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Title: Long Day's Journey into Night by : Eugene O'Neill


1
Long Day's Journey into Night by Eugene
O'Neill
  • Characterization

2
Eugene O'Neill
  • He is generally regarded as America's finest
    playwright, was born on October 16, 1888, in New
    York City, the youngest son of James (a
    successful actor) and Mary Ellen (Quinlan)
    O'Neill. The family was Irish-Catholic, and
    O'Neill was sent to a Catholic boarding school
    and then to Betts Academy in Stamford,
    Connecticut, before enrolling at Princeton
    University in 1906. He left Princeton a year
    later.
  • O'Neill was emotionally scarred by his mother's
    addition to morphine, and the fact that it was
    his birth that precipitated her addiction. She
    tried to commit suicide in 1902.

3
  • The year 1912 was a crucial one for O'Neill. He
    continued to drink heavily, and lacking stable
    employment, was forced to depend on his father
    for financial assistance. He attempted suicide by
    taking a drug overdose, and he also divorced his
    wife. During the summer and fall, his father took
    him to their summer house in New London,
    Connecticut. This is the period of O'Neill's life
    that appears in the character of Edmund in
    O'Neill's play, Long Day's Journey Into Night,
    which is set in 1912.

4
  • O'Neill was established as the leading American
    dramatist of the day.
  • Strange Interlude, which lasted for nearly five
    hours in performance, is often regarded as the
    first play in which O'Neill revealed his full
    power as a dramatist. It won for him his third
    Pulitzer Prize.
  • In 1936, O'Neill won the Nobel Prize for
    Literature, the first American dramatist to
    receive the award.

5
  • prevented O'Neill writing any plays during the
    last decade of his life. He died of pneumonia on
    November 27, 1953, in Boston, Massachusetts

6
Introduction
  • Long Day's Journey Into Night, written in 1941
    but not staged until three years after his death.
    This autobiographical play about the troubles of
    the O'Neill family won O'Neill's fourth Pulitzer
    Prize, in 1957.

7
  • Long Day's Journey into Night was never performed
    during O'Neill's lifetime. On his twelfth wedding
    anniversary with his wife Carlotta, O'Neill gave
    her the script of the play with this note

8
  • For Carlotta, on our 12th Wedding Anniversary
  • Dearest I give you the original script
    of this play of old sorrow, written in tears and
    blood. A sadly inappropriate gift, it would seem,
    for a day celebrating happiness. But you will
    understand. I mean it as a tribute to your love
    and tenderness which gave me the faith in love
    that enable me to face my dead at last and write
    this play ? write it with deep pity and
    understanding and forgiveness for all the four
    haunted Tyrones.
  • These twelve years, Beloved One, have been a
    Journey into Light ? into love. You know my
    gratitude. And my love!
  • Gene
  • Tao House
  • July 22, 1941.

9
  • The play is deeply autobiographical. O'Neill,
    like Edmund, was the child of a Broadway actor.
    The O'Neills were Irish-American, as are the
    Tyrones. Catholicism looms large in both
    families, with a religious father appalled by his
    sons' apparent rejection of the Church. O'Neill's
    father was an alcoholic, and like James Tyrone,
    he gave up a promising career as a Shakespearean
    actor for a part in a commercial but artistically
    worthless play called Monte Cristo. In the play,
    Tyrone speaks of this commercial success but
    never names it. O'Neill's mother in real-life was
    a morphine addict, and like Mary, became one
    after the birth of her youngest child. Jamie is
    also modeled after O'Neill's real-life brother, a
    dissolute alcoholic whoremonger who failed
    miserably at everything he put his hand to. And
    Eugene had an older brother named Edmund who died
    as a baby in the play, the dead middle son is
    named Eugene

