The New Yorker, October 21, 1996
Why I Wrote The Crucible: An Artist's Answer to Politics
By Arthur Miller
As I watched The Crucible taking shape as a movie over much of the past
year, the sheer depth of time that it represents for me kept returning to mind.
As those powerful actors blossomed on the screen, and the children and the
horses, the crowds and the wagons, I thought again about how I came to cook all
this up nearly fifty years ago, in an America almost nobody I know seems to
remember clearly. In a way, there is a biting irony in this film's having been
made by a Hollywood studio, something unimaginable in the fifties. But there
they are -- Daniel Day-Lewis (John Proctor) scything his sea-bordered field,
Joan Allen (Elizabeth) lying pregnant in the frigid jail, Winona Ryder
(Abigail) stealing her minister-uncle's money, majestic Paul Scofield (Judge
Danforth) and his righteous empathy with the Devil-possessed children, and all
of them looking as inevitable as rain.
I remember those years -- they formed The Crucible's skeleton -- but I have
lost the dead weight of the fear I had then. Fear doesn't travel well; just as
it can warp judgment, its absence can diminish memory's truth. What terrifies
one generation is likely to bring only a puzzled smile to the next. I remember
how in 1964, only twenty years after the war, Harold Clurman, the director of
Incident at Vichy, showed the cast a film of a Hitler speech, hoping to give
them a sense of the Nazi period in which my play took place. They watched as
Hitler, facing a vast stadium full of adoring people, went up on his toes in
ecstasy, hands clasped under his chin, a sublimely self-gratified grin on his
face, his body swivelling rather cutely, and they giggled at his overacting.
Likewise, films of Senator Joseph McCarthy are rather unsettling -- if you
remember the fear he once spread. Buzzing his truculent sidewalk brawler's
snarl through the hairs in his nose, squinting through his cat's eyes and
sneering like a villain, he comes across now as nearly comical, a self-aware
performer keeping a straight face as he does his juicy threat-shtick.
McCarthy's power to stir fears of creeping Communism was not entirely based on
illusion, of course; the paranoid, real or pretended, always secretes its pearl
around a grain of fact. From being our wartime ally, the Soviet Union rapidly
became a expanding empire. In 1949, Mao Zedong took power in China. Western
Europe also seemed ready to become Red -- especially Italy, where the Communist
Party was the largest outside Russia, and was growing. Capitalism, in the
opinion of many, myself included, had nothing more to say, its final poisoned
bloom having been Italian and German Fascism. McCarthy -- brash and
ill-mannered but to many authentic and true -- boiled it all down to what
anyone could understand: we had "lost China" and would soon lose Europe as
well, because the State Department -- staffed, of course, under Democratic
Presidents -- was full of treasonous pro-Soviet intellectuals. It was as simple as
that.
If our losing China seemed the equivalent of a flea's losing an elephant, it
was still a phrase -- and a conviction -- that one did not dare to question; to
do so was to risk drawing suspicion on oneself. Indeed, the State Department
proceeded to hound and fire the officers who knew China, its language, and its
opaque culture -- a move that suggested the practitioners of sympathetic magic
who wring the neck of a doll in order to make a distant enemy's head drop off.
There was magic all around; the politics of alien conspiracy soon dominated
political discourse and bid fair to wipe out any other issue. How could one
deal with such enormities in a play?
The Crucible was an act of desperation. Much of my desperation branched out,
I suppose, from a typical Depression -- era trauma -- the blow struck on the
mind by the rise of European Fascism and the brutal anti-Semitism it had
brought to power. But by 1950, when I began to think of writing about the hunt
for Reds in America, I was motivated in some great part by the paralysis that
had set in among many liberals who, despite their discomfort with the
inquisitors' violations of civil rights, were fearful, and with good reason, of
being identified as covert Communists if they should protest too strongly.
In any play, however trivial, there has to be a still point of moral reference
against which to gauge the action. In our lives, in the late nineteen-forties
and early nineteen-fifties, no such point existed anymore. The left could not
look straight at the Soviet Union's abrogations of human rights. The
anti-Communist liberals could not acknowledge the violations of those rights by
congressional committees. The far right, meanwhile, was licking up all the
cream. The days of "J'accuse" were gone, for anyone needs to feel right to
declare someone else wrong. Gradually, all the old political and moral reality
had melted like a Dali watch. Nobody but a fanatic, it seemed, could really say
all that he believed.
