A child's spirit is like a child, you can never catch it by running after it; you must stand still, and, for love, it will soon itself come back.
Arthur Miller
Maybe all one can do is hope to end up with the right regrets.
Betrayal is the only truth that sticks.
I think it's a mistake to ever look for hope outside of one's self.
I cannot sleep for dreaming; I cannot dream but I wake and walk about the house as though I'd find you coming through some door.
A good newspaper, I suppose, is a nation talking to itself.
Let you look sometimes for the goodness in me, and judge me not.
The theater is so endlessly fascinating because it's so accidental. It's so much like life.
Don't be seduced into thinking that that which does not make a profit is without value.
Never fight fair with a stranger, boy. You'll never get out of the jungle that way.
The apple cannot be stuck back on the Tree of Knowledge; once we begin to see, we are doomed and challenged to seek the strength to see more, not less.
He's not the finest character that ever lived. But he's a human being, and a terrible thing is happening to him. So attention must be paid.
Can anyone remember love? It's like trying to summon up the smell of roses in a cellar. You might see a rose, but never the perfume.
Man must shape his tools lest they shape him.
A suicide kills two people, Maggie, that's what it's for!
Well, all the plays that I was trying to write were plays that would grab an audience by the throat and not release them, rather than presenting an emotion which you could observe and walk away from.
The structure of a play is always the story of how the birds came home to roost.
Everybody likes a kidder, but nobody lends him money.
Without alienation, there can be no politics.
You cannot catch a child's spirit by running after it; you must stand still and for love it will soon itself return.
The job is to ask questions-it always was-and to ask them as inexorably as I can. And to face the absence of precise answers with a certain humility.
All we are is a lot of talking nitrogen.
You specialize in something until one day you find it is specializing in you.
I'm the end of the line; absurd and appalling as it may seem, serious New York theater has died in my lifetime.
Where choice begins, Paradise ends, innocence ends, for what is Paradise but the absence of any need to choose this action?
I have made more friends for American culture than the State Department. Certainly I have made fewer enemies, but that isn't very difficult.
I love her too, but our neuroses just don't match.
The problem was to sustain at any cost the feeling you had in the theater that you were watching a real person, yes, but an intense condensation of his experience, not simply a realistic series of episodes.
If I have any justification for having lived it's simply, I'm nothing but faults, failures and so on, but I have tried to make a good pair of shoes. There's some value in that.
A playwright lives in an occupied country. And if you can't live that way you don't stay.
If I see an ending, I can work backward.
I am older than everyone I ever knew. All my dogs are dead. Half a dozen cats, parakeets... all gone.
Certainly the most diverse, if minor, pastime of literary life is the game of Find the Author.
The closer a man approaches tragedy the more intense is his concentration of emotion upon the fixed point of his commitment, which is to say the closer he approaches what in life we call fanaticism.
I think now that the great thing is not so much the formulation of an answer for myself, for the theater, or the play-but rather the most accurate possible statement of the problem.
In the theater, while you recognized that you were looking at a house, it was a house in quotation marks. On screen, the quotation marks tend to be blotted out by the camera.
He wants to live on through something-and in his case, his masterpiece is his son. all of us want that, and it gets more poignant as we get more anonymous in this world.
What is the most innocent place in any country? Is it not the insane asylum? These people drift through life truly innocent, unable to see into themselves at all.
It is my art. I am better at it than I ever was. And I will do it as long as I can. When you reach a certain age you can slough off what is unnecessary and concentrate on what is. And why not?
The number of elements that have to go into a hit would break a computer down. the right season for that play, the right historical moment, the right tonality.
I know that my works are a credit to this nation and I dare say they will endure longer than the McCarran Act.