Mourning Becomes Electra, one
of Eugene O'Neill's greatest plays,
was
presented by the National Theatre in 2003 celebrating the fiftieth
anniversary of the playwright's death. A reworking of the “Oresteia”
trilogy by Aeschylus and the Electra tragedies of Sophocles and
Euripides, O’Neill’s epic American tragedy of hatred,
passion, jealousy and greed is set in New England after the Civil
War. Using Freud’s theories, as O’Neill had done earlier
in “Strange Interlude,” he now views classical drama
(as had Freud) as a rich field for exploration of character motivation.
The National Theatre production is directed by Howard Davies, and
Helen Mirren stars as Christine, wife of returning Civil War brigadier
general Ezra Mannon. Eve Best plays Lavinia, Ezra’s devoted
daughter, who discovers her mother’s love affair with Adam
Brandt. Adam, the son of Ezra’s wayward brother who had dishonored
the family by his marriage to a servant, seeks revenge for the treatment
of his parents. He and Christine plot Ezra’s death by poison
on the
evening
of his return from the war. Disclosing them as her father’s
murderers, Lavinia persuades her brother Orin to kill Adam, at whose
loss Christine commits suicide. Although Lavinia had seemed plain
in contrast to Christine’s beauty, she now grows more like
her mother in appearance, and Orin, his mother’s favorite,
turns his affections toward Lavinia. After his torment ends with
suicide, Lavinia is left alone in their mansion, its shutters nailed
closed, to “live alone with the dead… until the curse
is paid out and the last Mannon is let die.”
Life and Works
Born in New York City on October 16, 1888,
the second son of popular actor James O'Neill, young Eugene sometimes
accompanied his father on the national tours that were mandatory
in every major actor's career. James O'Neill's best known
part was the title role in "The Count of Monte Cristo,"
in which he toured for many years. The father, a famous actor
and also, according to his son, a land-mad miser, in “Long Day’s
Journey” delivers a long speech revealing his regret at remaining
in popular but worthless vehicles at the expense of developing his
talent in serious works like the plays of Shakespeare.
At eighteen, Eugene entered Princeton University
and shortly after, was expelled. In "Long Day’s Journey"
the wild behavior of the younger son, who is O'Neill,
is
blamed on the bad example set by the older brother, would-be actor
Jamie. As a seaman, Eugene sailed the world, and worked for
a while as a gold prospector in Honduras. In New York City,
he would frequent the sleazy saloons, one of which is the setting
for "The Iceman Cometh." By the time he was twenty-four,
he had contracted tuberculosis, the fate suffered by the younger
son in "Long Day's Journey." Always a reader, he
decided during his recuperation to become a playwright, and entered
George Baker's playwriting course at Harvard University.
His early one-act plays based on his sea experiences
became an excellent film, "The Long Voyage Home."
O'Neill's first big success on Broadway was "Beyond the Horizon"
in 1920, which was awarded a Pulitzer prize, as were three of his
later plays. It concerns two brothers, one a sea-loving, sensitive
lad, who marries and must remain home as a farmer, and the other,
a born farmer who takes advantage of the opportunity to sail the
world but profits nothing from his experiences. It is interesting
to note that both O'Neill and Arthur Miller had older brothers and
that fraternal pairs figure importantly in the works of both men.
Although these early plays are realistic, O'Neill
demonstrates in two one-acts his growing interest in the expressionism
of the thirties, as seen in German films like "The Cabinet
of Dr. Caligari." In the expressionistic "The Hairy
Ape," in which a ship's stoker, his milieu the pounding engines
and furnaces, aspires to the love of a wealthy woman passenger,
but fails to find peace out of his customary environment; as the
citizens of the metropolis ignore him, mechanically bent on their
destinations. He can find companionship only in the zoo, at
the cage of the ape to whom he has been compared. In "The
Emperor Jones," an opportunistic black railway porter, through
his cunning, takes advantage of naive jungle inhabitants to become
their emperor. But as he is pursued through the jungle by
city deserters even more greedy than he, his veneer of civilization
is lost, and he reverts to basic human fears. Both these plays
are preserved as good films, the latter with an impressive performance
by Paul Robeson as Jones.
The naturalism that marks these one-acts is also
the driving force behind the tragedy of "Anna Christie,"
a former prostitute who hopes to leave behind her former life in
the West and live cleanly and peacefully with her father, a tugboat
captain in New York. But she is unable to escape the molding
forces beyond her control, her past and "the old devil
sea" that her father believes has them in his grip. The film
of the same name in the title role stars Greta Garbo, who successfully
captures O'Neill's brooding heroine.
In "Strange Interlude" (1928)
O"Neill experiments with having the characters not only deliver
their dialogue in interacting with others, but also speak their
thoughts to the audience, thoughts that often counter their remarks
to the listener. A revival a few years ago, with Glenda Jackson
as the heroine and Edward Petherbridge as her long suffering friend
Charles, played both in London and on Broadway, demonstrating the
power of this work in which the heroine both entraps and is entrapped
by the men in her life: her domineering father, her husband, the
doctor friend who is the secret father of her child, the understanding
family friend, and her son.
