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SUMMERIZATION OF THE DEATH OF A SALESMAN

"Death of a Salesman"
Plot for Acts 1 and 2
In the beginning of the play, the main character, Willy Lowman, has just returned home
after finding himself unable to concentrate on driving. His wife, Linda, suggests that he
ask for a job in New York so that he won't have to drive so much. Willy insists, however,
that it is vital to his company that he works in New England. Willy asks Linda about his
son, Biff, who has just come home after being away for several years. He can't understand
why Biff is unable to get a good and steady job. Soon Willy begins thinking about when
Biff was a senior in high school. He remembers how Biff was the star of the football team
and how he was offered really good scholarships from several colleges. After Willy's
dreaming ends, Charley comes in to play cards with him. While they are playing cards
Charley offers Willy a job, but Willy refuses. As they are talking, Willy's brother, Ben,
appears to him in another dream. Willy tries to talk to both of them at once and Charley
can't understand. Willy and Charley get into an argument and Charley leaves. Willy then
turns his attention to Ben and asks him how he became so successful. Ben tells Willy that
he went into the jungle when he was seventeen and when he came out at twenty-one he was
rich. After Biff overhears Willy talking to himself, he asks Linda what's wrong with him.
Linda explains that Willy is exhausted and has even tried to kill himself. When Willy
enters the scene, Happy tries to cheer him up by announcing that he and Biff are going to
start their own sporting goods company. He tells Willy that Biff is going to see Bill
Oliver in the morning and ask for a loan. Willy is optimistic and reminds Biff that the
most important things in life are to be well liked and to have personal attractiveness.
The next day Willy decides to ask his boss, Howard, if he can have a job in New York.
Howard explains that there is no room for him in New York, and then tells Willy that he
no longer wants him to represent the company. Now that Willy has no job, he must ask
Charley for the money to pay his insurance premium. When Charley finds out that Willy has
been fired, he offers him a good job in New York, but Willy refuses. Charley gives Willy
the money and then Willy leaves to meet Biff and Happy at a restaurant. When Willy
arrives at the restaurant, Biff tries to explain to him that he has been living an
illusion and will never amount to anything extraordinary. Willy refuses to listen to him
and pretends that Biff has another appointment for the next day. When Biff tries to make
Willy face the truth, Willy becomes furious and goes off to the bathroom. Biff and Happy
then leave the restaurant. While Willy is in the bathroom, he goes into another illusion.
He finds himself in a hotel room with a woman. She is telling him how much she loves his
sense of humor. Then knocking is heard at the door, and at first Willy refuses to answer
it. As the knocking continues, Willy tells the woman to wait in the bathroom. He opens
the door and finds Biff there. Biff tells Willy that he has flunked math and asks that
Willy talk to his math teacher about it. Biff explains that his teacher doesn't like him
because he once caught Biff imitating him in class. Biff shows Willy the imitation and
they both start laughing. The woman hears them laughing and comes out of the bathroom.
Willy hurries her out of the room, but not before the woman demands the stockings that
Willy promised her. Willy tries to explain the situation, but Biff won't listen. He
accuses Willy of giving away Linda's stockings and calls him a liar and a fake. The
waiter at the restaurant then brings Willy out of his illusion. Willy asks if there is a
seed store in the neighborhood and then leaves. Later that night Biff and Happy come home
and find Willy planting seeds in the back yard. Biff tells Willy that it would be best if
they didn't see each other again. He tries to explain that he is only a common man and
will never live up to Willy's expectations, but Willy refuses to listen. Willy decided
that he will commit suicide because he believes that with the 20,000 dollars of life
insurance money Biff will finally be able to make something of him. At his funeral, we
see that Willy died a forgotten man because no one except his family came.
Main Characters
Willy Loman
The main conflict in Death of a Salesman deals with the confusion and frustration of
Willy Lowman. These feelings are caused by his inability to face the realities of modern
society. Willy's most prominent delusion is that success is dependent upon being
well-liked and having personal attractiveness. Willy builds his entire life around this
idea and teaches it to his children. When Willy was young, he had met a man named Dave
Singleman who was so well liked that he was able to make a living simply by staying in
his hotel room and telephoning buyers. When Dave Singleman died, buyers and salesmen from
all over the country came to his funeral. This is what Willy has been trying to emulate
his entire life. Willy's need to feel well liked is so strong that he often makes up lies
about his popularity and success. At times, Willy even believes these lies himself. At
one point in the play, Willy tells his family of how well liked he is in all of his towns
and how vital he is to New England. Later, however, he tells Linda that no one remembers
him and that the people laugh at him behind his back. As this demonstrates, Willy's need
to feel well liked also causes him to become intensely paranoid. When his son, Biff, for
example, is trying to explain why he cannot become successful, Willy believes that Biff
is just trying to spite him. Unfortunately, Willy never realizes that his values are
flawed. As Biff points out at the end of the play, he had the wrong dreams.
