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Death of a Salesman Broadway Reviews

About the Show

Arthur Miller’s Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece Death of a Salesman, in a new production directed by eight-time Tony Award® winner Mike Nichols and starring Academy Award® winner Philip... (more info)

Theatre Ethel Barrymore Theatre (Broadway)
Previews Feb 13, 2012
Opened Mar 15, 2012
Critics' Rating
8.18 Positive
13 Positive
4 Mixed
0 Negative
Readers' Rating
6.12 Mixed
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Critics' Reviews

7
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Theater Review: 'Death of a Salesman'

From: amNY  |  By: Matt Windman  |  Date: 3/15/2012

At age 44, Philip Seymour Hoffman is still too young to be playing the 60-year-old Willy Loman. In a kind of dazed stupor, his Loman effortlessly switches between his out-of-control egotism and his private fears and insecurities. Still, Hoffman lacks...

7
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Attention must be paid to age

From: NY Post  |  By: Elisabeth Vincentelli  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Hoffman faces a big problem in that he’s 44 to Willy’s 60. It’s hard to buy him not only as a man nearing retirement age, but as the father of two grown sons. [...] Despite its central miscasting, the production is quite watchable. A big reason...

8
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Theater Review: 'Death of a Salesman'

From: NY Daily News  |  By: Joe Dziemianowicz  |  Date: 3/15/2012

In Mike Nichols’ powerful and emotionally rich revival at the Barrymore, Philip Seymour Hoffman resists playing Willy as larger than life, but to scale. As a result, the play has never felt more like an ensemble drama. That fits. It’s a story of ...

One must pay attention to a man even as inattentive as the loutishly bewildered Willy Loman, whom Philip Seymour Hoffman portrays so effectively in director Mike Nichols’s steel-girded Broadway revival of “Death of a Salesman,” which officially...

7
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Theater review: 'Death of a Salesman' on Broadway

From: LA Times  |  By: CharlesMcNulty  |  Date: 3/15/2012

'Garfield plunges to the sea-floor bottom of this fractured father-son relationship and reveals unspeakable heartbreak throughout his perilous descent. Attention must be paid to such a performance, which not only supplies the production’s turbo-cha...

8
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Feeling the absence of an everyman in 'Death of a Salesman' on Broadway

From: Chicago Tribune  |  By: Chris Jones  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Garfield shows us a young man who is troubled, angered and deeply affected by the hypocritical rhetoric of his father. But he does not show us a young man who has gone out and failed. His visage is infused with articulate, attractive innocence; yet w...

9
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A deeply relevant 'Death of a Salesman' emerges

From: Associated Press  |  By: Mark Kennedy  |  Date: 3/15/2012

The still-vibrant, still-powerful story of Arthur Miller's Willy Loman returns to a nation now emerging from a Great Recession, awash with consumerism, disgusted by greed and where audience members are striving pointlessly to be 'well liked' on Faceb...

8
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'Death of a Salesman' still packs a punch

From: Newsday  |  By: Linda Winer  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Let's get this out of the way at the top. Philip Seymour Hoffman is too young and soft to be the standard-issue iconic Willy Loman chiseled on the Mount Rushmore of American drama. Andrew Garfield seems too delicate and sensitive to be the Biff we kn...

9
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Death of a Salesman: Theater Review

From: Hollywood Reporter  |  By: David Rooney  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Impeccably cast down to the smallest roles, with an ensemble led by Philip Seymour Hoffman, Linda Emond and Andrew Garfield, this emotionally wrenching production evokes the unmistakable atmosphere and attitudes of mid-century America while also putt...

7
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American Dreamer, Ambushed by the Territory

From: New York Times  |  By: Ben Brantley  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Emotional distance sprang, for me at least, from a feeling of disconnection between the leading actors (all, I would argue, miscast) and their characters. ... Mr. Hoffman, Ms. Emond and Mr. Garfield all bring exacting intelligence and intensity to th...

9
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Death of a Salesman

From: Variety  |  By: Marilyn Stasio  |  Date: 3/15/2012

It's a bit of a mystery why Nichols chose to cast the lithe and slender Garfield in a role that seems to call for more brute strength than athletic grace. The thesp is far better suited to his upcoming movie role as the new Peter Parker in 'The Amazi...

8
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It's very easy to buy into new 'Death of a Salesman' revival

From: USA Today  |  By: Elysa Gardner  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Garfield vividly traces Biff's evolution from a confident, charismatic teenager to a man crippled by his father's expectations and mistakes. The U.K.-bred actor's body language, spry and vigorous in youthful scenes, slackens; even his canny New York ...

9
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STAGE REVIEW Death of a Salesman

From: Entertainment Weekly  |  By: Thom Greier  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Compliments must be paid. Director Mike Nichols' stirring Death of a Salesman, running on Broadway through June 2, harbors no radical agenda, no modern glosses or reinterpretations of Arthur Miller's text. Instead, Nichols & Co. play it straight. And...

9
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A Smile, a Shoeshine and a Saint

From: Wall Street Journal  |  By: Terry Teachout  |  Date: 3/15/2012

Philip Seymour Hoffman, the star of Mike Nichols's revival of Arthur Miller's 'Death of a Salesman,' is following in the well-remembered footsteps of Lee J. Cobb, George C. Scott, Dustin Hoffman and Brian Dennehy, and it's a tribute to his talent tha...

9
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Philip Seymour Hoffman Leads Great ‘Salesman’ Revival

From: Bloomberg  |  By: Jeremy Gerard  |  Date: 3/15/2012

It’s uncommonly rare to watch a revival and suddenly attune yourself to the sound of weeping around you, the shaking of your hand as you take notes and, most important, to recognize that what you’re feeling must be very much like what audiences m...

Philip Seymour Hoffman doesn't look the part of the 63-year-old salesman at the end of his rope, but he's not afraid to play the character's unsympathetic traits and he's poignant when Willy uncharacteristically realizes he's furthering his own destr...

9
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Broadway review: 'Death of a Salesman'

From: Philadelphia Inquirer  |  By: Howard Shapiro  |  Date: 3/15/2012

What makes this production so powerful is the way Nichols draws clear characters from everyone - even the waiters in a late scene seem to have back-stories hidden somewhere in their portrayals. ... From its opening, when Willy returns abruptly from a...

Audience Reviews

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