Legacy of Eugene O’Neill
- In full:
- Eugene Gladstone O’Neill
- Died:
- November 27, 1953, Boston, Massachusetts (aged 65)
- Also Known As:
- Eugene Gladstone O’Neill
- Awards And Honors:
- Pulitzer Prize
- Nobel Prize (1936)
- Notable Works:
- “A Moon for the Misbegotten”
- “Ah, Wilderness!”
- “Anna Christie”
- “Beyond the Horizon”
- “Bound East for Cardiff”
- “Desire Under the Elms”
- “Long Day’s Journey into Night”
- “More Stately Mansions”
- “Mourning Becomes Electra”
- “Strange Interlude”
- “The Emperor Jones”
- “The Great God Brown”
- “The Hairy Ape”
- “The Iceman Cometh”
- Notable Family Members:
- father James O’Neill
O’Neill was the first American dramatist to regard the stage as a literary medium and the only American playwright ever to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature. Through his efforts, the American theatre grew up during the 1920s, developing into a cultural medium that could take its place with the best in American fiction, painting, and music. Until his Beyond the Horizon was produced, in 1920, Broadway theatrical fare, apart from musicals and an occasional European import of quality, had consisted largely of contrived melodrama and farce. O’Neill saw the theatre as a valid forum for the presentation of serious ideas. Imbued with the tragic sense of life, he aimed for a contemporary drama that had its roots in the most powerful of ancient Greek tragedies—a drama that could rise to the emotional heights of Shakespeare. For more than 20 years, both with such masterpieces as Desire Under the Elms, Mourning Becomes Electra, and The Iceman Cometh and by his inspiration to other serious dramatists, O’Neill set the pace for the blossoming of the Broadway theatre.
Barbara Gelb Arthur Gelb