The Hartford Stage
production of Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman is the reason you go
to live theater. The Pulitzer Prize winning play is exceptionally
powerful and emotionally devastating. The
cast, led by Peter Jacobson as Willy Loman, is superb. Director Melia Bensussen stages the production
with heartbreak and sadness. She brings
a skillful spiritedness to the scenes focusing on the intimate, sobering family
dynamics. Ms. Bensussen also effectively
expands the spatial relationships within the show as the characters drift afar
from the front of Scenic Designer Sara Brown’s steel skeletal set, adding a dreamlike
element to the production. This makes
sense since Miller’s original title for the play was The Inside of His Head, where past memories, mix with present day
illusions. Matthew Richard’s pinpoint
Lighting Design, many times bathing characters in harsh, white light, and
Darron L West’s recognizable soundscape coupled with a dissonant piano backdrop,
heighten the drama within the work. Samuel H. Levine, Max Katz, and Peter Jacobson in Death of a Salesman. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
Death of a Salesman first appeared on Broadway over 75 years ago, but
the themes that pulsate throughout the play – pursuit of the American Dream, conflicts
between father and sons, denial, among others – are just as current today.
Adrianne Krstansky and Peter Jacobson in Death of a Salesman. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
The plot focuses on Willy
Loman, a traveling salesman who has seen better days, both on the road, and with
his wife and two sons. Slipping between
reality and vivid hallucinations of his past, he believes ultimate success is
just around the corner, all long supported by his loyal and protective wife,
Linda. His two adult sons, mirror their
father’s failures and disillusionments. Biff,
in his youth, a charismatic, high school football star, is now adrift with no
direction or life goals. Happy is a
womanizer whose expectations of the real world are as unrealistic as those of his
father.
Samuel H. Levine, Peter Jacobson, and Max Katz in Death of a Salesman. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
As the play progresses,
and Willy’s delusions and volatile behavior become more prevalent, his family
life and professional career crumble, resulting in a harsh and blistering
denouement.
Peter Jacobson's Willy Loman, exudes an intensity and cynicism that is heartbreaking to behold. He satisfyingly brings the audience along in his whirlwind of competing emotions and actions. As Linda Loman, Adriene Krstansky’s is solid as Willy’s unyielding wife. She adeptly portrays the many sides of the character - unflinchingly supportive and protective, fierce guardian of her husband, a meek and passive observer, but, in respect to her sons, an unbridled critic.
Peter Jacobson, Adrianne Krstansky, Max Katz, and Samuel H. Levine in Death of a Salesman. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
Samuel H. Levine’s
portrayal of Biff is an adroit display of squandered dreams and self-loathing
affectations. Max Katz finely imbues the
character of Happy with the self-deluding demeanor and restlessness of his
father.
The remainder of the featured cast is equally compelling in their roles. Michael Cullen is suitably unworldly as Willy’s ghostly brother Ben. Stephan Cefalu, Jr., morphs convincingly from a nerdy boyhood friend of Biff to a mature, self-confident family man and lawyer. Paul Michael Valley provides fine support as Charley, Willy’s only true friend. Nora Eschenheimer’s “Woman,” initially a flighty figure, provides a more shaded and darker brashness during the play’s penultimate moment.

Peter Jacobson in Death of a Salesman. Photo by T. Charles Erickson.
Death of a Salesman, playing at Hartford Stage through March
29. Click here for
dates, times, and ticket information.













