Long Day’s Journey into Night

play by O’Neill
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Awards And Honors:
Pulitzer Prize

Long Day’s Journey into Night, drama in four acts by Eugene O’Neill, written 1939–41 and produced and published posthumously in 1956. The play, which is considered an American masterpiece, was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1957.

O’Neill’s autobiographical play is a shattering depiction of a day in the dreary life of a couple and their two sons. James Tyrone, a semiretired actor, is vain, self-obsessed, and miserly; his wife, Mary, feels worthless and retreats into a morphine-induced haze. Jamie, their older son, is a bitter alcoholic. James refuses to acknowledge the illness of his consumptive younger son, Edmund. As Mary sinks into hallucination and madness, father and sons confront each other in searing scenes that reveal their hidden motives and interdependence.

O’Neill wrote A Moon for the Misbegotten (1952) as a sequel, charting the subsequent life of Jamie Tyrone.

American dramatist Eugene O'Neill, 1936.
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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.