Today is Arthur Miller’s birthday.
For nearly
six decades of his life, Miller created characters that wrestled with power
conflicts, personal and social responsibility, the repercussions of past
actions, and the twin poles of guilt and hope.
I look at the above quote and I wonder about the personal
struggles Arthur Miller, the man, had in his own life.
You see, the Pulitzer Prize and multiple Tony Awards
winner who always put into question "death and betrayal and injustice and
how we are to account for this little life of ours." had a secret that he
lived with from 1966 until his death in 2005.
Arthur Miller and his third wife,Inge Morath, had a son
named Daniel. Daniel was born with an
extra chromosome. Daniel had Down syndrome.
He was born in November 1966 and at a week old, was placed in an
institution and removed from Arthur Miller’s life.
It has been noted that Inge wanted to keep the baby, but
Miller was adamant that it had to be sent away. Daniel was institutionalized
soon after his birth, spent his infancy at an institution in New York City, and
the entire rest of his childhood at the Southbury Training School for retarded
children in Connecticut. In an article in Vanity Fair, it is reported that Inge
visited the boy regularly at Southbury, but his father never did, and
eliminated him from his life entirely, never mentioning his existence in public
nor in his autobiography Timebends.
Inge would visit her son often. She never let him go.
Despite the limitations of life in Southbury, Daniel grew
up to be a very bright and charismatic young man.
Arthur Miller's decision was entirely common for
people of his time and for society at large. Whereas, I had not the slightest
hesitation ever about raising Emma Sage at home, my generation was very different
in this regard from my parents' generation. Among the generation that grew up
before World War II, it was normal to institutionalize developmentally disabled
children, and in fact physicians often advised parents to do so.
Arthur Miller, born in 1916, belonged to the generation
which carried this mindset.
Different axioms lead in a different direction,
regardless of propriety. Anne de Gaulle, born in 1928 with Down syndrome, was
the daughter of the young officer Charles de Gaulle and his wife Yvonne. Anne
was never separated from her parents throughout her life, and her father always
made time to spend with her. Famously chilly and formal in public, the General
was reputed to be warmer and more outgoing with Anne. When she died at the
family home of Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises, General de Gaulle said simply:
"Maintenant, elle est comme les autres." [Now, she is like the
others.]
What produced these remarkable post-WWII changes in
conventional social attitudes? I don't understand how it took place in
detail. But, like everything else associated with the "baby boom"
generation, the clues must lie in the 1960s and 1970s, during which I spent my
childhood and youth.
Whilst the change has shifted to embrace our children
with Down syndrome, the underlying fear of disability is still alive and well
in our society. Our children are out in
the light……they are Living, Loving, Growing and Thriving and they are valued
members of our families and communities.
But there still lies darkness; as Eugenics is still ever
present, especially in regards to the prenatal diagnosis of Trisomy 21/Down
syndrome.
Today we celebrate the birth of a man who wrote with
conscience, clarity and compassion. A
man for whom it was not discovered until after his death held a powerful and
tragic secret.
“A character is defined by the kinds of challenges he
cannot walk away from. And by those he has walked away from that cause him
remorse.” ― Arthur Miller
Just before his death, Miller did something that indicates
that he was validating his son. By acknowledging
him by changing his Will to include Daniel as his rightful heir and son. A full quarter share of the estate, no more or
no less than his three siblings. It is
also noted that Miller visiting his son in the last years of his life. In my heart-of-hearts, I hope that is true.
The most important part of this story is that Daniel
transcended his father's failures: "He's made a life for himself; he is
deeply valued and very, very loved. What a loss for Arthur Miller that he
couldn't see how extraordinary his son is." States the woman who Daniel
has lived with most of his adult life.
It was a loss that Arthur Miller may have understood
better than he let on………and I wonder if this story could have been Arthur
Miller’s greatest unwritten play.
Click Here for the Vanity Fair article: Arthur Miller's Missing Act
1 comment:
I read that Vanity Fair article a few years ago, and loved it. Amazing story. Thank you for sharing it here and reminding people of the shift in thought over the years, and the way some of the older generation may still view things.
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