The Crucible
The Crucible
The Crucible
Crucible
by Arthur Miller
Teacher's
Study
Guide
ALIVE & ALOUD: Radio Plays for Learning in the Classroom, a program of L.A. Theatre Works,
is made possible in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, Sony Pictures Entertainment,
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Works productions and programs are supported with the help of The Capital Group Companies
Charitable Foundation.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Steinbeck/Miller Excerpt 4
Cast of Characters 5
Suggested Vocabulary 17
Talking Points 21
Visualizing Emotion 23
ARTHUR MILLER
EXCERPT:
ÒNow suppose I have children, a little property, a stake in the community. The threat of the
contempt charge jeopardizes everything I love. Suppose, from worry or cowardice, I agree to
what is asked. My deep and wounding shame will be with me always.
I cannot be reassured by the past performance of the Committee. I have read daily for a
number of years the testimony of admitted liars and perjurers whose charges have been used to
destroy the peace and happiness of people I do not know, and many of whom were destroyed
without being tried.
Which path am I to choose? Either way I am caught. It may occur to me that a man who
is disloyal to his friends could not be expected to be loyal to his country. You can’t slice up
morals. Our virtues begin at home. They do not change in a courtroom unless the pressure
of fear is put upon us.Ó
Mercy................................................Irene Arranga
Tituba...............................................Judyann Elder
Susanna.................................................Ann Hearn
ACT I
Giggles. Whispers. A rooster crows. These innocent sounds merge with the tense words of Reverend Parris
praying at the bedside of ten-year-old Betty Parris, who has been in a trance-like state for several hours.
Earlier, he discovered a group of girls, including Betty, dancing in the woods. Through his conversations
with Tituba, his black servant, and Abigail Williams, his niece, Parris reveals his growing paranoia about
the incident and its aftermath. He is aware that the community is gossiping about Betty and Abigail. He
questions Abigail about their activities, but she denies that the behavior was anything more than "sport."
Parris shares the alarming rumors that he has heard. Abigail has been dismissed recently from employment
at the Proctor household, soiling her reputation. Abigail hotly defends herself, arguing that Mrs. Proctor
wanted a slave instead of a servant.
When Mr. and Mrs. Putnam arrive, he learns that they, too, have an afflicted daughter, Ruth. The Putnams
have buried all but one of their children, so Mrs. Putnam has sent Ruth to Tituba to learn the cause of
the children's deaths. The Putnams become convinced that witches have invaded Salem. Reverend Parris
chooses not to agree with that judgment until he has consulted with Reverend John Hale of Beverly, a noted
authority on witchcraft. A crowd gathers, and Parris goes downstairs to pray with them.
When the adults leave, Abigail speaks to Betty and some of the other girls involved in the dancing. She
explains that she has told Parris everything about their actions and that they must choose their words
carefully because witchcraft is a hanging offense.
John Proctor, a respected farmer, arrives to find Mary Warren present, a servant who now works for
his wife. For a few minutes he is unavoidably alone with Abigail, and they discuss the impact of their
brief affair. John denies any continued attraction. Abigail criticizes John's wife and berates him for asking
her to forget what has happened between them. She then confesses that what the girls have done in the
woods is not witchcraft, but simply dancing.
Betty Parris becomes hysterical and various adults swarm the room to try to comfort her. Among them is
Rebecca Nurse, an elderly woman who succeeds in quieting the child. Although Betty is calmed, tension
continues as Parris bickers with parishioner Giles Corey about the salary paid to the minister.
Reverend John Hale arrives to offer his insights. After greeting people, he proceeds to question Abigail,
Tituba, and others. Under threat of punishment, Tituba "confesses" to trafficking with the devil. Betty
awakens and wildly calls out accusations. Others take up the cry. The scene which began with giggles and
whispers closes with shrieks from the afflicted young women.
When Mary returns, she says that the accused now number 39. She tries to ease the outrage that John
expresses by presenting Elizabeth with a rag doll made during the court sessions. She states that she has
defended Elizabeth during the proceedings. When Mary retires to bed, Elizabeth says she fears that Abigail
will denounce her in order to win back John.
Reverend John Hale arrives. He questions why the Proctors have not been in church for some time.
John says that he dislikes Reverend Parris' attitude. To prove his religious convictions, he attempts
to recite the Ten Commandments. However, he stumbles at the one concerning adultery and has to
be helped by Elizabeth. She encourages John to tell Reverend Hale that Abigail originally denied any
involvement with witchcraft. When Hale says that several have confessed, John counters that only those
who confess are spared a hanging.
