O'NEILL, EUGENE (GLADSTONE)

1888–1953, American dramatist, b. New York City. He is widely acknowledged as America's greatest playwright.

Early Life

O'Neill's father was James O'Neill, a popular actor noted for his portrayal of the Count of Monte Cristo. Young O'Neill, his mother, and his older brother lived an unsettled life traveling with James on tour. The tortured relationships in his family haunted O'Neill all his life and are reflected in many of his plays. From boarding school he entered Princeton in 1906 but remained there only a year. During the next few years he traveled widely and held a variety of jobs, acquiring experience that familiarized him with the life of sailors, stevedores, and the outcasts who populate many of his plays.

O'Neill was stricken with tuberculosis in 1912 and spent six months in a sanatorium, where he decided to become a playwright. In the next two years he wrote 13 plays. He studied with George Pierce Baker at Harvard (1914–15) and in the summer of the following year began his association with the Provincetown Players, a theatrical group that produced many of his one-act plays.

Plays

O'Neill's first full-length play to be produced was Beyond the Horizon (1920; Pulitzer Prize), a grim domestic drama set in New England. After several "ambitious" failures, O'Neill's first great play, Desire under the Elms (1924), was produced; set in 19th-century New England, it dramatizes the impassioned battle for dominance between a hard, puritanical father and his sensitive son. O'Neill's next important work, The Great God Brown (1926), is a complicated, symbolic play about a modern man's futile struggle to identify himself with nature. Strange Interlude (1928; Pulitzer Prize), a nine-act drama, is a Freudian character study of an emotionally sterile woman, whose frequent asides give expression to her deeper thoughts and feelings. His other plays of the period include Marco Millions (1928), Lazarus Laughed (1928), and Dynamo (1929).

In 1931 O'Neill's great trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra was produced. Set in post–Civil War New England, it is a retelling of the ancient Greek myth surrounding the murder of Agamemnon. After Days Without End (1934), no new O'Neill play was performed until The Iceman Cometh (1946). Considered by many critics his greatest work, it looks at a group of drunken outcasts who are stripped of their illusions by a misguided, guilt-ridden savior. In 1936 O'Neill was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature. A Moon for the Misbegotten (1947), about the frustrated love between an alcoholic and a farm woman, was not well received, but a revival of the play in 1973 was successful.

Later Life and Plays

Near the end of his life O'Neill renounced his daughter Oona when, at 18, she married the actor Charlie Chaplin, a man her father's age; O'Neill himself contracted a crippling disease that made him unable to write. At his death O'Neill left several important plays in manuscript, including the autobiographical masterpiece, Long Day's Journey into Night (produced 1956; Pulitzer Prize), and two parts of an unfinished cycle of plays using American history as a background—A Touch of the Poet (first U.S. production, 1958) and More Stately Mansions (first U.S. production, 1967).

Bibliography

See biographies by L. Sheaffer (2 vol., 1968–73), A. and B. Gelb (2 vol., rev. ed. 1974; new ed., Vol. I, 2000), and N. Berlin (1988); studies by O. Cargill et al. (1961), T. Bogard (1972), and J. Chothia (1982).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: ONeill Eugene (Gladstone)
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books on: ONeill Eugene (Gladstone)  - 40 results

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ONeill, Eugene Gladstone (continued): Provincetown, 137-47, 187-201, 202-8...69, 78, 86, 101, 136; The Ole Davil, 142, 146 (see also ONeill, Eugene; Anna Christie ); The Reckoning, 168 n. 2; The Rope, 64...
...Data Raleigh, John Henry, 1920- The plays of Eugene ONeill. Arcturus books edition Original ed. issued in...critiques. Includes bibliographical references. 1. ONeill, Eugene Gladstone, 1888-1953. I. Title. PS3529.N5Z79 1972...
...attempted to revivify the Greek tragedies, ONeill was beyond his depth Fergusson: "Mr. ONeill is not a thinker." Such is the catalogue...the case. Kathleen ni Hoolihan, call Eugene Gladstone ONeill onto the green carpet. That Irishman...
CHRONOLOGY 1888 Eugene Gladstone ONeill born October 16 in a New York...Mary Ellen "Ella" Quinlan ONeill. 1895-1900 Sent to Catholic...1910 Kathleen gives birth to Eugene Gladstone ONeill Jr. The new father sails to...
...are all signed, sometimes E. ONeill, sometimes Eugene ONeill, once "Tigean Te OaNeill," and once to an ambitious political parody on Hiawatha Eugene Gladstone ONeill. The twenty-four pieces show little besides a...
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journal articles on: ONeill Eugene (Gladstone)  - 2 results

