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Arthur Miller
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The awarding of this great prize to my work turns memory to my connections with Spain and her culture.
Born in New York in 1915, Arthur Miller is considered to be one of the twentieth century's major playwrights. He began his university studies at the University of Michigan (U.S.A) at a time when he was beginning to take an interest in the theatre. He wrote "The Grass still Grows", which won several literary awards, when he was still a student (1938). He published "The Man who had all the Luck" in 1944, but fame came to him in 1945 via his novel, "Focus". In 1947, he wrote "All my Sons", which was awarded the New York Drama Critics' Circle award. Miller is also renowned for his fierce political and social activism: he attacked American anti-humanism, courted Marxism, only to then criticise it, was a prominent opponent of the McCarthy witch hunt, and denounced American intervention in Korea and Vietnam.©Copyright 2008 Prince of Asturias Foundation | Data Protection Policy