With an introduction by Arthur Miller and a new Foreword by Philip Seymour Hoffman Will always stand with the masterpieces of Ibsen, Shakespeare and Sophocles Nicholas Hytner, director of the Royal National Theatre Eddie Carbone is a longshoreman and a straightforward man, with a strong sense of decency and of honour. For Eddie, it's a privilege to take in his wife's cousins, straight off the boat from Italy. But, as his niece begins to fall for one of them, it's clear that it's not just, as Eddie claims, that he's too strange, too sissy, too careless for her, but that something bigger, deeper is wrong, and wrong inside Eddie, in a way he can't face. Something which threatens the happiness of their whole family. A View from the Bridge is a tragic masterpiece of the inexorable unravelling of a man.