Francis Nurse and Giles Corey arrive upset; their wives have been arrested. Hale is shocked; he has deep
regard for Francis' wife, Rebecca Nurse. The town marshal arrives with a warrant for Elizabeth’s arrest. The
evidence, which convinces the law officer of her guilt, is a needle found in the body of the rag doll. As
Elizabeth is lead away, an irate John Proctor rips up the warrant and insists that Mary testify that she made
the doll. Reverend Hale is left with growing doubts.
REVEREND PARRIS
Photo Courtesy of the Arthur
Miller Historical Society
Danforth is skeptical of the claims, because Elizabeth Proctor is one of the accused. John learns that
Elizabeth is pregnant, so she will be spared for a year until the baby is born. He persists in his
criticism to help others wrongly accused. Giles, too, tries to provide evidence of ulterior motives. He
says that Putnam instructed his daughter, Ruth, to name others so he can claim their forfeited land.
Giles refuses to provide the name of the witness whooverheard Mr. Putnam’s instructions and is jailed
for contempt of court.
When the girls are summoned to answer to Mary’s testimony, Abigail leads the girls in crying out
that Mary afflicts them. John resorts to describing his adulterous relationship with Abigail in an attempt to
undermine her power. He states that his wife knows the truth of the matter. Elizabeth Proctor is brought
into the room to testify. John must turn his back to her, so she will have no hint of his wishes. Although she
has a reputation for unfailing honesty, Elizabeth lies to protect John. Tragically, her words condemn him.
Elizabeth is taken from the room, Abigail triumphs, and Mary joins in the outcry against John. She declares
that he is the devil’s man. With Reverend Hale protesting, John Proctor is arrested.
ACT IV
Several months later, Hawthorne and Danforth speak with Reverend Parris. They are all affected by the
growing doubts of the community. Reverend Parris says that Reverend Hale has returned to Salem hoping
to convince the remaining prisoners to confess and save their lives.
Abigail and Mercy Lewis have stolen Parris’ money and fled the community. Reverend Parris is distraught
as he senses the dissatisfaction of the parishioners. Reverend Hale enters and asks to speak with Elizabeth.
He persuades her to convince John that he should confess. Elizabeth and John are left alone briefly. She tells
him that Giles Corey was pressed to death when he refused to submit to a trial. As each stone was placed
upon him, he called for "more weight." By avoiding trial, Giles saved his farm from confiscation.
John agrees to confess knowing that he is not a saintly figure like Rebecca Nurse. Court authorities are
elated. Rebecca is brought into the room in hopes that she will confess as well. John signs the confession,
then grabs the paper when judges declare that it will be posted on the church doors. John cannot put his
name to any document that will be used to continue the blatant abuse of power. His honor restored, John
prepares to meet his death. With pride, Elizabeth refuses to intervene.
1932 Graduates from high school and registers for night school at City College, but quits after two weeks.
1934-35 Enrolls at University of Michigan; studies journalism. Becomes a reporter/night editor on student paper, The Michigan Daily.
1936 Writes NO VILLAIN in six days and receives Hopwood Award in Drama.
1937 Miller rewrites NO VILLAIN. Newly titled, THEY TOO ARISE receives a major award from the Bureau of New Plays and is produced in
Ann Arbor and Detroit, MI. HONORS AT DAWN receives Hopwood Award in Drama.
1938 THE GREAT DISOBEDIENCE receives second place in the Hopwood contest. THEY TOO ARISE is revised and titled THE GRASS
STILL GROWS for anticipated production in New York City. Miller graduates with a B.A. in English.
1938 Miller joins the Federal Theater Project in New York City to write radio plays and scripts.
1941 Takes extra job working as a shipfitter’s helper at the Brooklyn Naval Yard. Writes radio plays for Columbia Workshop (CBS).
1943 Writes THE HALF-BRIDGE and THAT THEY MAY WIN, produced in New York City. Writes LISTEN FOR THE SOUND OF
WINGS (radio play).
1944 Daughter, Jane, is born. Adapts Ferenc Molnar’s THE GUARDSMAN and Jane Austen’s PRIDE AND PREJUDICE for radio. THE MAN
WHO HAD ALL THE LUCK premieres on Broadway but closes after six performances, though it receives the Theater Guild National Award.
1947 Son, Robert, is born. ALL MY SONS premieres and receives the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award, and the Donaldson Award. Writes
THE STORY OF GUS. Writes an article, "Subsidized Theatre" for The New York Times. Works in a factory assembling boxes for minimum
wage to stay in touch with his audience.
1948 Travels to Europe where he gets a sense of the Italian background he uses for the Carbones and their relatives in A VIEW FROM THE
BRIDGE; also meets some Jewish death camp survivors held captive in a post-war bureaucratic tangle.
