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All My Sons is the name of a 1947 play by Arthur Miller. The play was later turned into a 1948 film and a 1986 made-for-TV film.
The play, which 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, was awarded the 1947 Tony Award for Best Play. It was directed by Elia Kazan (to whom it is dedicated) and won the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award beating Eugene O’Neill’s work The Iceman Cometh. It stared Ed Begley, Beth Miller, Arthur Kennedy, and Karl Malden and won both the Tony Award for Best Play and the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Play.
All My Sons tells the story of Joe Keller, a successful, middle-aged, self-made man who has done a terrible and tragic thing: during World War II, rushing to meet an order from the Army, he knowingly sold them defective airplane parts which later caused the planes to crash and killed 21 men. He framed his business partner for this crime and engineered his own exoneration; now, his son is about to marry the partner's daughter, the affair is revisited, and his lie of a life is unraveled. Joe has spent his entire life in the single-minded pursuit of wealth for the sake of his family, an American Dream gone nightmarishly awry; this is a story about responsibility: Joe and his generation must understand that the boys he killed--all the boys in the War--were his sons, too. But Arthur Miller, who wrote this powerful and moving work in 1947, had more than just that on his mind: this is a movie about all the compromises we are forced to make to live in a dishonest world, about a country's irrevocable loss of innocence, oddly timely as we sit poised to enter a new millennium. Written by Anonymous





