Tyrone Guthrie established his signature playhouse in 1963 with a mission to stage the classics. His first season reflected that with "Hamlet," Chekhov's "Three Sisters" and Molière's "The Miser."
The fourth production of that inaugural season raised eyebrows, however. Not even 15 years old, "Death of a Salesman" was chosen because Guthrie believed that playwright Arthur Miller had created a play that transcended time and place.
Given that auspicious start, it is curious that the Guthrie staged only two of Miller's plays in its first 34 years — "Salesman" twice and "The Crucible" once. Not until Joe Dowling became artistic director in 1996 did the theater form what might be called a special relationship with Miller.
This weekend Dowling opens "The Crucible," his final testament with Miller in a 20-year tenure. This marks the seventh time Dowling has put Miller on a Guthrie stage — more than any writer not named William Shakespeare. Yes, more than Brian Friel, a Dowling friend who holds a soft spot in the director's heart, or George Bernard Shaw, another fellow Irishman.
Dowling wrote of his admiration for the playwright in an essay collected in "Remembering Arthur Miller."
"I can still remember the excitement of reading 'The Crucible' for the first time," Dowling wrote. "This play had everything I could imagine in a great play: memorable characters, a great story, an historical theme that spoke of contemporary issues in an immediate way. It had dialogue that was both literate and thrilling to speak.
"I read the play aloud in the privacy of my bedroom, playing every part, male and female, young and old."
Little wonder, then, that Dowling would pick this play in his valedictory season. His cast will include Erik Heger and Michelle O'Neill (who played the Macbeths in 2010), old friend Peter Michael Goetz, Stephen Yoakam, Greta Oglesby and Raye Birk.