Desire Under the Elms, tragedy in three parts by Eugene O’Neill, produced in 1924 and published in 1925. The last of O’Neill’s naturalistic plays and the first in which he re-created the starkness of Greek tragedy, Desire Under the Elms draws from Euripides’ Hippolytus and Jean Racine’s Phèdre, both of which feature a father returning home with a new wife who falls in love with her stepson.
In this play Ephraim Cabot abandons his farm and his three sons, who hate him. The youngest son, Eben, buys out his brothers, who head off to California. Shortly after this, Ephraim returns with Abbie, his young new wife. Abbie becomes pregnant by Eben; she lets Ephraim believe that the child is his, thinking the child will secure her hold on the farm, but she later kills the infant when she sees it as an obstacle between her and Eben. Enraged, Eben turns Abbie over to the sheriff, but not before he realizes his love for her and confesses his complicity.
One of O’Neill’s most-admired works, Desire Under the Elms invokes the playwright’s own family conflicts and Freudian treatment of sexual themes. Although the play is now considered a classic of 20th-century American drama, it scandalized some early audiences with its treatment of infanticide, alcoholism, vengeance, and incest; the first Los Angeles cast was arrested for performing an obscene work.