![]() Then again, in 1949, the top marginal tax rate was 82 percent. After adjusting for inflation, that’s a 10-fold increase, well beyond the reach of today’s putative Willy Lomans. ![]() ![]() Tickets for the original run, in 1949, cost between $1.80 and $4.80 tickets for the 2012 run range from $111 to $840. What was once a middle-class entertainment has become a luxury item. While “Death of a Salesman” has consolidated its prestige as an exposure of middle-class delusions, the American middle class - as a social reality and a set of admirable values - has nearly ceased to exist.Ĭertainly few middle-class people, or at least anyone from any “middle class” that Loman would recognize, are among the audiences attending this production. Yet as I sat through a recent performance, I wondered why the play was revived at all. ARTHUR MILLER’s “Death of a Salesman,” now on Broadway in a Tony-nominated revival - and starring a heart-shattering Philip Seymour Hoffman as a Willy Loman for the ages - is the most devastating portrait of punctured middle-class dreams in our national literature.
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