"DEATH OF A SALESMAN'S" WILLY LOMAN AND "FENCES'S" TROY MAXSON: PURSUERS OF THE ELUSIVE AMERICAN DREAM Author(s): James E. Walton Source: CLA Journal , SEPTEMBER 2003, Vol. 47, No. 1 (SEPTEMBER 2003), pp. 55-65 Published by: College Language Association Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/44325193 JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to CLA Journal This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms DEATH OF A SALESMAN S WILLY LOMAN AND FENCES' S TROY MAXSON: PURSUERS OF THE ELUSIVE AMERICAN DREAM By James E. Walton Arthur Miller, according to a recent poll taken by the Royal National Theatre, is the world's greatest contemporary playwright. His Death of a Salesman has sold nearly eleven million copies worldwide. It is said that Death of a Salesman is staged somewhere in the world just about every single day of the year, making it arguably one of the most successful of all modern plays and establishing Willy Loman, its central character, as the quintessential American loser who fell short of his dreams (Lahr 2). Miller himself is the recipient of numerous awards, in- cluding the Olivier Award for Best Play and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award. In 1949, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Death of a Salesman. Writing his first play (1981) a little over three decades after Miller's crowning achievement, August Wilson has also been the recipient of numerous literary awards, in- cluding six New York Drama Critics Circle Best Play Awards, a Tony Award, and, of course, two Pulitzer Prizes. Unique among African American playwrights, Wilson, we are told, is able to support himself entirely from his earnings as a playwright and occasional lecturer. No other African American playwright has ever had two plays running simultaneously on Broadway. Fences and Joe Turner were both running in New York at the same time in the 1980s. Arthur Miller and August Wilson are two hugely successful playwrights with similarities that appear unending: as youngsters growing up among a number of siblings, neither was particularly accomplished in the 55 This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 56 James E. Walton classroom, Miller attending a s ing grades too low for him to the college of his choice, the U thur Miller had to write a letter to the president and make a special request in order to gain admission. He proved himself as a student and was allowed to stay. August Wilson attended a school in a poor section of Pittsburgh called "the Hill," and as is widely known, he quit school at age fifteen following unsubstantiated charges of plagiarism from a history teacher. He largely educated himself by reading books on literature and culture. Both Miller and Wilson have produced a series of wellreceived plays: All My Sons, The Crucible, After the Fall, and Incident at Vichy for Miller; The Piano Lesson, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, Two Trains Running and Seven Guitars for Wilson. Both Miller and Wilson are followers of baseball, and both acknowledge the influence of poetry on their work. "I prize the poetic above all in the theatre," says Arthur Miller. "Miller's plays move toward po- etry," writes Harold Clurman, one of Miller's editors. "Like a poet," Clurman adds, "Miller aims to elicit an emotional response in the reader. He wants to impart more than simply factual or concrete information. There is an intensity in Miller's work that approaches the level of intensity found only in good poetry" (Bigsby xxi). Speaking of the influence of poetry on his plays, Au- gust Wilson related that poetry is "the bedrock of my writing . . . not so much in the language as in the approach and the thinking. . . . The idea of metaphor is a very large idea in my plays and something that I find lacking in most contemporary plays. I think I write the kinds of plays that I do because I have twenty-six years of writing poetry underneath all of that" (qtd. in Donal- son 469). The similarities do not end there. Both Arthur Miller and August Wilson were sired by Anglo fathers, both have had a number of marriages, and This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Death of a Salesman and Fences 57 both write plays that might be deemed, in part, to be tobiographical. Miller has become an international pr ence, turning out works on Russia and China and mee ing with dissident writers and politicians around the world. August Wilson reaches a wide audience through his works and has taken on the ambitious task of writing a play about African American life that will be set in each decade of the twentieth century. Not surprisingly, at least to this writer, the protagonist in Miller's Death of a Salesman, Willy Loman, and the protagonist in Wilson's Fences, Troy Maxson, likewise have some intriguing similarities. Both Willy Loman and Troy Maxson are common men, ordinary men - not men of significance or nobility in the Aristotelian sense of a tragic hero. In Shakespearean times, protagonists were rulers, kings, folks of distinction. The ancient concept favored as tragic heroes individuals who were better than ordinary folks. Willy Loman and Troy Maxson are not of that order. They could be