1949 DEATH OF A SALESMAN premieres and receives the Pulitzer Prize, the New York Drama Critics’ Circle, the Antoinette Perry, the
Donaldson, and the Theater Club Awards. The New York Times publishes his essay "Tragedy and the Common Man.Ó
1950 Meets Marilyn Monroe. THE HOOK fails to reach production due to pressure from House Un-American Activities Committee. First
sound recording of DEATH OF A SALESMAN.
1951 First film production of DEATH OF A SALESMAN, with Frederic March, for Columbia Pictures.
1953 THE CRUCIBLE premieres and receives the Antoinette Perry and the Donaldson Awards. Asked to attend the Belgian premiere of THE
CRUCIBLE, but denied passport by the US.
1955 The one-act A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE premieres in a joint bill with A MEMORY OF TWO MONDAYS. HUAC pressures city
officials to withdraw permission for Miller to make a film he is planning about juvenile delinquency in New York.
1956 Divorces Mary Slattery and marries Marilyn Monroe. Subpoenaed to appear before HUAC. Receives honorary Doctor of Human Letters
(L.H.D.) from the University of Michigan.
1957 ARTHUR MILLER'S COLLECTED PLAYS published. Short story "The Misfits" is published in Esquire. Convicted ofcontempt of
Congress for refusing to name names.
1958 U.S. Court of Appeals overturns his contempt conviction. Elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters.
1959 Receives the Gold Medal for Drama from the National Institute of Arts and Letters.
1964 After visiting the Mauthausen death camp, covers the Nazi trials in Frankfurt, Germany for the New York Herald Tribune, AFTER THE
FALL and INCIDENT AT VICHY premiere.
1965 Elected president of International P.E.N., attends Yugoslavian conference. Off-Broadway production of A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE.
1967 Sound recording of INCIDENT AT VICHY. Television production of THE CRUCIBLE on CBS.
1970 FAME and THE REASON WHY produced. Miller’s works banned in the U.S.S.R. as a result of his work to free dissident writers.
1971 Sound recording of AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE. Television productions of A MEMORY OF TWO MONDAYS, on PBS and THE
PRICE, on NBC. THE PORTABLE ARTHUR MILLER is published.
1972 THE CREATION OF THE WORLD AND OTHER BUSINESS premieres. First sound recording of THE CRUCIBLE.
1974 UP FROM PARADISE premieres at the University of Michigan. Television production of AFTER THE FALL, on NBC.
1978 Belgian National Theatre does 25th anniversary production of THE CRUCIBLE. This time Miller attends.
1991 THE RIDE DOWN MT. MORGAN premieres in London. Receives Mellon Bank Award for lifetime achievement in the humanities.
1995 Receives William Inge Festival Award for distinguished achievement in the American theater. Tributes to the playwright on his eightieth
birthday held in England and America. HOMELY GIRL, A LIFE AND OTHER STORIES published.
1997 Revised version of THE RIDE DOWN MT. MORGAN given its American Premiere in Williamstown, Massachusetts. THE CRUCIBLE
(film with Daniel Day Lewis) opens. BBC television production of BROKEN GLASS.
1998 MR. PETER'S CONNECTIONS premieres. Named as the Distinguished Inaugural Senior Fellow of the American Academy in Berlin.
Revised version of THE RIDE DOWN MT. MORGAN appears on Broadway.
1999 DEATH OF A SALESMAN revived on Broadway for the play’s 50th anniversary.
2000 THE RIDE DOWN MT. MORGAN appears on Broadway, also a revival of THE PRICE. Major 85th birthday celebrations for Miller held at
University of Michigan and the Arthur Miller Center. ECHOES DOWN THE CORRIDOR published (collected essays, 1944-2000).
2001 UNTITLED, an unpublished play written for Vaclav Havel opens in New York. Williamstown Theater Festival revives THE MAN WHO
HAD ALL THE LUCK.
2002 THE CRUCIBLE is revived on Broadway, starring Laura Linney and Liam Neeson.
It would probably never have occurred to me to write a play one of the most gratifying and useful professions, and that
about the Salem witch trials of 1692 had I not seen some Willy was simply a nut. Never in show-business history has
astonishing correspondences with that calamity in the America a studio spent so much good money to prove that its feature
of the late 40s and early 50s. My basic need was to respond to film was pointless. In less than two years Death of a Salesman
a phenomenon which, with only small exaggeration, one could had gone from being a masterpiece to being a heresy, and a
say paralysed a whole generation and in a short time dried up fraudulent one at that.
the habits of trust and toleration in public discourse.
