Joe Keller became rich during the war. The fact that his company supplied the Air Force with faulty parts for planes and as a result 21 pilots died in crashes is something no one talks about today. At the time, Joe's company partner Steve went to prison while he himself convinced the court of his innocence. His youngest son Chris is now the company's hope for the future, as his older brother Larry, a fighter pilot, has been presumed missing for years. His mother alone obsessively clings to the belief that her son is still alive. Chris, convinced of his brother's death, wants to marry Ann - once Larry's fiancée and also the daughter of his father's imprisoned business partner. Her mother is adamantly opposed to the new union. It would mean accepting the death of her missing son. Miller's play looks unsparingly behind the facades of respectable bourgeoisie. Anselm Weber devised this production in spring 2017 at the Schauspielhaus Bochum.
Text source and further information about this event: https://www.schauspielfrankfurt.de/spielplan/alle_meine_soehne/2985/