"The Iceman Cometh" (1946) and
"Long Day's Journey into Night" (1957) are generally considered
O'Neill's best plays. The latter was produced posthumously
because O'Neill left instructions with his wife Carlotta that it
must not be staged until his brother died. He wrote the story
of the "haunted" family, he said in the dedication to
Carlotta, with "blood and tears." It is a searing
account of a day in the life of the Tyrones, the father a famous
actor, the mother addicted to morphine, the older son a wastrel,
and the younger son (O'Neill) stricken with tuberculosis.
Each blames the other for his or her tragic plight: -- the father
with his need to support the family, which drove him to remain in
a worthless but popular work; the mother on her pain at childbirth,
for which a "cheap" doctor hired by her husband prescribed
morphine, to which she became addicted; the younger brother on the
older, who leads him into degeneracy; and the older on the father,
who forced him into acting, which he despises, and heavy drinking,
in emulation of his father.
An excellent film version stars Katharine
Hepburn as the mother, Ralph Richardson as the father, Jason Robards,
Jr. as the older son and Dean Stockwell as the younger. There
is also a television version, with Laurence Olivier as the father
and Constance Cummings as the mother. The play is frequently
revived and always powerful in its impact. One of the best
revivals brought Helen Hayes to the Hartke Theater at Catholic University
in Washington, in an unforgettably moving performance as Mary.
"The Iceman Cometh" was
revived in London and on Broadway a few seasons ago, with Kevin
Spacey as Hickey. "Iceman" may seem to run a lifetime,
but then it does encompass life and death In Harry Hope's
bar earlier this century, the seedy inhabitants have only their
illusions, or "pipe dreams," to keep them alive.
With the help of liquor and companionship, each recalls a meaningful
past and resolves upon action -- but in the future. In the
present, however, they do not venture outside the bar. As
the play opens, they await the arrival of salesman Hickey offering
stale jokes (including the one about the wife and the iceman) and
free drinks.
Interviewed before the play's initial opening
in 1946, O'Neill described the first act as a "hilarious comedy....a
big kind of comedy that doesn't stay funny very long...the comedy
breaks up and the tragedy comes on." He attempted to
explain his approach to Theater Guild producer Laurence Langner:
"There are moments in it that suddenly strip the soul . . .
stark naked, not in cruelty or moral superiority, but with an understanding
compassion which sees him as a victim of the ironies of life and
of himself. These moments are for me the depth of tragedy,
with nothing more that can possibly be said."
Hickey's visit is less and more than the denizens
of the saloon expected. This time he is selling them salvation
by destroying their illusions as he has destroyed his own about
his wife. Hickey has killed his wife, he reveals, to destroy
her pipe dream that he was a good man, worthy of her forgiveness.
His pipe dream is that he loved his wife, until he confesses that
as he killed her he told her, "You know what you can do with
your pipe dream now, you damned bitch." Immediately,
Hickey retracts this slip: "I couldn't have said that.
I loved Evelyn." He departs with the police, still holding
onto the pipe dream of loving his wife.
Goaded by Hickey, the men and women in the bar
now accept their hopelessness, and are plunged into the despair
they have kept at bay -- the liquor has no "kick"
and the bar seems "a morgue." As Hickey had
urged, each goes forth to face reality -- with disastrous results.
Finally, each returns to the sanctuary of the saloon to offer a
"face-saving version of his experience when he went out to
confront his pipe dreams." With the help of liquor, they
recover their illusions . All but Larry, as impressively played
by Tim Piggott-Smith. Larry, who knows that "the lie
of a pipe dream is what gives life to the whole misbegotten lot
of us," has clung to the illusion that he is uninvolved, detached.
But by the end, he has sent Don Parritt to his death. Facing
the truth about himself, a truth that means death, Larry acknowledges
that he is "the only convert to death Hickey made here."
In a remarkably skillful performance, Kevin Spacey
intelligently built the character of salesman Hickey from the anticipated
joviality to the evangelical sales pitch for the biggest sale
of his life: selling the group on reality. Their
conversion spells destruction for the fragile inhabitants of
"the No Chance Saloon . . . Bedrock Bar, the End of the Line
Cafe. . . the last harbor." (Larry's description) Spacey
avoided the temptation to make Hickey likeable; even his first speeches
had a sinister motif that finally became the major theme.
With great attention to detail, British director Howard Davies
achieved the necessary ensemble effect for the inhabitants of the
bar; this is a play which demands focus on both the group as a whole
and the individuals, an effect Davies brought off to perfection.
What a pity O'Neill could not live to see this "Iceman."
He often complained about the productions of his plays, including
the l946 "Iceman," with Eddie Dowling directing and James
Barton miscast as Hickey. Of the final scene in this production,
O'Neill remarked, "If our American acting and direction cannot
hold this scene up without skimping it, then to hell with our theater."
After a debilitating illness, O'Neill died in
1953. He had been working on a series of historical plays
designed to show that since the first settlers, the hope and idealism
of America were lost in its search for material gain. Both were
staged on Broadway and subsequently revived. In "A
Touch of the Poet" (l958) Irish officer Con Melody (Eric
Portman) emigrates to the colonies with his daughter and wife, unforgettably
interpreted by Helen Hayes, combining pathos and humor. The second,
unfinished, "More Stately Mansions” was staged in 1967 and
treats the daughter, who marries into the gentry. Ingrid Bergman
starred.