In 1948-51, I had the sensation of being trapped inside a
I refer to the anti-communist rage that threatened to reach perverse work of art, one of those Escher constructs in which
hysterical proportions and sometimes did. I can’t remember it is impossible to make out whether a stairway is going
anyone calling it an ideological war, but I think now that up or down. Practically everyone I knew stood within the
that is what it amounted to. I suppose we rapidly passed conventions of the political left of centre; one or two were
over anything like a discussion or debate, and into something Communist party members, some were fellow-travellers, and
quite different, a hunt not just for subversive people, but most had had a brush with Marxist ideas or organisations. I
for ideas and even a suspect language. The object was to have never been able to believe in the reality of these people
destroy the least credibility of any and all ideas associated being actual or putative traitors any more than I could be,
with socialism and communism, whose proponents were yet others like them were being fired from teaching or jobs in
assumed to be either knowing or unwitting agents of Soviet government or large corporations. The surreality of it all never
subversion. left me. We were living in an art form, a metaphor that had
suddenly, incredibly, gripped the country.
An ideological war is like guerrilla war, since the enemy is an
idea whose proponents are not in uniform but are disguised In today’s terms, the country had been delivered into the
as ordinary citizens, a situation that can scare a lot of people hands of the radical right, a ministry of free-floating apprehen-
to death. To call the atmosphere paranoid is not to say that sion toward anything that never happens in the middle of
there was nothing real in the American-Soviet stand-off. But Missouri. It is always with us, this anxiety, sometimes directed
if there was one element that lent the conflict a tone of the towards foreigners, Jews, Catholics, fluoridated water, aliens
inauthentic and the invented, it was the swiftness with which in space, masturbation, homosexuality, or the Internal
all values were forced in months to reverse themselves. Revenue Department. But in the 50s any of these could be
validated as real threats by rolling out a map of China. And if
DEATH OF A SALESMAN opened in February 1949 and this seems crazy now, it seemed just as crazy then, but openly
was hailed by nearly every newspaper and magazine. doubting it could cost you.
Several movie studios wanted it and finally Columbia Pictures
bought it, and engaged a great actor, Frederick March, to play So in one sense THE CRUCIBLE was an attempt to make life
Willy [the central character]. real again, palpable and structured. One hoped that a work
of art might illuminate the tragic absurdities of an anterior
In two years or less, with the picture finished, I was asked by work of art that was called reality, but was not. It was the
a terrified Columbia to sign an anti- communist declaration very swiftness of the change that lent it this surreality. Only
to ward off picket lines which the rightwing American Legion three or four years earlier an American movie audience, on
was threatening to throw across the entrances of theatres seeing a newsreel of Stalin saluting the Red Army, would have
showing the film. In the phone calls that followed, the air of applauded, for that army had taken the brunt of the Nazi
panic was heavy. It was the first intimation of what would onslaught, as most people were aware. Now they would look
soon follow. I declined to make any such statement, which I on with fear or at least bewilderment, for the Russians had
found demeaning; what right had anyorganisation to demand become the enemy of mankind, a menace to all that was
anyone’s pledge of loyalty? I was sure the whole thing would good. It was the Germans who, with amazing rapidity, were
soon go away; it was just too outrageous. turning good. Could this be real?
But instead of the problem disappearing, the studio actually
made another film, a short to be shown with In the unions, communists and their allies, known as intrepid
Salesman. This was called THE LIFE OF A SALESMAN organisers, were to be shorn of membership and turned out as
and consisted of several lectures by City College School of seditious. Harry Bridges, the idol of west coast longshoremen,
Business professors - which boiled down to selling was a joy, whom he had all but single-handedly organised, was subjected
ALIVE & ALOUD: Radio Plays for the Classroom 11
TH E C R U C I B L E b y A r t h u r M i l l e r
to trial after trial to drive him back to his native Australia was too tempting to be passed. That our marriage had some
as an unadmitted communist. Academics, some prominent in connection with my being subpoenaed was confirmed when
their fields, were especially targeted, many forced to retire or Chairman Walters of the Huac sent word to Joseph Rauh, my
fired for disloyalty. Some were communists, some were fellow lawyer, that he would be inclined to cancel my hearing if Miss
travellers and, inevitably, a certain number were unaffiliated Monroe would consent to have a picture taken with him.
liberals refusing to sign one of the dozens of humiliating
anti-communist pledges being required by terrified college The offer having been declined, the good chairman, as my
administrations. hearing came to an end, entreated me to write less tragically
about our country. This lecture cost me $40,000 in lawyer’s
But it is impossible to convey properly the fears that marked fees, a year’s suspended sentence for contempt of Congress,
that period. Nobody was shot, to be sure, although some were and a $500 fine. Not to mention about a year of inanition
going to jail, where at least one, William Remington, was in my creative life.
murdered by an inmate hoping to shorten his sentence by
having killed a communist. Rather than physical fear, it was My fictional view of the period, my sense of itsunreality had
the sense of impotence, which seemed to deepen with each been, like any impotence, a psychologically painful experi-
week, of being unable to speak accurately of the very recent ence. A similar paralysis descended on Salem. In both places,
past when being leftwing in America, and for that matter in to keep social unity intact, the authority of leaders had to be
Europe, was to be alive to the dilemmas of the day. hardened and words of scepticism toward them constricted.