the neighbor, the friend, the fellow down the street. Yet both are eminently qualified to be tragic he- roes, should we care to make the case. Willy Loman and Troy Maxson are both in pursuit of the elusive American dream. Material goods, for many the essence of the American dream, take on importance for both protagonists. For Willy Loman, it is the refriger- ator, the car, and the house. He struggles to keep up with the payments, borrowing money at times. His wife, Linda, informs us during the requiem that she has made the final payment on the house on the same day that Willy Loman is buried. Earning a good living and gaining a practical education has great value for Troy Maxson. He advises his son Cory: You go on and get your book-learning so you can work yourself up in that A&P or learn how to fix cars or build houses or something, get you a trade. That way you have something This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 58 James E. Walton can't nobody take away from you. You put your hands to some good use. garbage. (Wilson 35) Linda Loman, the ever protect solicitious wife to Willy, is cle times charming, other times w held fully accountable for his Willy is lovingly viewed as "on a harbor" (Bigsby 76). Rose Max might be labeled with the same checkerboard past with men, R Troy, told herself, "Here is a m empty spaces you been tipping Both Linda and Rose carefully igmatic behavior of the father havior of the sons, in turn, to Willy Loman has a son, Biff, school football player with hope sity of Virginia. He never ma son, Cory, a good football playe play football in North Carolin Birnbaum's math tests stop Biff a second job and Troy's lack of dreams of playing college footb Both Willy Loman and Troy M their long-suffering wives, suc of The Other Woman. The fath troubles the sons. Biff Loman ther in the act when he, withou father at the hotel in Boston w Disillusioned by it all, Biff is n his two-timing father is a "fake grip and is never able to exec seems to lose his confidence. H and is never able to hold on to is still looking to find himsel disgrace. This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Death of a Salesman and Fences 59 After Cory learns of his father's infidelity with Alberta the Florida gal with "them great big old legs and hips wide as the Mississippi River," Cory harshly tells Troy "You don't count around here anymore" (78); and, later, don't know how she (Rose) stand you . . . after what y did to her" (87). Cory's expression of outrage and defian quickly escalates to the point where he grabs a base bat and engages in an almost fight-to-the-death encou ter with his father. A barrier, a fence, has now forev been created between father and son. Cory enters the military. In both plays, Death of a Salesman and Fences, both main characters, Willy Loman and Troy Maxson, die before the play ends. Given all of the apparent similarities between the two authors, Arthur Miller and Troy Maxson, and with their two major protagonists seemingly set on parallel courses, one might reasonably conclude that Willy Loman and Troy Maxson are identical characters, two equally unfortunate blokes who, in an otherwise egalitarian society, simply fell through the proverbial crack. Nothing could be further from the truth. In his fifty-three years, to paraphrase Malcolm, Troy Maxson caught more hell every day of his life than Willy Loman ever saw. Appropriating the famous words of Linda Loman, attention must be paid. Attention must be paid to the glaring differences between Willy Loman and Troy Maxson. True, Willy Loman, in his early 60s, finds himself without a job and alienated from his sons. Still, his lot differs markedly from Troy's. For starters, Willy Loman was a descendent of what August Wilson describes in the opening of Fences as the "destitute of Europe." His ancestors were "devoured" by the city. They found immediate welcome and acceptance. "They swelled its belly until it burst into a thousand furnaces and sewing machines, a thousand butcher shops This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 60 James E. Walton and baker's ovens, a thousan and funeral parlors and mone grants of Europe, a dream dar No such silver spoon was ex sented one of "the descendents of African slaves (who) were offered no such welcome or participation. . . . They cleaned houses and washed clothes, they shined shoes, and in quiet desperation and vengeful pride, they stole, and lived in pursuit of their own dreams. That they could breathe free, finally, and stand to meet life with the force of dignity and whatever eloquence the heart could call upon" (introduction to Fences). At an early age, Troy Maxson was abandoned by his mother, who had eleven children but could not take any more of her evil husband, Troy's father. She stole away in the dead of the night and was never seen since. Troy was virtually chased from home by the same evil man and, in time, was reduced to robbing for food. Additionally, Troy Maxson was an ex-con, had spent fifteen years in prison for involuntarily taking a man's life. A star baseball player, he had been relegated to a lower realm, the segregated Negro Leagues. Troy can only acquire a home by "swooping" down on the three