10
Character list
  • James Tyrone Husband of Mary and the father of
    Jamie
    and Edmund
  • Mary Tyrone The wife of Tyrone and mother
    of
    Jamie and Edmund
  • Jamie Tyrone The elder Tyrone son, he is
    in his
    early thirties
  • Edmund Tyrone  The younger Tyrone son, he is ten

    years younger than Jamie

11
James Tyrone
  • James Tyrone is a vigorous, healthy man of
    sixty-five. His predominant trait, other than the
    fact that he drinks too much, is his miserliness,
    which is to blame for many of the family's
    troubles. Tyrone refuses to spend money on their
    summer house to make it pleasant for his wife,
    and he tries to send Edmund to a state sanatorium
    just to save money. Although he is comparatively
    well off, Tyrone lives in fear of ending his days
    in poverty. He tries to secure his future by
    investing in real estate, but he rarely makes a
    good deal. The origins of his miserliness lie in
    his childhood. His father deserted the family and
    at the age of ten, Tyrone was sent to work long
    hours in a machine shop. The family was always
    poor, and Tyrone learned, as he frequently puts
    it, the value of a dollar.

12
  • Tyrone is an actor who as a young man was
    considered one of the most promising actors in
    America. But he squandered his talent by
    performing for years in a popular melodrama, thus
    getting typecast and ruining his chances of
    getting other, more challenging roles. He traded
    artistic excellence for financial success, and he
    bitterly regrets it. Tyrone is an Irish Catholic
    who despises his sons for rejecting the faith. He
    thinks Jamie is an idle, ungrateful loafer and
    has no respect for Edmund's reading in poetry and
    philosophy, denouncing Edmund's favorite authors
    as atheists and degenerates. Tyrone's great love
    is Shakespeare, and he thinks all other writers
    are inferior.
  • Tyrone has a genuine love for his wife, but is
    thrust into despair when she lapses back into her
    addiction. He knows the situation is hopeless.

13
Quotes .
  • "If he's ever had a loftier dream than whores and
    whiskey, he's never shown it." Act 3
  • Tyrone speaks about Jamie.

14
Mary Tyrone
  • Mary Tyrone is fifty-four years old. She was once
    beautiful and still has a youthful figure, as
    well as a charming, innocent manner. But her
    manner also betrays extreme nervousness. Her
    hands are never still. They too were once
    beautiful, but have become gnarled and ugly
    through rheumatism.

15
  • Mary was raised in a prosperous home and she was
    devoted to her father, who died of consumption.
    Educated in a convent, she wanted to become a nun
    or a concert pianist, and she looks back at this
    period as a happy time in her life. She was
    introduced to James Tyrone by her father, and
    fell in love with him immediately. But their life
    together, although initially happy, was hard on
    her. She had to travel a lot, stay in lonely,
    cheap hotels and eat bad food. Her husband
    refused to spend enough money to make their
    summer home a pleasant one. One son, Eugene, died
    when he was two, and Mary blames herself because
    she left the baby with her mother so that she
    could accompany her husband on his travels.
    Weakened by the strain of their lifestyle, Mary
    became sick after giving birth to Edmund. She was
    prescribed morphine by an incompetent doctor and
    became addicted to it. She also feels guilty
    about Edmund's bad health, since after Eugene's
    death she felt she was not worthy of being a
    mother and that God would punish her if she gave
    birth again.

16
  • When the play begins, Mary has been home for two
    months after going away to get cured of her
    addiction, and Tyrone believes she has recovered.
    But it soon becomes obvious that she has not. She
    cannot face the fact that Edmund is seriously
    ill, claiming that he has nothing more than a
    common cold, and starts taking morphine again.
    This cushions her from reality, and as the play
    progresses she starts to live in the past, since
    the present is too painful for her to endure. By
    the end of the play, she has regressed completely
    into the past and talks as if she is still a girl
    at the convent

17
Quotes .
  • "None of us can help the things life has done to
    us." Act 2, scene 1
  • Mary tries to excuse her son Jamie for his
    faults, but her comment reveals her attitude to
    herself as well.
  • "I hate doctors! They'll do anything-anything to
    keep you coming back to them. They'll sell their
    souls! What's worse, they'll sell yours, and you
    never know it till one day you find yourself in
    hell!" Act 2, scene 2
  • Mary gives vent to her anger.
  • "The past is the present, isn't it? It's the
    future, too." Act 2, scene 2
  • Mary expresses her depressed vision of how people
    are slaves to what happened in the past.