A new cautionary diction, an uncustomary prudence inflected
As for the idea of willingly subjecting my work not only to our way of talking to one another. The word socialism was all
some party’s discipline but to anyone’s control, my repugnance but taboo. Words had gotten fearsome. As I learned directly in
was such that, as a young and indigent writer, I had turned Ann Arbor on a 1953 visit, university students were avoiding
down lucrative offers to work for Hollywood studios because renting rooms in houses run by the housing cooperative for
of a revulsion at the thought of someone owning the paper fear of being labelled communist, so darkly suggestive was the
I was typing on. It was not long, perhaps four or five years, word cooperative. The head of orientation at the university
before the fraudulence of Soviet cultural claims was as clear told me, in a rather cool, uninvolved manner, that the FBI was
to me as it should have been earlier. But I would never enlisting professors to report on students voicing leftwing
have found it believable, in the 50s or later, that with its opinions, and - more comedy - that they had also engaged
thuggish self-righteousness and callous contempt for artists’ students to report on professors with the same views.
freedoms, that the Soviet way of controlling culture could be
successfully exported to America. In the early 50s, along with Elia Kazan, who had directed
ALL MY SONS and DEATH OF A SALESMAN, I submit-
Some greatly talented people were driven out of the US ted a script to Harry Cohn, head of Columbia Pictures. It
to work in England: screenwriters like Carl Foreman and described the murderous corruption in the gangster-ridden
Donald Ogden Stewart, actors like Charlie Chaplin and Sam Brooklyn longshoremen’s union. Cohn read the script and
Wanamaker. I no longer recall the number of our political called us to Hollywood, where he casually informed us that
exiles, but it was more than too many and disgraceful for a he had had the script vetted by the FBI, and that they had
nation prideful of its democracy. seen nothing subversive in it. But the head of the AFL motion
Writing now, almost half a century later, with the Soviet picture unions in Hollywood, Roy Brewer, had condemned
Union in ruins, China rhetorically fending off capitalism even it as untrue communist propaganda, since there were no
as in reality it adopts a market economy, Cuba wallowing gangsters on the Brooklyn waterfront. Cohn, no stranger to
helplessly in the Caribbean, it is not easy to convey the gangsterism, having survived an upbringing in the tough Five
American fear of a masterful communism. The quickness with Points area of Manhattan, opined that Brewer was only trying
which Soviet-style regimes had taken over eastern Europe to protect Joe Ryan, head of the Brooklyn longshoremen
and China was breathtaking, and I believe it stirred up (who, incidentally, would go to Sing Sing prison for
a fear in Americans of our own ineptitudes, our mystifying gangsterism).
inability, despite our military victories, to control the world
whose liberties we had so recently won back from the Axis Brewer threatened to call a strike of projectionists in any
powers. theatre daring to show the film. Cohn offered his
solution to the problem: he would produce the film if I would
In 1956, the House Un-American Activities Committee make one change - the gangsters in the unionwere to
(HUAC) subpoenaed me - I was cited for contempt of be changed to communists. This would not be easy; I knew
Congress for refusing to identify writers I had met at one of all the communists on the waterfront- there were two
the two communist writers’ meetings I had attended many of them (both of whom in the following decade became
years before. By then, the tide was going out for Huac and it millionaire businessmen). So I had to withdraw the script,
was finding it more difficult to make front pages. However, which prompted an indignant telegram from Cohn: "As soon
the news of my forthcoming marriage to Marilyn Monroe as we try to make the script pro-American you pull out." One
The heart of the darkness was the belief that a massive, There were witches, if not to most of us then certainly to
profoundly organised conspiracy was in place and carried everyone in Salem; and there were communists, but what
forward mainly by a concealed phalanx of intellectuals, was the content of their menace? That to me became the
including labour activists, teachers, professionals, sworn to issue. Having been deeply influenced as a student by a
undermine the American government. And it was precisely the Marxist approach to society, and having known Marxists and
invisibility of ideas that was frightening so many people. How sympathisers, I could simply not accept that these people were
could a play deal with this mirage world? Paranoia breeds spies or even prepared to do the will of the Soviets in some
paranoia, but below paranoia there lies a bristling, unwelcome future crisis. That such people had thought to find hope of a
truth, so repugnant as to produce fantasies of persecution to higher ethic in the Soviet was not simply an American, but a
conceal itsexistence. The unwelcome truth denied by the right worldwide, irony of catastrophic moral proportions, for their
was that the Hollywood writers accused of subversion were like could be found all over the world.