 
 
...and Mrs. T. Eugene Worrell. NEWSPAPERS...James River from Gladstone to Howardsville...Libraries. 52. ONeill, Eugene. The last will...Toppin, Ettrick Eugene P. Trani, Richmond...Gillenwater Ann F. Gladstone James Goetzinger...
...Richmond Suzanne Foster Thomas, Alexandria Eugene P. Trani, Richmond B. Walton Turnbull...Giese * Willie Gillenwater * Ann F. Gladstone * Dee Glusiec * James Goetzinger * Joyce...the aftermath of the Civil War Lindsay ONeill, Yale University * communication and...


 

magazine articles on: ONeill Eugene (Gladstone)  - 3 results

 
 
Eugene ONeill in Buenos Aires. by Andrew Graham...interest in the life and writings of Eugene ONeill, the man who revolutionized theater...the federal capital of Argentina. Eugene Gladstone ONeill (1888-1953), a supernumerary on...
...Helene Kvale. Mar 24-Apr 3. EUGENE ONEILL THEATER CENTER, Waterford, (860...A Moon for the Misbegotten, ONeill; dir: Gordon Edelsten. Feb 23...Mar 4-Apr 17. Anna Christie, ONeill; dir: Molly Smith. May 6-Jun...
...Mann from Chekhov; dir: Josh Gladstone. Apr 15-May 1. THE KAVINOKY...San Juan Shakespeare Company, Eugene Rodriguez; dir: Alfredo Galvan...Hughie/A Pound on Demand, Eugene ONeill/Sean OCasey; dir: Catherine...


 

newspaper articles on: ONeill Eugene (Gladstone)  - 6 results

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...Andreasons Cremation Burial Service, Eugene, in charge of arrangements. ONeill - John ONeill, 72, of Eugene, died March 21. Visitation will...M. Watson Vollbrecht, 93, of Gladstone, formerly of Eugene, died March 19. A memorial service...
...BREASTSTROKE - 1, Brooks, Gladstone, 1:07.91. 2, Kellye...1:43.47. 13, South Eugene (David Devore, Nathan Lindquist...16, Aaron Minster, North Eugene, 1:52.23. 200 INDIVIDUAL...21.66. 3, Lee, South Eugene, 22.10. 4, Jaime Comrie...
...Jesuit. ALSO: 11, North Eugene, 1:46.68. 100 BACKSTROKE...Sprague 14, North Eugene 13, Beaverton 13, South...2, Renee Rother, Gladstone, 2:13.28. 3, Rebecca...56, Wilsonville 40, Gladstone 21, Scappoose 21, Sweet...3, David Lee, South Eugene, 21.99. 4, Jaime...
...Milwaukie, p Steinberge, North Eugene, 3:46. John Dibala, Silverton...Lakeridge, Marshall, North Eugene, Summit, The Dalles-Wahtonka...Creswell, 1:35. Nick ONeill, McLoughlin, d Jeremy Sanders...Rogue River 1, Taft 1, Gladstone 1. Class 3A Sky-Em W L Pct...
...Ming was the greatest thing to hit the Liberals since Gladstone. I have not seen Ming going through any atlases, he...with a penchant for theatre, including Beckett and Eugene ONeill. If Clegg were leader of the Lib Dems, both the Tories...
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encyclopedia articles on: ONeill Eugene (Gladstone)  - 1 result

 
 
ONEILL, EUGENE (GLADSTONE) 1888 1953, American dramatist, b...Early Life ONeills father was James ONeill, a popular actor noted for his portrayal of the Count of Monte Cristo. Young ONeill, his mother, and his older brother...


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