Friday, October 25, 2019
Joe Keller in All My Sons Essay -- Arthur Miller
How to Make Joe Keller Look Bad KELLER: Say, I ainââ¬â¢t got time to get sick. MOTHER: He hasnââ¬â¢t been laid up in fifteen years. KELLER: Except my flu during the war. MOTHER: Huhh? KELLER: My flu, when I was sick duringâ⬠¦the war. MOTHER: Well, sureâ⬠¦(to George) I mean except for that flu. (George stands perfectly still) Well, it slipped my mind, donââ¬â¢t look at me that way. He wanted to go to the shop but he couldnââ¬â¢t lift himself off the bed. I thought he had pneumonia. GEORGE: Why did you say heââ¬â¢s never-? KELLER: I know how you feel, kid, Iââ¬â¢ll never forgive myself. If I couldââ¬â¢ve gone in that day Iââ¬â¢d never allow Dad to touch those heads. GEORGE: She said youââ¬â¢ve never been sick. MOTHER: I said he was sick, George. George: (going to Ann) Ann, didnââ¬â¢t you hear her say-? MOTHER: Do you remember every time you were sick? GEORGE: Iââ¬â¢d remember pneumonia. Especially if I got it just the day my partner was going to patch up cylinder headsâ⬠¦What happened that day, Joe? In the above lines, Arthur Miller pulls back the veil that has been hiding Joe Kellerââ¬â¢s past in All My Sons. Not only are these lines critical to the remainder of the playââ¬â¢s events, but many of the characters also switch emotions almost instantly. With the significance and delicateness of these lines at stake, a director has the responsibility of conveying the language to the audience with only a few pre-existing stage directions as aid. One major way to convey these lines is to remain consistent with how he/she is portraying each character to make them still feel convincing to the audience. If directed effectively, Joe Kellerââ¬â¢s departure from all prior characterization will be even more noticeable. In addition to other possibilities, the... ...l be no happy ending. The chaos George brought into Act II will only magnify after this speech. This section is in essence, the loss of stability in the Keller family. Keller is reduced to a shell of his former self as the audience takes on the beliefs of Chris through the remainder of the play. This scene will hopefully result in frustration towards Keller so that his ââ¬Å"Youââ¬â¢re a boy, what could I do!â⬠(Miller 2.646) speech does not merit much pity. We realize that although Keller was misunderstood, he lived a lie too long. At the playââ¬â¢s end, this scene acted from my viewpoint should give the audience the feeling that even though Kellerââ¬â¢s suicide is tragic, it is these lines that killed him. Works Cited Richardson, Gary A. and Stephen Watt, eds. American Drama: Colonial to Contemporary. Cambridge. MA: Heinle & Heinle Publishers, 2003.
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