This late O'Neill play, posthumously published and hardly ever produced, was the only completed script in his projected historical cycle.
This was the first time an O'Neill play was seen in the West End.
Yet isn't it a relief to find an O'Neill play in which emotional heavies aren't pulverizing each other in the theatrical ring?
So do the dreamers and losers of another great O'Neill play, "The Iceman Cometh."
Last week, the O'Neill play sold 77 percent of the available seats at the Neil Simon Theater and the advance sale is relatively light.
The piece is the company's video adaptation of its acclaimed 1998 stage production of the 1921 O'Neill play.
And how when Olivier took that fall in the O'Neill play, he did a spin and landed on the stage as if nothing happened.
Description of a production of an O'Neill play with special attention to Eugene Lee's design.
"The Mourning Show" is not, strictly speaking, an O'Neill play.
For the O'Neill play and others to follow, that channel will carry the oral descriptions of the action.