President Truman was among the first to have to deal with the dilemma, and his
way of resolving itself having to trim his sails before the howling gale on the
right-turned out to be momentous. At first, he was outraged at the allegation
of widespread Communist infiltration of the government and called the charge of
"coddling Communists" a red herring dragged in by the Republicans to bring down
the Democrats. But such was the gathering power of raw belief in the great
Soviet plot that Truman soon felt it necessary to institute loyalty boards of
his own.
The Red hunt, led by the House Committee on Un-American Activities and by
McCarthy, was becoming the dominating fixation of the American psyche. It
reached Hollywood when the studios, after first resisting, agreed to submit
artists' names to the House Committee for "clearing" before employing them.
This unleashed a veritable holy terror among actors, directors, and others,
from Party members to those who had had the merest brush with a front
organization.
The Soviet plot was the hub of a great wheel of causation; the plot justified
the crushing of all nuance, all the shadings that a realistic judgment of
reality requires. Even worse was the feeling that our sensitivity to this
onslaught on our liberties was passing from us -- indeed, from me. In
Timebends, my autobiography, I recalled the time I'd written a screenplay
(The Hook) about union corruption on the Brooklyn waterfront. Harry Cohn, the
head of Columbia Pictures, did something that would once have been considered
unthinkable: he showed my script to the F.B.I. Cohn then asked me to take the
gangsters in my script, who were threatening and murdering their opponents, and
simply change them to Communists. When I declined to commit this idiocy (Joe
Ryan, the head of the longshoremen's union, was soon to go to Sing Sing for
racketeering), I got a wire from Cohn saying, "The minute we try to make the
script pro-American you pull out." By then -- it was 1951 -- I had come to
accept this terribly serious insanity as routine, but there was an element of
the marvelous in it which I longed to put on the stage.
In those years, our thought processes were becoming so magical, so paranoid,
that to imagine writing a play about this environment was like trying to pick
one's teeth with a ball of wool: I lacked the tools to illuminate miasma. Yet I
kept being drawn back to it.
I had read about the witchcraft trials in college, but it was not until I read
a book published in 1867 -- a two-volume, thousand-page study by Charles W.
Upham, who was then the mayor of Salem -- that I knew I had to write about the
period. Upham had not only written a broad and thorough investigation of what
was even then an almost lost chapter of Salem's past but opened up to me the
details of personal relationships among many participants in the tragedy.
I visited Salem for the first time on a dismal spring day in 1952; it was a
sidetracked town then, with abandoned factories and vacant stores. In the
gloomy courthouse there I read the transcripts of the witchcraft trials of
1692, as taken down in a primitive shorthand by ministers who were spelling
each other. But there was one entry in Upham in which the thousands of pieces I
had come across were jogged into place. It was from a report written by the
Reverend Samuel Parris, who was one of the chief instigators of the witch-hunt.
"During the examination of Elizabeth Procter, Abigail Williams and Ann Putnam"
-- the two were "afflicted" teen-age accusers, and Abigail was Parris's niece
-- "both made offer to strike at said Procter; but when Abigail's hand came
near, it opened, whereas it was made up, into a fist before, and came down
exceeding lightly as it drew near to said Procter, and at length, with open and
extended fingers, touched Procter's hood very lightly. Immediately Abigail
cried out her fingers, her fingers, her fingers burned... "
In this remarkably observed gesture of a troubled young girl, I believed, a
play became possible. Elizabeth Proctor had been the orphaned Abigail's
mistress, and they had lived together in the same small house until Elizabeth
fired the girl. By this time, I was sure, John Proctor had bedded Abigail, who
had to be dismissed most likely to appease Elizabeth. There was bad blood
between the two women now. That Abigail started, in effect, to condemn
Elizabeth to death with her touch, then stopped her hand, then went through
with it, was quite suddenly the human center of all this turmoil.
All this I understood. I had not approached the witchcraft out of nowhere or
from purely social and political considerations. My own marriage of twelve
years was teetering and I knew more than I wished to know about where the blame
lay. That John Proctor the sinner might overturn his paralyzing personal guilt
and become the most forthright voice against the madness around him was a
reassurance to me, and, I suppose, an inspiration: it demonstrated that a clear
moral outcry could still spring even from an ambiguously unblemished soul.
Moving crabwise across the profusion of evidence, I sensed that I had at last
found something of myself in it, and a play began to accumulate around this
man.
But as the dramatic form became visible, one problem remained unyielding: so
many practices of the Salem trials were similar to those employed by the
congressional committees that I could easily be accused of skewing history for
a mere partisan purpose. Inevitably, it was no sooner known that my new play
was about Salem than I had to confront the charge that such an analogy was
specious -- that there never were any witches but there certainly are
Communists. In the seventeenth century, however, the existence of witches was
never questioned by the loftiest minds in Europe and America; and even lawyers
of the highest eminence, like Sir Edward Coke, a veritable hero of liberty for
defending the common law against the king's arbitrary power, believed that
witches had to be prosecuted mercilessly. Of course, there were no Communists
in 1692, but it was literally worth your life to deny witches or their powers,
given the exhortation in the Bible, "Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live."
