portrays the suffering Willy Loman—the middle-aged man at the end of his emotional rope—with Dunnock equally impressive as his patient wife, Linda. George
Subject: Loman, Willy (Fictitious character) -- Drama
Transcript: [MUSIC PLAYING] Boy. Oh, boy. Willy. It's all right. I came back. Why? What happened? Did something happen? No, nothing happened. You didn't smash
Willy loses control of the present and drifts in and out of memories of Biff's senior year, when he flunked math. He goes to the restroom, where
Still in Willy's memory, Biff discovers the woman his father has been seeing. Still in Willy's memory, Willy tries to lie about his
When Willy arrives, Biff tries to talk to him about his past, but Willy is too upset over being fired to hear the truth about Biff's failure at
Deep in a memory, Willy and his mistress get a surprise visit from young Biff. Willy tells the woman to hide while Biff asks Willy to convince his
Willy leaves Charley's office, claiming men are worth more dead than alive. He tells Charley he's his only friend.
Willy's sons overhear him talking to himself downstairs. Willy, lost in a memory, relives moments from Biff's boyhood. He brags about his
Act I: Willy Loman comes home weary from a sales trip; he had almost driven off the road. He and his wife, Linda, talk about how he has grown too
Willy remembers when Brooklyn wasn't so developed and mourns the missing plants and flowers from the yard. He catches himself imagining a car he
Lost in a memory, Willy and Linda go over their finances. Willy hasn't been earning enough, which causes him to alternate between desperate