Arthur Miller °B T TIEG Nue @sQue he University of Michigan hopes by the end of this year it will be ready to unveil its Arthur Miller 'I heater. While final plans will not be ready until the spring, shortly after Death of a Salesman marks its 50th anniversary on Broadway, Lee Bollinger proposed the creation of the theater when he took the reins as U-M president in 1997. "When Lee Bollinger came here, one of his strong initiatives was to recognize some of the great past fi b- tires at the university and capture our history," says Anne Knott, spe- cial counsel to the president In particular, he wanted to cap- ture the very strong connection the university has with Arthur Miller and, at the same time, seize an opportunity to fill a need in the community, which is [a place for fine theater. "The Arthur Miller Theater may be modeled after the University Musical Society, which brings out- standing musical events to town." A faculty advisory committee has been meeting to help define the pro- gram for the theater. However, whether there will be student produc- tions and who will be appointed artis- tic director is yet to be determined. What is certain is that the Arthur Miller Theater will be intimate, seat- ing some 300-400, similar to the Cottesloe Theater, which is a part of the National Theater in London. "But even after plans are final- ized, there will be a lot of flexibili- ty," adds Knott. "Although you need to have a good idea of what you want to achieve in order to recruit the appropriate people, you don't want it to be so detailed in its description that you foreclose on creative talent, opportunities and personalities that might take things in very exciting directions. And even after it's developed, there will be room for change." Arthur Miller Although at the University the location of Michigan. has not yet The playwright is been deter- scheduled to return mined, Robert to Ann Arbor in October for a Kasdan, U-M executive vice public symposium. 2/5 1999 president and chief financial officer, says the university is seriously explor- ing a number of sites both on and off campus. "We hope that within the next few months, a decision will be made," he says. "If it's a place that we are rehabil- itating, it will be ready a lot sooner than if it's a place that we are devel- oping from the ground up." Miller has been asked to lend his name to other theaters around the country, but the playwright only agreed to one — in Ann Arbor. "Miller said it never seemed right before," says Knott. "We are all very excited to have Arthur's support and interest." In the meantime, President Lee Bollinger is looking forward to the day the theater can be officially ded- icated. to one of the university's most famous alumni. "Arthur Miller is by common agreement one of the greatest play- wrights of the century; and, by his own account, he began his remark- able career while a student at the University of Michigan," he says. "To start to realize your potential is a basic goal of education. To place before students, therefore, the exam- ple of Arthur Miller is an opportunity not to be missed. And, not insignifi- candy, we need a theater, too." — Alice Burdick Schweiger Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller on the set of "The Misfits," 1960. English and editor of the Michigan Quarterly Review. While at Michigan, Miller became part of the editorial staff at the Michigan Daily. "One of the first pieces he wrote challenged Nazi rhetoric," says Enoch Brater. "It was a time when certain Michigan politicians were flirting with Hitler, and Miller wanted to challenge them." At the time, Miller lived at 411 N. State St. in a house owned by the Doll family. During spring break in his sophomore year, he stayed in Ann Arbor to work on his first play. He finished the play in five days and asked Jim Doll, one of the Doll family sons, to read the play and give his can- did reaction. Doll had the room across from Miller's. "Finally his door opened, and he came across the corridor into my room and handed me the manuscript," Miller writes in his autobiography. "Aesthetic pleasure makes people vul- nerable, and Jim's long, bony face was like a child's now. ... 'It's a play, all right. It really is!' he laughed with a naivete I had not seen in him before. `...I think it's the best student play I've ever read.' Something like love shone in his face, something, incredibly enough, like gratitude. "Outside, Ann Arbor was empty, still in the spell of spring vacation. I wanted to walk in the night, but it was impossible to keep from trotting. My thighs were as hard and strong as iron bars. I ran uphill to the deserted center of town, across from the Law Quadrangle and down North University, my head in the stars. I had -` made Jim laugh and look at me as he never had before. "The magical force of making marks on a piece of paper and reach- ing into another human being, mak- ing him see what I had seen and feel my feelings — I had made a new shadow on the earth."