not a menace to the country, or even bearers of meaningful
change. They wrote not propaganda but entertainment, some But as the 50s dawned, they were stuck with the past. Part
of it of a mildly liberal cast, but most of it mindless, or when it of the surreality of the anti-left sweep was that it picked
was political, as with Preston Sturges or Frank Capra, entirely up people for disgrace who had already turned away from a
and exuberantly un-Marxist. pro-Soviet past but had no stomach for naming others who
had merely shared their illusions. But the hunt had captured
As for the left, its unacknowledged truth was more important some significant part of the American imagination and its
for me. If nobody was being shot in our ideological war power demanded respect.
but merely vivisected by a headline, it struck me as odd,
if understandable , that the accused were unable to cry out Turning to Salem was like looking into a petri dish, an
passionately their faith in the ideals of socialism. There were embalmed stasis with its principal moving forces caught in
attacks on the HUAC’s right to demand that a citizen reveal stillness. One had to wonder what the human imagination fed
his political beliefs; but on the idealistic canon of their own on that could inspire neighbours and old friends to emerge
convictions, the defendants were mute. The rare exception, overnight as furies secretly bent on the torture and destruction
like Paul Robeson’s declaration of faith in socialism as a cure of Christians. More than a political metaphor, more than
for racism, was a rocket that lit up the sky. a moral tale, THE CRUCIBLE, as it developed over more
than a year, became the awesome evidence of the power of
On a lucky afternoon I happened upon The Devil in human imagination inflamed, the poetry of suggestion, and
Massachusetts, by Marion Starkey, a narrative of the Salem the tragedy of heroic resistance to a society possessed to the
witch-hunt of 1692. I knew this story from my college reading, point of ruin.
but in this darkened America it turned a completely new
aspect toward me: the poetry of the hunt. Poetry may seem In the stillness of the Salem courthouse, surrounded by the
an odd word for a witch-hunt but I saw there was something images of the 1950s but with my head in 1692, what the two
of the marvellous in the spectacle of a whole village, if not an eras had in common gradually gained definition. Both had
entire province, whose imagination was captured by a vision the menace of concealed plots, but most startling were the
of something that wasn’t there. similarities in the rituals of defence, the investigative routines;
300 years apart, both prosecutions alleged membership of
In time to come, the notion of equating the red-hunt with a secret, disloyal group. Should the accused confess, his
the witch-hunt would be condemned as a deception. There honesty could only be proved by naming former confeder-
were communists and there never were witches. The deeper I ates. The informer became the axle of the plot’s existence and
moved into the 1690s, the further away drifted the America the investigation’s necessity.
of the 50s, and, rather than the appeal of analogy, I found
something different to draw my curiosity and excitement. The witch-hunt in 1692 had a not dissimilar problem, but
a far more poetic solution. Most suspected people named by
Anyone standing up in the Salem of 1692 and denying that others as members of the Devil’s conspiracy had not been
witches existed would have faced immediate arrest, the hardest shown to have done anything, neither poisoning wells, setting
interrogation and possibly the rope. Every authority not only barns on fire, sickening cattle, aborting babies, nor undermin-
confirmed the existence of witches but never questioned the ing the virtue of wives (the Devil having two phenomenally
necessity of executing them. It became obvious that to dismiss active penises, one above the other).
conjure
crucible
faction
abomination
providence
formidable
pilgrimage
sniveling
prodigious
sarcasm
whim
defamation
afflicted
precise
fraud
recite
begrudge
tainted
blasphemy
daft
contemptuous
affidavit
quail
denounce
2. Survey your peers to learn what superstitions they know. For example, what is the significance
of a black cat, knocking on wood, walking under a ladder, or opening an umbrella inside the
house? How are those beliefs similar to the beliefs and reactions of the characters in the play?
4. Consider the social messages in the play. Develop a skit that shows how peer pressure can
influence others.
6. Follow-up by researching what happened to major characters. How many died? What lead
to the closing of the trials?
7. Three hundred years after the Salem trials, the community dedicated a memorial to the
victims of the trial. Research victims of a modern "witch hunt" such as the Hollywood Ten.
Create a visual product that symbolizes their tribulations or write an essay or poem that might
be read at a ceremony about the event.
8. Design a program cover that could be used for an audience attending the radio production.
9. Consider "what if?" Make a list of elements in the plot that are pivotal.
10. Relate current events from newspapers or internet sites to what took place in THE
CRUCIBLE. Are there parallels between THE CRUCIBLE and present day?
EXTRA: Can you relate THE CRUCIBLE to any other recordings that you have heard? How
does THE CRUCIBLE compare to ARE YOU NOW OR HAVE YOU EVER BEEN?
Salem, Massachusetts
Locate maps and images related to Salem at the time of the witch trials.
