The cast consisted principally of the Broadway cast, with the addition of Kevin McCarthy from the original London cast. However, Fredric March replaced Broadway actor
Lee J. Cobb after concerns arose over Cobb's past as a communist sympathizer. Director László Benedek took great care that the film should closely follow the play. The script contains many of Arthur Miller's lines verbatim, sometimes removing only small bits of dialogue. However, Miller, who had no involvement with or control over the film, claimed that it was ruined by the truncation of key scenes. Benedek also stressed the dreary, middle-class setting of the film, using small rooms and gray shots.
Career of a Salesman showed what the producers believed to be a more typical American salesman and was an attempt to defuse possible accusations that
Death of a Salesman was an anti-American film. Columbia eventually agreed to remove the short for the film's theatrical run. Miller saw
Career of a Salesman as an attack upon his work, proclaiming: "Why the hell did you make the picture if you're so ashamed of it? Why should anybody not get up and walk out of the theater if
Death of a Salesman is so outmoded and pointless?" He argued against the portrayal of the salesman profession as "a wonderful profession, that people thrived on it, and there were no problems at all". Miller also felt that Benedek's direction managed to "chop off almost every climax of the play as though with a lawnmower" and portray Loman as a lunatic rather than a victim. ==Reception==