Biff Lowman
In many ways Biff is similar to his father. In the beginning of the play we see that Biff
shares many of the same ideas as Willy. He values being well liked above everything else
and sees little value in being smart or honest. One of Biffs main flaws is his tendency
to steal. Early in the play we learn that he has stolen a football from the school
locker. When Willy finds out about this, instead of disciplining Biff, he says that the
coach will probably congratulate him on his initiative. We also learn that Biff once
stole a box of basketballs from Bill Oliver. This foreshadows the scene in which Biff
steals Bill Olive's fountain pen after trying to get a loan for his sporting goods
business. The climactic scene in Biffs life comes when he finds a woman in Willy's hotel
room. This causes Biff to realize that Willy is a fake. Biffs tragedy is that he has
accepted Willy's values all his life, and now that he finds out they are false, he has no
values of his own to rely upon. Thus, Biff becomes lost and must set out to find his own
values. Once Biff begins to develop his own beliefs, his opinions about his father
change. Instead of viewing his father as a fake, Biff comes to realize that his father
had some good qualities, but was simply misguided by inadequate values. 
Happy Lowman 
Happy is the younger of the two Lowman brothers and thus is often overshadowed by Biff.
Because of this, Happy is constantly trying to get attention from Willy. In one of the
flashbacks Happy continually says, I'm losing weight, you notice, Pop? This is an attempt
by Happy to get recognition from Willy. When in the present, Happy tries to get
recognition by announcing that he is getting married. In both instances, however, Happy's
remarks are dismissed as unimportant. Thus it is no surprise when Happy leaves Willy
alone in the restaurant. It is merely in retaliation for his own rejection. Another
characteristic of Happy is his refusal to recognize reality. When Biff, Happy, and Willy
are in the restaurant, Happy tries to prevent Willy from learning that Biff did not get
the loan. While Biff is trying to explain that he never actually worked as a salesman for
Oliver, Happy is continually reassuring Willy that the interview went well. Another
example occurs at the end of the play when Happy insists that Willy did not die in vain.
He had a good dream.
Theme
The main theme in Death of a Salesman is illusion versus reality. Willy has lived his
entire life in a world of illusions. These illusions include Willy's belief that being
well liked is the key to success, as well as the literal illusions that Willy has of his
past.Originally, Biff shared Willy's illusions of success and greatness, but by the end
of the play he has become completely disillusioned. Once Biff comes to fully understand
his place in life, he says to Willy, I'm a dime a dozen, and so are you. Willy, however,
has lived too long in his dreams and cannot understand what Biff is trying to say. If
Willy had to face reality, he would then be forced to examine the affair he had in
Boston, his philosophy, and all of his illusions. Instead, he prefers to live in the
past. And now Biff, who is trying to confront the truth about him, finds that he is
completely unable to communicate with his father. Another theme of Death of a Salesman is
the old order of agrarian pride and nobility versus the new order of industrialization.
In the beginning of the play, Willy foreshadows this theme by criticizing the changes
brought about by industrialization. The street is lined with cars. There's not a breath
of fresh air in the neighborhood. It is this conflict between the old and new orders that
brings about Willy's downfall. Willy's father, a pioneer inventor, represents the
traditional values and way of life that Willy was brought up on. So does Dave Singleman,
the eighty-four year old salesman that inspired Willy to go into the sales industry.
Howard, the young boss of Willy's company, represents the impersonal and ruthless nature
of capitalistic enterprise. When Willy goes in to ask Howard if he can be transferred to
a job in New York, Howard refuses to help him even though Willy has-been working for the
company for several decades and was good friends with his father. When Willy asks why he
cannot be reassigned, Howard replies, it's a business, kid, and everybody's gotta pull
his own weight, thus demonstrating Howard's cold indifference to Willy's situation.

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