18
Jamie Tyrone
  • Jamie Tyrone is thirty-three years old.
    Physically, he takes after his father, and has
    the same robust constitution. But Jamie is a
    cynical man who is wasting his life. He was
    expelled from every college he ever attended,
    although he did acquire some training as an
    actor. With the help of his father he has had
    some success in that profession on Broadway, but
    he never saves any money and is broke by the end
    of the theater season.

19
  • During the summer, he earns his keep at the
    Tyrones' summer home by taking care of the
    grounds. But he spends most of his time drinking
    whiskey and hanging out at the brothels in town.
    He and his father, who thinks he is a lazy,
    ungrateful, good-for-nothing, quarrel bitterly
    throughout the play. Jamie has been a huge
    disappointment for his father. He has also been a
    bad influence on his brother. At first he tries
    to deny this, saying that Edmund is stubborn and
    independent, but near the end of the play he
    admits that he has deliberately tried to make
    Edmund fail, since a successful brother would
    have made his own failure more galling.

20
Quotes .
  • if you can't be good you can at least be
    careful." Act 1
  • Jamie summarizes the advice he gave to his
    younger brother.
  • "Happy roads is bunk. Weary roads is right. Get
    you nowhere fast. That's where I've got-nowhere.
    Where everyone lands in the end, even if more of
    the suckers won't admit it." Act 4
  • Jamie finally confesses the truth about his own
    life.
  • "The Mad Scene. Enter Ophelia! " Act 4
  • Jamie's sardonic remark when his mother enters
    the room, apparently unaware of her surroundings

21
Edmund Tyrone
  • Edmund Tyrone is twenty-three years old and is
    the youngest member of the family. Unlike Jamie,
    he does not have his father's strong
    constitution, but takes more after his mother. He
    suffers from tuberculosis and must shortly go
    away to a sanatorium for treatment.

22
  • Edmund has led a restless life. His older brother
    was a bad influence on him, and he was expelled
    from college. After that he went to sea, ending
    up in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He knows what it
    is like to work hard for low pay. Often in South
    America he was broke and slept on park benches
    because he had nowhere else to go. Once he tried
    to commit suicide. At the time the play takes
    place, Edmund has a job as a reporter on a local
    newspaper, in which he also publishes some of his
    poems. His father hopes that he is now on the
    road to success, having found something he wants
    to do.

23
  • Edmund rejects the Catholicism of his father and
    is well read in modern poetry and philosophy. He
    has a gloomy attitude to life. Fond of his
    mother, he holds out hope for her as long as he
    possibly can, longer than the cynical Jamie. He
    has many resentments against his father,
    especially when Tyrone wants to send him to a
    cheap sanatorium. But by the end of the play he
    has a deeper understanding of why his father
    behaves the way he does. He also learns to
    understand the love-hate relationship he has with
    Jamie.

24
Quotes .
  • . "Everything looked and sounded unreal. Nothing
    was what it is. That's what I wanted-to be alone
    with myself in another world where truth is
    untrue and life can hide from itself." Act 4
  • Edmund speaks of his feelings as he walked home
    in the fog.
  • "I was set free! I dissolved in the sea, became
    white sails and flying spray, became beauty and
    rhythm, became moonlight and the ship and the
    high dim-starred sky." Act 4
  • Edmund tells his father about the ecstasy of some
    of his experiences at sea.
  • For a second you see-and seeing the secret are
    the secret. For a second there is meaning." Act 4
  • Edmund talks about the meaning of his peak
    experiences at sea.

25
Done by
  • Siham Ali Al-Shehri
  • Huda Muhammad Al-Faify
  • Bodour Gabal Al-Solmi
  • Nawal Safar Al- Amri
  • Nouf Al-Otaibi
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