12 -- The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 27, 2000 FRIDAY Focus By Anna Clark and Gina Hamadey Daily Staff Reporters A CONVERSATION WITH ARTHUR MILLER amed American playwright Arthur Miller lived on North State Street in the 1930s. Not far from that site will rise a theater bearing the University alum's name. As one of the greatest writers of the 20th Century, the University hopes his, legend will live on, enriching campus drama, THE MICHIGAN DAILY'S GINA HAMADEY HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO SPEAK TO ARTHUR MILLER VIA TELEPHONE WEDNESDAY EVENING AS HE RECOVERED FROM A RECENT RIB INJURY. The Michigan Daily: When was the last time you were in Ann Arbor? Arthur Miller: A couple of years now. I gave an award to a young playwright. I watched some theater work there at that time. TMD: Anything good? Miller: Yeah, it was some interesting stuff TMD: What are some of your favorite things about Ann Arbor? Miller: Well, of course when I went to school it was a different place than it is now. But I liked it a lot because it was a very democratic school. Particularly because they let me in. And the atmosphere was very open and I found it a place where I could develop myself and learn what I was interested in learning. They were very inter- ested in writing at that time. It was about the only school that I knew of, and I think it still is, where creative writing was important. That was a very unusual thing at that time. Probably much less so now, but at that time it was unheard of. I could hang out with people who wanted to write and teachers who were interested in writing. That meant a lot to me. TMD: What about socially, did you go out a lot? Miller: Well I was working so much of the time, I had two jobs, but I had plenty of friends and a lot discussions about everything that was going on at the time. And I had a girlfriend whom I later married. So it was a very active and useful time for me. I associated all that with Ann Arbor. What about you? TMD: I think I'm pretty social; I try to bal- ance it all. So what were your favorite things about working for the Daily? Did you work on anything really interesting? Miller: When I worked for the Daily I did just general reporting, and I was a night editor for awhile. And I got to write some stories about all sorts of stuff. There was one professor there who developed a way of analyzing the intake of peo- ple so they could find out what they could eat and lose a lot of fat. I wrote the story that he was inundated with fat ladies. He regretted ever talk- ing to me. And the New Deal, so called, was in motion then. And Ann Arbor had a lot of experts in a lot of subjects that the new legislation dealt with. So there was all kinds of interviews about the legali- ty of all sorts of stuff about what went through Congress. Because they were changing the fun- damental laws of the United States. And there was also a lot of demonstrating going on, about the invasion by Japan of China, which everybody has forgotten about. But it was very important then. And one or two Chinese guys came and spoke and there were a number of Japanese students, so there was a lot of conflict. Another one was the Spanish Civil War, which a couple of students I knew went to and got' killed. It was a very politically important time in American history, in world history, because it was leading up to the second world war, and there was a lot of convictions on both sides of a lot of issues for the Daily to write about. TMD: About the symposium, was there any- one you were looking forward to seeing? Miller: I don't know many of the people there anymore, except Prof. Enoch Brater. And I expect to be talking to him on the hook-up tomorrow. If the hook-up works, which I pre- sume it will. So you'll see me then. TMD: He has a lot of nice things to say abou't you. Miller: Well, good! TMD: Have you visited the Daily lately? Miller: I did one other time. Actually, I think in my autobiography called "Timebends," which you can probably get at the library, there is a lit- tle piece about my revisiting the Daily in the '50s, which was about 15 years after I graduated and what I discovered then. You ought to look it up. There's an index, and you can easily find it. TMD: I just saw "Timebends" today, because I was buying your new book, "Echoes Down the Corridor." It looks good. Miller: There is some interesting stuff in there, I think. TMD: There are a lot of political essays, right? Miller: Well, there's all sorts of stuff. There are essays about the theater and about, oh, all sorts of issues and parts of life. It's not only political. TMD: What about the Arthur Miller Theater, are you excited to have that put up'? - Miller: I'm just so happy about that. That's one of the main reasons I wanted to be there. But 1 expect there will be another occasion where I can come and see about that. I hope it all pans out all right. 