thousand dollars given to his sweet but mentally challenged brother, Gabriel, by the U.S. Government for getting half of his head blown away fighting the Japanese during WWII. Attention must be paid. Willy Loman was a salesman; we never learn exactly what he sold, but he sold something. He did enjoy a professional career traveling up and down the eastern seaboard states, often ending up in Boston or New York. A salesman, said Willy, is "the greatest career a man could want" (81). In an interview with Nathan L. Grant on the topic of African American speech, interestingly enough, August Wilson offered a chance opinion on Death of a Salesman and the advisability of a Troy Maxson becoming a sales- This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Death of a Salesman and Fences 61 man: "A black man as a salesman might be lynched! It' not a job you could easily do. Say you're setting a few e velopes at a store. Knock at the door, walk into that store, and the man at the door says, yeah, boy, go around to the back. It's ludicrous to try to do that kind of work. Blacks speak differently, think differently; they respond to stimuli differently" (Grant 10). Troy Maxson did not even have a driver's license. He worked on a garbage truck, one where they had "the white mens driving and the colored lifting." Slaving as a garbage collector, for Troy, certainly is not "the greatest career a man could want." Troy has to file an official complaint to be even considered for a plum job like driver, an officiai complaint that seems to be headed nowhere, because he will have to pass a written test first, and he has not yet learned to read. Willy Loman never faced such overwhelming obstacles. For all of his setbacks and shortcomings, he never had to walk those mean streets, never had such a tough row to hoe. Charley, Willy Loman's good friend, is il way s there to lend Willy Loman money if he needs it. He even offers Willy a well-paying job when Willy is dumped as a salesman. Only pride stops Willy from taking Charlie's offer. There is no good friend Charlie with a back-up job offer for Troy Maxson. No such safety net exists in ids world. The amazing triumph of Troy Maxson, tragic flaws and all, is that on an existential level, for him also a dream was dared and won true. Ironically enough, none other than playwright Arthur Miller, creator of Willy Loman, provides us with a basis for completing our understanding of indomitable Troy Maxson. In his time-honored es- say "Tragedy and the Common Man," Miller gives us a working definition of that classical concept known as the "tragic flaw." He makes it clear that the possessor of a tragic flaw need not be someone of great stature or high character, as was previously maintained. Miller goes on to say of the tragic flaw: This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 62 James E. Walton Nor is it necessarily a weakness. The ter, is really nothing - and need be no unwillingness to remain passive in t ceives to be a challenge to his dignity, ful status. Only the passive, only th without active retaliation, are "flaw that category, (qtd. in Kennedy 1726 What an apt way to describe rounding Troy Maxson. Though in his universe - his employer eroded athletic prowess - he re not "accept his ... lot without for all that he has encountered he made it to Mobile (he claims he walked the two hun- dred miles), after having been chased from home by his evil father, camped out under the Bay Street Bridge, and did what he had to do in order to support his first wife and young son. He would not accept his lot. A champion baseball player in a league where only the ball was white, he once hit seven home runs off the great Satchel Paige. He knew the greatest home run hitter of them all, Josh Gibson. Current stars like Warren Spahn, Hank Aaron, and Wes Covington were of no consequence to Troy Maxson. When Cory and Rose try to tell Troy that times have changed and that he is too old to play in the major leagues, Troy will not be quieted. He is unwilling to remain passive. He asserts "his image of his rightful status": Hank Aaron ain't nobody. That's what you supposed to do. That's how you supposed to play the game. Ain't nothing to it. It's just a matter of timing . . . getting the right follow- through. Hell, I can hit forty-three home runs now! (34) One could not tell Troy that age is the chief reason he could not play baseball in the major leagues. What do you mean too old? Don't come telling me I was too old. I just wasn't the right color. Hell, I'm fifty-three years old and can do better than Selkirk's .269 right now! (39) This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Death of a Salesman and Fences 63 Playing baseball brought Troy Maxson no financial curity. Despite his high level of talent, there was no figure salary. No managerial position awaiting him up retirement. No retirement package. No shoe contract. Even Josh Gibson, with over seventy home runs in one season, did not find any measure of financial security. What Arthur Miller calls a "tragic flaw" is Troy's active retaliation against a system that denied him his place, his rightful status. That same system will not be permitted to exploit the talents of his athletic