How significant was the community in terms of size and importance in the colony?
Puritans
What was the origin of the Puritan form of worship?
Why had they settled in America?
Examining Witches
Rev. Hale speaks of testing the witches.
What were some of the methods used to determine guilt or innocence?
What were the consequences of confessing to witchcraft?
King James
The King James version of the Bible was available.
Who was King James and what were his beliefs about witches?
Arthur Miller
What were his experiences with the House on Un-American Activities Committee?
What does he have to say about the parallels between the
play and the politics of the 1940's and 50's?
Develop teams of attorneys to create a defense strategy for various characters in the
play. You do not need to be limited to those who were accused. How would your
team defend the actions of Mary Warren or Abigail Williams as they are portrayed
in the various scenes?
Be prepared to point to quotations and actions from the play that support the
defense strategy that you develop.
Write an opening and deliver an opening speech to the jury that lays out what your
defense team will try to prove about your client.
Read primary documents related to the trial. The Salem Trials website includes
the arrest warrent for Elizabeth Proctor, the petition for John Proctor, and the
testimony in the cases of Tituba, Rebecca Nurse, and others.
Print a sample of the testimony and highlight "evidence" that was used to condemn
the accused.
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/salem/salem.htm
ACT I
1. Listen closely to the sound effects that begin the play. Wind and giggles dissolve into the
tortured moaning of a child and the distress of those who surround her. In what ways, do these
effects foreshadow later events? (Disc 1, Track 1, 1:40)
2. The opening scene will introduce most of the major characters. Divide the class into small
groups and assign a character to each group. Listeners should pay special attention to the
words spoken by their characters. At the conclusion of the scene, they should meet briefly to
discuss the following questions:
"What you see is what you get" is an expression meaning that a person does not try to
hide his pesonality or goals. Is your character honest or full of
hidden motives?
Have one member of the group summarize the findings and share those with the entire class.
3. Abigail confronts John Proctor. What comments build sympathy for her plight? Which lines
lead listeners to see her in a negative light? (Disc 1, Track 4, 0:30)
ACT II
1. Suspicion reigns in the Proctor household. What lines indicate Elizabeth’s doubts? How does
John try to reassure her? (Disc 1, Track 9, 0:00)
2. One test used to prove evidence was the ability of the accused to recite Biblical passages and
the Ten Commandments without fault. What is ironic about the attempt by John Proctor to
meet the test? (Disc 1, Track 12, 0:38)
3. Reverend Hale asks them what abomination has been hidden that might have brought this
tragedy upon Salem? Think about the actions of the men who question Tituba, the jealousies that
surface in dialogue, and the scandals that are described. What are some of the behaviors that could
be categorized as abominations? (Disc 1, Track 15, 0:00)
1. "Don’t take this personally, but..." often precedes criticism. What errors in the trials were
being pointed out by Giles Cory and Francis Nurse? How does the judge personalize the criticism?
What concerns does Danforth have? (Disc 2, Track 1, 0:00)
2. Review the scene in which John Proctor tries to prove that the girls are frauds. How does
irony play a part? (Disc 2, Tracks 5-7)
ACT IV
1. The opening dialogue makes the audience aware that some of the accused are mad and the
jailer is drunk. How does this behavior resonate with the whole process of the trials? (Disc
2, Track 8, 0:00)
2. Reverend Hale and Reverend Parris have changed. Describe their actions and explain their
current attitudes toward the trials. (Disc 2, Tracks 8-9)
3. The leaders put great pressure on John Proctor to accept guilt and name others. What is their
motive for emphasizing the impact of his confession? (Disc 2, Tracks 10-12)
4. As John Proctor weighs the options, what factors tip the balance? (Disc 2, Tracks 11-12)
5. The crowing of a rooster is heard the background as the story closes. In what ways are characters
and the community "awakening"? (Disc 2, Track 12, 3:34)
In silent movies, the actors used facial expressions and body movements to carry the plot. Dialogue
was flashed on the screen periodically.
During a radio production, listeners must rely solely on words and sound effects. Reverse that
process by developing digital photos to represent key dialogue in the play.
Work with a small team of people to analyze one scene from the play and produce a series of
digital photos to portray the emotions of characters.
1. Review the scene assigned to you and locate a quotation or action that you can represent.
2. Listen to the scene again and discuss the facial expressions and postures that you believe
would best represent the lines.
3. Take pictures from several angles and have team members act out the lines.
4. Select the best examples and place them in chronological order. If you have access to
software, you may want to add the text to the photo or display the results using a program
such as PowerPoint.
Give me a Call
To dwell
Where no foot hath
A path
There will I spend
And End
My wearied years
In tears
Increase Mather authored the classic book used to determine the signs of witchcraft -- Cases of
Conscience Concerning Evil Spirits Personating Men, Witchcrafts, Infallible Proofs of Guilt in Such
as Are Accused with that Crime. He was the father of Cotton Mather, who would eventually
record comments on the Salem trials.
