Imagine you are Arthur miller - An actor playing the part of Eddie in "A View From the Bridge" has written to you for advice on how he should play the character - Write back with close reference to key dialogue and the dramatic devices used.

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Imagine you are Arthur miller. An actor playing the part of Eddie in “A View From the Bridge” has written to you for advice on how he should play the character.

Write back with close reference to key dialogue and the dramatic devices used.

15 Vine Street,

Brooklyn,

New York

10YPZ 406

13th May 1957

Dear Albert,

                

I am writing to you in reply to your recent letter asking for advice on how to play the leading character Eddie Carbone in “A View from the Bridge”.

My inspiration for writing this book was from my own experience from working on the docks with Italian immigrants; from the little stories my parents had told me; and the story about Vinny Bolzano, who told the Immigrant Bureau that his Uncle was staying with them. His family grabbed Vinny in the kitchen and pulled him down three flights of stairs with his head “bouncin’ like a coconut”. They spit on him in the streets, he was only fourteen, and his own father and his brothers never talked to him again.

The set of the play must reflect that Eddie’s flat is overcrowded and set in the slums of Brooklyn, which is an industrial area suffering from poverty.

        Eddie is a crucial character to this story because everything seems evolve around him. Everything should evolve around him, as he has extreme passion and hatred for Rodolfo, whom he becomes jealous of in the end. He blocks out Beatrice and Alfieri because he doesn’t want to be persuaded into agreeing to let Catherine go for the same reason he obstructed Catherine and Rodolfo’s wedding.

        Eddie in the beginning of the story was a ‘family man’; his use of the rocker means that it is his chair; no one else sits in it. The position of it is important because he can overlook everything that is happening in the room. His conversations are parental and job advice to Catherine even though she isn’t his daughter; the down side to his behaviour is that he’s over protective of Catherine.

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        In the middle of the story Eddie should seem to be distant because he doesn’t want to believe that Catherine and Rodolfo are in love and he can’t express his feelings in words, only in physical actions e.g. “…unconsciously twisting the newspaper…” and “…lightly boxing…”

        The end of the story leads to tragedy; Eddie is cut off from the family since he kissed Catherine in possession, and then kissed Rodolfo to try and prove that he is camp. Catherine has a change of heart towards Eddie “He’s a rat! He belongs in the sewers!” Eddie’s speech, like Catherine and Beatrice, ...

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