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"There are no second acts in American lives," wrote F. Scott Fitzgerald, which is often true but also often not. Two of America's premiere post World War II playwrights, Arthur Miller and Edward Albee, despite periods of audience neglect and critical dismissal after their initial great successes, have both enjoyed celebratory second acts late in their careers. The elder Miller, in particular, has been elevated to the de facto status of national cultural treasure, as his major plays enjoy significant revival here and abroad (the recent revival of The Crucible being his latest success), and his cultural pronouncements resonate in a wide public arena.
New York, July 12, 2002
- Gerald Rabkin