son Cory and then leave him jobless and penniless. Cory will not play high school football unless he can carry out all of his chores, including helping with the building of that fence and keep up with that job at the A&P. Troy's unwillingness to be passive and his active retaliation do not stop there. The athletic world will not have the option of doing to the son what it had done to the father. Withholding Cory and his talented contribution to the arena of sports could be seen as Troy's means of active retaliation, a revolutionary act. As noted, promotion to the elite job of driver on the garbage truck requires a driver's license. His dedicates himself to the task and manages to earn his driver's license. His values might not always be governed by the accountant's bottom line, but he does hold to his sense of values - shopping with those merchants who might be a little more expensive but who treated him right in his time of need, and laboring to care for his family, the "inside" and "outside" children in his family, because it is his responsibility and his responsibility alone. In the most poignant of all scenes, late one evening we witness a somewhat ungainly Troy Maxson paintakingsly entering the yard carrying a precious bundle, his young "outside" baby, Raynelle. The mother, Alberta, we know, has died in the hospital a few days earlier. It all becomes clear now. Instead of spending his time at the Taylor's listening to the ballgame, Troy has found other pastimes. This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 64 James E. Walton His best buddy, Bono, looked t He had cautioned Troy several on Rose, because he dearly loved both Troy and Rose. Bono's worse suspicions have proved true. Troy has been doing more than just eyeing Alberta, more than just buying her a drink or two. Troy Maxson has committed the unforgivable. He has, sadly, wronged the beautiful Rose. The durable pinewood fence that Rose wanted to keep her family in, to keep them protected, was not constructed in time. And, still, Troy will not duck the responsibility of his shameful action: Rose . . . I'm standing here with my daughter in my arms. She ain't but a wee bittie little old thing. She don't know nothing about grownups' business. She innocent . . . and she ain't got no mama. (78) When Rose initially turns from Troy and goes inside, he stays with his game plan as he sits on the porch and coos to a smiling little baby. Next he tries his hand at singing a heart-wrenching song about a scared, lonesome traveler without a ticket who is pleading with the engineer to give him a ride aboard the passing train. The imagery is striking. Rose comes to the door again, this time more receptive. We feel no sympathy for Troy, who had earlier described his eighteen years of marriage to Rose as standing "on first base for eighteen years." His philandering with Alberta was his way, he told her, of trying "to steal second." Troy deserves no sympathy. He lets Rose know his view. "I ain't sorry for nothing I done. It felt right in my heart" (79) In this brief, touching scene, remorseless Troy Maxson does achieve his goal of appealing to his heartbroken wife to help him raise his infant daughter. Rose declares that from now on Troy will be a "womanless man," but she does agree to become a new mother. The inning was late, the game was in doubt, but baseball-oriented Troy, with This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Death of a Salesman and Fences 65 his plaintive appeal, has scored another one, has hit other one over the fence. And when the universe bellows out to Troy Maxson, "Who art thou that I might be mindful of thee?" Troy Maxson rises to his full height and roars back, "I ... I am a man, damnit!" And when a man takes on the might of the universe and is found wanting - as mere man always will be found - then man, in the form of Troy Maxson, can take comfort in the knowledge that he did, in fact, step up to the plate, that he was unwilling to remain passive and accept his lot, that he did not stand with the bat on his shoulders and take the called third strike. Troy Maxson went down swinging at the universe. In so doing, for Troy Maxson the proud act of asserting his will, the proud act of asserting his humanity was, for him, a dream dared and won true. And Gabriel says emphatically, " That's the way that go!" Works Cited Bigsby, Charles, ed. The Portable Arthur Miller. Introduction to the Original Edition. By Harold Clurman. New York: Penguin, 1995. Donalson, Melvin, ed. Cornerstones : An Anthology of African American Litera ture. New York: St Martin's, 1966. Grant, Nathan L. "Men, Women, and Culture: A Conversation with August Wilson." <http://jazz.san.uc.edu/www/amdrama/wilsonint.html> Kennedy, X. J., and Dana Gioia. Literature: An Introduction to Fiction , Poetry , and Drama. 6th ed. New York: HarperCollins, 1995. Lahr, John. "Making Willy Loman." <http://www.deathofasalesman.com/lahrnyer-willy.htm> Wilson, August. Fences. New York: Penguin, 1985. (All references in the paper are to this text.) California State University, Fresno Fresno, California This content downloaded from 83.54.244.2 on Wed, 26 May 2021 17:50:54 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms