather than his typical self-deception. Maybe he has forgotten that the “old buyers” have already died of old age. His imagined dialogue partner tells him that Biff will consider the impending act one of cowardice. This obviously indicates that he himself also thinks that it’s very probable that Biff will hate him even more for doing it, as the presence of “Ben”, a man whom he greatly admires for being a successful businessman, is a product of his own mind. But he ignores this knowledge which he carries in himself and goes on with his plan.Īfter this scene, Biff, who has decided to totally sever the ties with his parents, has an “abrupt conversation” (p.99) with Willy.
He doesn’t want to leave with another fight, he wants to make peace with his father and tell him goodbye in a friendly manner. He has realized, that all his life, he has tried to become something that he doesn’t really want to be and that becoming this something (a prosperous businessman) was a (for him) unreachable goal that was only put into his mind by his father (p.105). He doesn’t want a desk, but the exact opposite: To work outside, in the open air, with his hands. But he’s willing to forgive Willy for making this grave mistake while Biff was in his youth. He simply wants to end their relationship in a dignified way. Willy is very angered by this plan of Biff’s, because it means that he is definitely not going to take the 20000 dollars and make a fortune out of it. Happy, who has become very much like his father, self-deceiving and never facing reality, is shocked by what Biff says. He is visibly not used to hearing the naked truth being spoken in his family. He objects by telling another lie, “We always told the truth!” (p.104). This only serves to enrage Biff further, after Willy has already denied shaking his hand, which would have been a gesture of great symbolic meaning.