The Man Who Had All the Luck
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The Man Who Had All the Luck (1944) was an early play by Arthur Miller. The play premiered in New York City, but closed after just three days and four performances. It remained a relatively unknown play for over half a century. Director Dan Fields entered into discussions with Miller about the possibility of a revival. The play was finally revived in 2000 in a Los Angeles production directed by Fields and again in New York City in 2002 under the direction of Scott Ellis.
The Works of Arthur Miller |
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Plays |
Honors at Dawn | The Man Who Had All the Luck | All My Sons | Death of a Salesman | An Enemy of the People | The Crucible | A View From the Bridge | Incident At Vichy | The Price | In Russian | The Creation of the World and Other Business | The American Clock | A Memory of Two Mondays | Up from Paradise | The Archbishop's Ceiling | The Last Yankee | Everybody Wins | The Ride Down Mt. Morgan | Broken Glass | Mr. Peters' Connections | Resurrection Blues | Finishing the Picture |
Other works |
Focus | "The Misfits" (short story) | I Don't Need You Anymore (short stories)| Homely Girl: A Life (three short stories) | Timebends (autobiography) | On Politics and the Art of Acting (speech) |