0 0 tragedy and comedy. More than just a building, theater will strengthen 'U' Dozens of American colleges and per- forming arts centers have asked him for per- mission to name theaters and buildings in his honor. He denied every one - except the University of Michigan. With a brief postcard mailed to University President Lee Bollinger, world-renowned playwright and cultural icon Arthur Miller casually approved the naming of the Arthur Miller Theater at his alma mater. "He was delighted to accept," said Joanne Nesbitt, University spokeswoman. More than 60 years after Miller left Ann Arbor, the University is planning the develop- ment and construction of the 600-seat theater, which will be the heart of the new Walgreen Drama Center that will be built adjacent to the Power Center for the Performing Arts. The theater is one of many ways the Uni- versity maintains ties to one of its most dis- tinguished alumni - the Brooklyn boy who arrived on campus in 1934 and left four years later with two Hopwood writing awards and lofty ambitions of success on the stage. Two months later, he was on gov- ernment "relief," as he called it in his recent book of essays, "Echoes Down the Corri- dor." Ten years later, he won the Pulitzer Miler "she Prize for his most , famous play, "Death the Univer of a Salesman." Besides continued be aboiut writing success, Miller made headlines for his of nurturin personal life and polit- ical opinions. Notably, he refused to cooper-_ ate with the govern- ment during the House University reg Committee on Un- American Activities hearings,-and he made actress Marilyn Monroe his second wife. alumni in University viewbooks. He is studied in the classroom and performed on the stage. Currently, students in the senior seminar English 417: "The Stages of Arthur Miller" are pouring over Miller's plays, including "After the Fall" and "The Crucible." Meanwhile the Department of Theater and Drama is per- forming their final, sell-out performance of Miller's "A View from the Bridge" tonight at the Trueblood Theater. Fredricksen also said Miller inspired the annual Festival of New Works, devoted to giv- ing burgeoning playwrights and scriptwriters the opportunity to perform their work. "He helped launch it, actually," Fredrick- sen said, adding that Miller came to campus for the first festival two summers ago. This week's Arthur Miller Symposium, honoring the playwright's 85th birthday, should help display how Miller and the Uni- versity have influenced each other, said Uni- versity regent Olivia Maynard (D-Goodrich). "He's done so much that it's hard to put into words," Maynard said. "He shows what the University can be about in terms of nur- turing the best in people:" WS what While Maynard said his name may especially ity can attract students interested in theater, the Universi- Sterms ty's Department of The- ater and Drama can't ride ,the on his fame. s3 "People will look at that pie= but they'll want to see what Olivia Maynard we're doing today," she said. Music Prof. Wendy it (D-Goodrich) Hammond, coordinator of the University's dramatic writing program, said Miller's influence could strengthen and stimulate the community's 01 A FJr FILE PHOTOI American playwright Arthur Miller, a University alum, is best known "The Crucible," seen here in a 1999 University musical theater performance. "It was a dream, Strassel said. "The great- est gift you can give an actor is good writing. Miller is a great playwright in that he goes directly to the meat of the drama. There's not a lot of time wasted on exposition:" But, Hammond added, Miller's association with the University humanizes him and stu- dents are reminded that "he's just a man and they too could be masters." In an essay titled "University of Michigan," written in 1953 and recently reprinted in the collected essays of "Echoes Down the Corri- dor," Miller wrote about how the University like the University of Michigan should be great in a lot of different ways. Athletics are one way but I'd quickly add that the arts should have equal prominence because they have equal importance." The Arthur Miller Theater, expected to be ready for use in about two years, has different meaning for different people. Bollinger said in a press release that he hoped the theater would remind students that "they might find their talent, whatever it may be." "This is vital to what we are as a communi- ty," Bollinger added. A