There had to be witches in the world or the Bible lied. Indeed, the very
structure of evil depended on Lucifer's plotting against God. (And the irony is
that klatches of Luciferians exist all over the country today, there may even
be more of them now than there are Communists.)
As with most humans, panic sleeps in one unlighted corner of my soul. When I
walked at night along the empty, wet streets of Salem in the week that I spent
there, I could easily work myself into imagining my terror before a gaggle of
young girls flying down the road screaming that somebody's "familiar spirit"
was chasing them. This anxiety-laden leap backward over nearly three centuries
may have been helped along by a particular Upham footnote. At a certain point,
the high court of the province made the fatal decision to admit, for the first
time, the use of "spectral evidence" as proof of guilt. Spectral evidence, so
aptly named, meant that if I swore that you had sent out your "familiar spirit"
to choke, tickle, poison me or my cattle, or to control thoughts and actions, I
could get you hanged unless you confessed to having had contact with the Devil.
After all, only the Devil could lend such powers of visible transport to
confederates, in his everlasting plot to bring down Christianity.
Naturally, the best proof of the sincerity of your confession was your naming
others whom you had seen in the Devil company -- an invitation to private
vengeance, but made official by the seal of the theocratic state. It was as
though the court had grown tired of thinking and had invited in the instincts:
spectral evidence -- that poisoned cloud of paranoid fantasy -- made a kind of
lunatic sense to them, as it did in plot-ridden 1952, when so often the
question was not the acts of an accused but the thoughts and intentions in his
alienated mind.
The breathtaking circularity of the process had a kind of poetic tightness.
Not everybody was accused, after all, so there must be some reason why you
were. By denying that there is any reason whatsoever for you to be accused, you
are implying, by virtue of a surprisingly small logical leap, that mere chance
picked you out, which in turn implies that the Devil might not really be at
work in the village or, God forbid, even exist. Therefore, the investigation
itself is either mistaken or a fraud. You would have to be a crypto-Luciferian
to say that -- not a great idea if l you wanted to go back to your farm.
The more I read into the Salem panic, the more it touched off corresponding
ages of common experiences in the fifties: the old friend of a blacklisted
person crossing the street to avoid being seen talking to him; the overnight
conversions of former leftists into born-again patriots; and so on. Apparently,
certain processes are universal. When Gentiles in Hitler's Germany, for
example, saw their Jewish neighbors being trucked off, or rs in Soviet Ukraine
saw the Kulaks sing before their eyes, the common reaction, even among those
unsympathetic to Nazism or Communism, was quite naturally to turn away in fear
of being identified with the condemned. As I learned from non-Jewish refugees,
however there was often a despairing pity mixed with "Well, they must have done
something." Few of us can easily surrender our belief that society must somehow
make sense. The thought that the state has lost its mind and is punishing so
many innocent people is intolerable. And so the evidence has to be internally
denied.
I was also drawn into writing The Crucible by the chance it gave me to use a
new language -- that of seventeenth-century New England. That plain, craggy
English was liberating in a strangely sensuous way, with its swings from an
almost legalistic precision to a wonderful metaphoric richness. "The Lord doth
terrible things amongst us, by lengthening the chain of the roaring lion in an
extraordinary manner, so that the Devil is come down in great wrath," Deodat
Lawson, one of the great witch-hunting preachers, said in a sermon. Lawson
rallied his congregation for what was to be nothing less than a religious war
against the Evil One -- "Arm, arm, arm!" -- and his concealed anti-Christian
accomplices.
But it was not yet my language, and among other strategies to make it mine I
enlisted the help of a former University of Michigan classmate, the
Greek-American scholar and poet Kimon Friar. (He later translated Kazantzakis.)
The problem was not to imitate the archaic speech but to try to create a new
echo of it which would flow freely off American actors' tongues. As in the
film, nearly fifty years later, the actors in the first production grabbed the
language and ran with it as happily as if it were their customary speech.
The Crucible took me about a year to write. With its five sets and a cast of
twenty-one, it never occurred to me that it would take a brave man to produce
it on Broadway, especially given the prevailing climate, but Kermit Bloomgarden
never faltered. Well before the play opened, a strange tension had begun to
build. Only two years earlier, the Death of a Salesman touring company had
played to a thin crowd in Peoria, Illinois, having been boycotted nearly to
death by the American Legion and the Jaycees. Before that, the Catholic War
Veterans had prevailed upon the Army not to allow its theatrical groups to
perform, first, All My Sons, and then any play of mine, in occupied Europe.
