Broadway review: 'Death of a Salesman'
Willy Loman, as a character, has achieved a status something like Hamlet's - if you can play the patriarch of what is now a great American classic, Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman, then you're a notable actor. Lee J. Cobb originated the role on Broadway in 1948, in a Tony- and Pulitzer Prize-winning production directed by Elia Kazan. George C. Scott played the volatile, delusional man in a 1975 revival, then came…
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