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133 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1947
CHRIS: The cats in that alley are practical, the bums who ran away when we were fighting were practical. Only the dead ones weren't practical.
CHRIS: It takes a little time to toss that off. Because they weren't just men. For instance, one time it'd been raining several days and this kid came to me, and gave me his last pair of dry socks. Put them in my pocket. That's only a little thing... but... that's the kind of guys I had. They didn't die; they killed themselves for each other. I mean that exactly; a little more selfish and they'd've been here today. And I got an idea—watching them go down. Everything was being destroyed, see, but it seemed to me that one new thing was made. A kind of... responsibility. Man for man. You understand me?—To show that, to bring that on to the earth again like some kind of a monument and everyone would feel it standing there, behind him, and it would make a difference to him.
JIM: Oh, no, he'll come back. We all come back, Kate. These private little revolutions always die. The compromise is always made. In a peculiar way. Frank is right—every man does have a star. The star of one's honesty. And you spend your life groping for it, but once it's out it never lights again.
MOTHER [going upstage with him]: You don't realise how people can hate, Chris, they can hate so much they'll tear the world to pieces...
╰✎ i honestly prefer this over death of a salesman, i liked the characters more but why was the ending literally copy and paste of that book…c’mon arthur miller (also this play is where 21 pilots got their band name from which is surprising that they chose it from something so sad)
The Fairway Players
All My Sons by Arthur Miller
Cast List
Kate Keller played by Helen Grace-Hayward
Joe Keller played by John O'Dea
Dr. Jim Bayliss played by Kevin MacDonald
Frank Lubey played by Kel Greenwood
Sue Bayliss played by Sam Greenwood
Lydia Lubey played by Paige Reswick
Chris Keller played by Barry Walford
Bert played by Harley MacDonald
Ann Deever played by Sarah-Jane MacDonald
George Deever played by Nick Walford - excerpt from pg. 9 in The Appeal