The company broke more new ground in 1983 when it invited playwright Arthur Miller to direct a production of what was seen at the time as a uniquely American drama "Death of a Salesman," an experience Miller recounted in the form of a day-to-day diary in his book Salesman in Beijing (1985).
Beijing | Broadway theatre | People's Republic of China | English people | French people | Museum of Modern Art | Art Deco | Filipino people | Metropolitan Museum of Art | British people | Irish people | West End theatre | Scottish people | Romani people | musical theatre | Mexican people | Japanese people | German people | Brazilian people | Italian people | Art Institute of Chicago | Portuguese people | Dutch people | Royal National Theatre | theatre | San Francisco Museum of Modern Art | Royal Court Theatre | National Gallery of Art | Turkish people | Honolulu Museum of Art |