| O'Neill, Eugene Gladstone (1888-1953) |
|
In the Fall of 1914,
I entered Harvard University to attend the course in dramatic technique
given by Professor George Baker. I left after one year and did not complete
the course. The following is a list of all my published and produced plays which are worth mentioning, with the year in which they were written: Bound East for Cardiff
(1914), Before Breakfast (1916), The Long Voyage Home (1917), In the Zone
(1917), The Moon of the Carabbees (1917), Ile (1917), The Rope (1918),
Beyond the Horizon (1918), The Dreamy Kid (1918), Where the Cross is Made
(1918), The Straw (1919), Gold (1920), Anna Christie (1920}, The Emperor
Jones (1920), Different (1920), The First Man (1921), The Fountain (1921-22),
The Hairy Ape (1921 ), Welded (1922), All God's Chillun Got Wings (1923),
Desire Under the Elms (1924), Marco Millions (1923-25), The Great God
Brown (1925), Lazarus Laughed (1926), Strange Interlude (1926-27), Dynamo
(1928 ), Mourning Becomes Electra (1929-31) , Ah, Wilderness (1932), Days
Without End (1932-33). After an active career of writing and supervising the New York productions of his own works, O'Neill (1888-1953) published only two new plays between 1934 and the time of his death. In The Iceman Cometh (1946), he exposed a «prophet's» battle against the last pipedreams of a group of derelicts as another pipedream and managed to infuse into the «Lower Depths» atmosphere a sense of the tragic. A Moon for the Misbegotten (1952) contains a strong autobiographical content, which it shares with Long Day's Journey into Night (posth. 1956), one of O'Neill's most important works. The latter play, written, according to O'Neill, «in tears and blood... with deep pity and understanding and forgiveness for all the four haunted Tyrones», had its premiere at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm. Sweden grew into an O'Neill centre with the first productions of the one-act play Hughie (posth. 1959) as well as A Touch of the Poet (posth. 1958) and an adapted version of More Stately Mansions (posth. 1962 ) - both plays being parts of an unfinished cycle in which O'Neill returned to his earlier attempts at making psychological analysis dramatically effective. From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967. Eugene O'Neill died in 1953. |