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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › All_My_SonsAll My Sons - Wikipedia

    All My Sons is a three-act play written in 1946 by Arthur Miller. It opened on Broadway at the Coronet Theatre in New York City on January 29, 1947, closed on November 8, 1947, and ran for 328 performances. [2]

    • Arthur Miller
    • 1947
  2. Todos eran mis hijos (All My Sons) es una obra de teatro escrita por Arthur Miller. [1] La obra se estrenó en Broadway en el Coronet Theatre [2] de Nueva York el 29 de enero de 1947, y se mantuvo en cartel hasta el 8 de noviembre del mismo año (328 representaciones). [3]

  3. All My Sons, a play in three acts, is set in a small town several years after World War Two, and begins with Jim Bayliss, a doctor, and Joe Keller, head of the Keller family, sitting in Keller’s backyard, reading the paper. A storm the previous night has shorn in half a tree that is revealed to memorialize Larry Keller, one of two Keller ...

  4. All My Sons es una obra de teatro escrita por Arthur Miller en 1947 que se centra en la historia de una familia estadounidense que se ve envuelta en un escándalo empresarial y moral. En este artículo, se realizará un desglose completo de la obra, analizando su estructura, personajes, temas, simbolismo y estilo literario.

  5. Arthur Miller wrote All My Sons during a flourishing period of American drama, with many playwrights breathing new life into the theatrical models of Greek tragedy and the dramatic realism of Anton Chekhov.

  6. All My Sons opened in New York City in 1947, winning the Drama Critics’ Award for Best New Play and establishing Arthur Miller as a leading voice in the American theatre. An immediate success with audiences and critics, the play has frequently been revived on Broadway and elsewhere around the world.

  7. When Miller chose All My Sons as the title for his play, he indicated one of the work’s major themes: the exploration of the relationships among parents and their children. Wartime had dislocated many families by removing fathers and sons, and soldiers such as Chris and Larry formed new connections with their comrades in arms, often leading ...