The Dramatists Guild refused to protest attacks on a new play by Sean O'Casey,
a self-declared Communist, which forced its producer to cancel his option. I
knew of two suicides by actors depressed by upcoming investigation, and every
day seemed to bring news of people exiling themselves to Europe: Charlie
Chaplin, the director Joseph Losey, Jules Dassin, the harmonica virtuoso Larry
Adler, Donald Ogden Stewart, one of the most sought-after screenwriters in
Hollywood, and Sam Wanamaker, who would lead the successful campaign to rebuild
the Old Globe Theatre on the Thames.
On opening night, January 22, 1953, I knew that the atmosphere would be pretty
hostile. The coldness of the crowd was not a surprise; Broadway audiences were
not famous for loving history lessons, which is what they made of the play. It
seems to me entirely appropriate that on the day the play opened, a newspaper
headline read "ALL 13 REDS GUILTY" -- a story about American Communists who
faced prison for "conspiring to teach and advocate the duty and necessity of
forcible overthrow of government." Meanwhile, the remoteness of the production
was guaranteed by the director, Jed Harris, who insisted that this was a
classic requiring the actors to face front, never each other. The critics were
not swept away. "Arthur Miller is a problem playwright in both senses of the
word," wrote Walter Kerr of the Herald Tribune, who called the play "a step
backward into mechanical parable." The Times was not much kinder, saying,
"There is too much excitement and not enough emotion in The Crucible." But
the play's future would turn out quite differently.
About a year later, a new production, one with younger, less accomplished
actors, working in the Martinique Hotel ballroom, played with the fervor that
the script and the times required, and The Crucible became a hit. The play
stumbled into history, and today, I am told, it is one of the most heavily
demanded trade-fiction paperbacks in this country; the Bantam and Penguin
editions have sold more than six million copies. I don't think there has been a
week in the past forty-odd years when it hasn't been on a stage somewhere in
the world. Nor is the new screen version the first. Jean-Paul Sartre, in his
Marxist phase, wrote a French film adaptation that blamed the tragedy on the
rich landowners conspiring to persecute the poor. (In truth, most of those who
were hanged in Salem were people of substance, and two or three were very large
landowners.)
It is only a slight exaggeration to say that, especially in Latin America,
The Crucible starts getting produced wherever a political coup appears
imminent, or a dictatorial regime has just been over-thrown. From Argentina to
Chile to Greece, Czechoslovakia, China, and a dozen other places, the play
seems to present the same primeval structure of human sacrifice to the furies
of fanaticism and paranoia that goes on repeating itself forever as though
imbedded in the brain of social man.
I am not sure what The Crucible is telling people now, but I know that its
paranoid center is still pumping out the same darkly attractive warning that it
did in the fifties. For some, the play seems to be about the dilemma of relying
on the testimony of small children accusing adults of sexual abuse, something
I'd not have dreamed of forty years ago. For others, it may simply be a
fascination with the outbreak of paranoia that suffuses the play -- the blind
panic that, in our age, often seems to sit at the dim edges of consciousness.
Certainly its political implications are the central issue for many people; the
Salem interrogations turn out to be eerily exact models of those yet to come in
Stalin's Russia, Pinochet's Chile, Mao's China, and other regimes. (Nien Cheng,
the author of "Life and Death in Shang- hai," has told me that she could hardly
believe that a non-Chinese -- someone who had not experienced the Cultural
Revolution -- had written the play.) But below its concerns with justice the
play evokes a lethal brew of illicit sexuality, fear of the supernatural, and
political manipulation, a combination not unfamiliar these days. The film, by
reaching the broad American audience as no play ever can, may well unearth
still other connections to those buried public terrors that Salem first
announced on this continent.
One thing more -- something wonderful in the old sense of that word. I recall
the weeks I spent reading testimony by the tome, commentaries, broadsides,
confessions, and accusations. And always the crucial damning event was the
signing of one's name in "the Devil's book." This Faustian agreement to hand
over one's soul to the dreaded Lord of Darkness was the ultimate insult to God.
But what were these new inductees supposed to have done once they'd signed on?
Nobody seems even to have thought to ask. But, of course, actions are as
irrelevant during cultural and religious wars as they are in nightmares. The
thing at issue is buried intentions -- the secret allegiances of the alienated
hearts always the main threat to the theocratic mind, as well as its immemorial
quarry.
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