Death of a Salesman (Broadway Theatre Archive)
starring: Stanley Adams, Edward Andrews, Lee J. Cobb, Albert Dekker, Mildred Dunnock
directed by: Alex Segal
directed by: Alex Segal
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Product Description:
Studio: KulturRelease Date: 04/02/2002Starring: Lee J. CobbRun time: 120 minutes
Studio: KulturRelease Date: 04/02/2002Starring: Lee J. CobbRun time: 120 minutes
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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:

Rating:
- Overwhelming
I have always considered "Salesman" the greatest American play and saw the original production when I was only 15 and was floored.But, even allowing for my then easily impressionable age, I still believe I saw, as near as possible, theatrical perfection. Since then there have been many hundreds (thousands?) of productions including some excellent "revivals".But this is as close as you can get to that original production. Although the script was altered a bit because of tv constrictions, the power ... Read More
Rating:
- Amazing Masterpiece
Having assembled the vast majority of Broadway Archives and even classic movies, modern and B&W alike.......this along with Jason Robards in "The Iceman Cometh" simply stand alone.
After watching Lee J. Cobb in 12 Angry Men, On the Waterfront, certainly you can understand why he was one of the great character actors of his day.But this performance stands alone from anything I have ever seen and heard.It is as powerful, as resonate, as skilled a performance as one can expect.It is said ... Read More
Rating:
- NOT WILLIE'S TIME
Arthur Miller had a good ear for the foibles and traumas of the ordinary people of the old middle class put up against the wall in a world that was dramatically changing after World War II. The time of the man in the gray flannel suit and the victory of corporate culture that destroyed the old independent professions was not Willie Loman's time. In this play, seemingly only about the trials and tribulations of Everyman Willie Loman a used up salesman at the end of his career, the underlying tension is that ... Read More
Rating:
- Mr. Cobb absolutely riveting.
Seeing Lee J. Cobb as Willy Loman in this David Susskind produced version is as close as possible to seeing the original play on Broadway, and a far sight better than just about any live production one could find nowadays.
Mr. Cobb's performance is so absorbing, so powerful and so disturbing, that we, (the audience) feel genuinely dazed at its conclusion. It's as though, by the time of the final scene, that we too, are attending Willy's funeral, and all stumble away drained and awed.
Read More
Rating:
- A Masterful Work and Presentation by Cobb
An insightful play about the realities of life. Cobb gives a standup performance in this classic play equal to none. Actors of his caliber are few and far between. Simply the best performance of this play to date. Lee becomes Willy in a somewhat scary portrayal. It is hard to tell the difference between Lee and Willy. Highly Recommend this version to serious theatre affcianados.
- OverwhelmingI have always considered "Salesman" the greatest American play and saw the original production when I was only 15 and was floored.But, even allowing for my then easily impressionable age, I still believe I saw, as near as possible, theatrical perfection. Since then there have been many hundreds (thousands?) of productions including some excellent "revivals".But this is as close as you can get to that original production. Although the script was altered a bit because of tv constrictions, the power ... Read More
- Amazing MasterpieceHaving assembled the vast majority of Broadway Archives and even classic movies, modern and B&W alike.......this along with Jason Robards in "The Iceman Cometh" simply stand alone.
After watching Lee J. Cobb in 12 Angry Men, On the Waterfront, certainly you can understand why he was one of the great character actors of his day.But this performance stands alone from anything I have ever seen and heard.It is as powerful, as resonate, as skilled a performance as one can expect.It is said ... Read More
- NOT WILLIE'S TIMEArthur Miller had a good ear for the foibles and traumas of the ordinary people of the old middle class put up against the wall in a world that was dramatically changing after World War II. The time of the man in the gray flannel suit and the victory of corporate culture that destroyed the old independent professions was not Willie Loman's time. In this play, seemingly only about the trials and tribulations of Everyman Willie Loman a used up salesman at the end of his career, the underlying tension is that ... Read More
- Mr. Cobb absolutely riveting.Seeing Lee J. Cobb as Willy Loman in this David Susskind produced version is as close as possible to seeing the original play on Broadway, and a far sight better than just about any live production one could find nowadays.
Mr. Cobb's performance is so absorbing, so powerful and so disturbing, that we, (the audience) feel genuinely dazed at its conclusion. It's as though, by the time of the final scene, that we too, are attending Willy's funeral, and all stumble away drained and awed.
Read More
- A Masterful Work and Presentation by CobbAn insightful play about the realities of life. Cobb gives a standup performance in this classic play equal to none. Actors of his caliber are few and far between. Simply the best performance of this play to date. Lee becomes Willy in a somewhat scary portrayal. It is hard to tell the difference between Lee and Willy. Highly Recommend this version to serious theatre affcianados.
