A word-sigh escapes his lips-it might be " Oh, boy, oh, boy. He unlocks the door, comes into the kitchen, and thankfully lets his burden down, feeling the soreness of his palms. Even as he crosses the stage to the doorway of the house, his exhaustion is apparent. He is past sixty years of age, dressed quietly. From the right, WILLY LOMAN, the Salesman, enters, carrying two large sample cases. But in the scenes of the past these boundaries are broken, and characters enter or leave a room by stepping " through " a wall onto the forestage. Whenever the action is in the present the actors observe the imaginary wall-lines, entering the house only through its door at the left. This forward area serves as the back yard as well as the locale of all WILLY's imaginings and of his city scenes. Before the house lies an apron, curving beyond the forestage into the orchestra. The roof-line of the house is one-dimensional under and over it we see the apartment buildings. The entire setting is wholly or, in some places, partially transparent. (This bedroom is above the unseen living-room.) At the left a stairway curves up to it from the kitchen. Two beds are dimly seen, and at the back of the room a dormer window. Behind the kitchen, on a level raised six and a half feet, is the boys' bedroom, at present barely visible.
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