Activity:
Select a character from the play and create an appropriate poem or statement to be placed on
the grave. Try various computer fonts or calligraphy to establish a typographical style
that works well with the wording.
Many grave markers of the time included elaborate stone carvings. You may also want to create
a sketch of the marker.
Q. A director develops an overall concept of the play. What ideas were at the heart
of this production?
A. The director, Martin Jenkins from the BBC in London, heard the play expressed through tense, almost
whispered dialogue to evoke a sense of secrecy, envy, shame and, as the play unfolded, desperation. He
wanted to invoke the sense of a tight, isolated community and high emotion through the voices.
Q. What steps did the company take to prepare for the performance?
A. The company of actors worked with a dialogue coach to find a uniform speech pattern, which would
replicate the sound of 17th century Salem, Massachusetts. We used a segment from the Public Television
Series, ÒThe Story of English,Ó which explained how people spoke during that time. The coach made
a tape for each actor of several vowel sounds and specific words and examples from ÒThe Story of
EnglishÓ segment. The actors concentrated on two or three specific vowel sounds and learned to uniformly
pronounce key words in order to create the sense that they were all from the same place.
Q. What are the special challenges that exist in a radio performance of this play?
A. The greatest challenge is to make these historical characters real and to recreate the world of 17th
century Salem in a highly charged emotional atmosphere where calm resolve and hysteria are both present
in this struggle for life or death. The actors needed to use their voices to express a wide range of emotional
and mental states. They worked on pacing, and changing the rhythms of their dialogue. Sounds such as
breathing, crying and various other non-verbal cues are used to express various emotional states.
Q. Describe ways that these particular actors added depth and insight to the characters they portrayed.
A. Actors do a read-through of the script with the director. Usually, the director talks about the play
and his concept of the production. Actors do a considerable amount of ÒhomeworkÓ or preparation
before the first read-through. They make choices for their character, which often change as they work
with the director and their fellow actors. The rehearsal period, in this case 10 days, is a time of great
growth and change as the actor goes through the rehearsal process and begins to ÒshowÓ his or her
character and to eventually ÒownÓ it.
A. During the witch-hunts of the 1950's when the House Un-American Activities Committee led by
Senator Joseph McCarthy began investigating subversive activity in the entertainment industry, actors,
directors, writers and others were asked to testify about their political affiliations and to Òname namesÓ
— that is, to tell the committee what they knew about the affiliations of colleagues and friends. People
were asked to swear under oath that they had never been members of the Communist Party or to admit
it and renounce their affiliation. Those who refused to testify, by invoking the Fifth Amendment, were
blacklisted by the Hollywood studios. A group of 10 screenwriters known as ÒThe Hollywood Ten,Ó
were blacklisted — in most instances their careers were destroyed and their lives and those of their
families were seriously impacted. In another L.A Theatre Works recording, Eric Bentley's ARE YOU
NOW OR HAVE YOU EVER BEEN?, a re-enactment of the HUAC Hearings is re-created entirely
from the original transcripts.
Q. Arthur Miller is generally recognized as one of America's greatest playwrights. What qualities
make his works so notable?
A. Arthur Miller is able, more than any other American playwright, to combine great characters and
important themes in powerful dramatic terms. Some authors can do wonderful dialogue but are not
good at plot; others tell great stories but the themes are shallow or not well realized; other playwrights
deal with important problems or subjects, but their characters are wooden. Arthur Miller beautifully
integrates all the elements of great drama — plot, dramatic action, character, dialogue, and complex,
interesting, important themes.
ACTIVITY:
If you were going to see a production of THE CRUCIBLE, what questions would you
ask? What questions would you ask the director? What questions would you want to
ask the actors?
In groups, come up with questions that you would want to ask of people involved in a
production of THE CRUCIBLE. Prepare a full interview (as if you were going to be on 60
MINUTES) with either the author, an actor or a director.
Hill Francis. A Delusion of Satan: The Full Story of the Salem Witch Trials. New York: Doubleday. 1995.
Detailed history, chronology, summary of major people involved, photos of
main buildings associated with the period.
Jackson, Shirley. The Witchcraft of Salem Village. New York: Random House. 1998.
Concise history at a middle school reading level. Available in paperback.
* THE WALDORF CONFERENCE by David Kimmel, Marty Reisman & Nat Segaloff
Starring: Edward Asner, Charles Durning and Ron Rifkin
A dramatic speculation of what occurred when the most powerful men in American film met in New York's
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel to decide how to address the HUAC communist witch-hunt. At this conference, the
blacklist was born.