The Archbishop's Ceiling - Characters

Characters

Adrian; Maya; Marcus; Irina; Sigmund


Works of Arthur Miller
Plays
  • No Villain
  • They Too Arise
  • Honors at Dawn
  • The Golden Years (radio play)
  • That They May Win (one-act)
  • The Man Who Had All the Luck
  • All My Sons
  • Death of a Salesman
  • An Enemy of the People
  • The Crucible
  • A View from the Bridge
  • A Memory of Two Mondays
  • The Misfits
  • After the Fall
  • Incident At Vichy
  • The Price
  • The Creation of the World and Other Business
  • The Archbishop's Ceiling
  • The American Clock
  • Up from Paradise
  • Elegy for a Lady
  • Some Kind of Love Story
  • Everybody Wins
  • The Last Yankee
  • The Ride Down Mt. Morgan
  • Broken Glass
  • Mr. Peters' Connections
  • Resurrection Blues
  • Finishing the Picture
Novels
  • Focus
  • Homely Girl: A Life
Short stories
  • The Misfits (short story and screenplay)
  • I Don't Need You Anymore (short stories)
  • Presence: Stories (short stories)
Non-fiction
  • Situation Normal
  • In Russia
  • In the Country
  • Chinese Encounters
  • Salesman in Beijing
  • Timebends (autobiography)

Read more about this topic:  The Archbishop's Ceiling

Famous quotes containing the word characters:

    Socialist writers are made of sterner stuff than those who only let their characters steeplechase through trouble in order to come out first in the happy ending of moral uplift.
    Christina Stead (1902–1983)

    A criminal trial is like a Russian novel: it starts with exasperating slowness as the characters are introduced to a jury, then there are complications in the form of minor witnesses, the protagonist finally appears and contradictions arise to produce drama, and finally as both jury and spectators grow weary and confused the pace quickens, reaching its climax in passionate final argument.
    Clifford Irving (b. 1930)

    The business of a novelist is, in my opinion, to create characters first and foremost, and then to set them in the snarl of the human currents of his time, so that there results an accurate permanent record of a phase of human history.
    John Dos Passos (1896–1970)