Radio Show
What Now?: 1949 - Arthur Miller's 'Death of a Salesman' First Produced


Recorded live at AS220 on May 6th 2009

1949 - Arthur Miller's 'Death of a Salesman' First Produced

What does it mean to 'fail' in America? Have we failed or has the 'American Dream' proven to be hollow? Is there an alternative?

Miller Death of A Salesman 2 500.jpg PANELISTS:

Kym Moore is currently the Gerard Visiting Assistant Professor of Theatre, Speech and Dance at Brown University where she teaches acting and directing. Moore has previously taught at Swarthmore, Hampshire, Sarah Lawrence and The Conservatory of Theatre Arts and Film at SUNY Purchase. She has guest directed at Notre Dame University, Smith, Swarthmore, and Dartmouth. Moore is a multidisciplinary stage director, writer, and producer. She is an associate member of the Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers, and the Lincoln Center Theater Director's Lab. As the founding director of Frogs on the Water Theatre in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Kym Moore has produced a number of plays, formed community outreach programs, and experimented with theatrical form by way of her unique performance style combining fine art, film, dance and theatre.

Monica Teixeira de Sousa teaches about Education Law, Education and Class Mobility, Family Law, and Property. She researches and writes extensively on issues of equity and education. Before joining the New England Law Boston faculty in 2007, she was a staff attorney at Rhode Island Legal Services. Teixeira de Sousa also taught for two years as an adjunct faculty member at Roger Williams University School of Law and served as a trainer for the Legal Services Training Consortium of New England. She has worked extensively with the Rhode Island College Upward Bound Program, from which she graduated in 1994, and is one of the founders and co-chair of the Education Justice Council of Rhode Island.

Scott A. Sandage, Ph.D. is a cultural historian and Associate Professor at Carnegie Mellon University. Sandage has been a consultant to the Smithsonian Institution, the National Archives, the National Park Service and a number of film and radio documentaries. His commentaries have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Industry Standard, and Fast Company Magazine, among others. He contributed an essay on loserdom to the catalog of the 2004 Whitney Biennial Exhibition. His book, Born Losers: A History of Failure in America (Harvard University Press 2005) is a study on how the mid-19th century saw a cultural redefinition of failure as a word that could summarize a whole human life.

Jim Rubens a successful entrepreneur and venture capitalist is the author of OverSuccess: Healing the American Obsession with Wealth, Fame, Power, and Perfection (Greenleaf Press, 2009). From 1994-1998 Rubens served as a term as a New Hampshire State Senator and the Chairman of the Education Committee. Rubens book, OverSuccess, explores the how and why our innate ambition has become unhinged from our capabilities, and our healthy and necessary status-seeking has turned into a pathology.

P.O.V. Made In LA
This relevant documentary was aired on RIPBS as part of Action Speaks' programming during the Spring 2009 recording season.

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