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Tax-exempt? | Eugene O'Neill's Last Plays Separating Art from Autobiography In his final creative years, 1939 to 1943, O'Neill wrote The Iceman Cometh, Long Day's Journey into Night, and A Moon for the Misbegotten. Because these plays are so intense, intimate, and evocative of the friends and family members who influenced O'Neill's artistic development, biographers and critics have long-and mistakenly-regarded them as accurate sources for insights into the playwright's early years. Drawing upon interviews and a staggering amount of archival research into multiple generations of the O'Neill family, Alexander sets the historical record straight by documenting the actual people and situations on which characters and scenes in O'Neill's last plays are based. Included in her study are such topics as the playwright's attempted suicide, his tuberculosis, and his relationship with his parents. By revealing the distinctions between O'Neill's life and his art, Alexander's findings make possible greater insight into the artistry that shaped these final plays and brought them to life. Doris Alexander is a professor emerita of English at the City University of New York. She lives in Venice, Italy. Alexander's books include The Tempering of Eugene O'Neill and Eugene O'Neill's Creative Struggle. May 2005 ISBN 0820327093 cloth • $44.95 264 pp. • 6 x 9 in. • 7 b&w photos"Eugene O'Neill's Last Plays is the crowning pinnacle of Doris Alexander's four decades as a major O'Neill scholar. Her voice, which speaks to both young and old, and to both neophyte and aficionado, remains sterling. Here is an essential work on O'Neill and his dramaturgy, and how could we have lived so long without it!" Norman Fruman, Professor Emeritus of English, University of Minnesota"Alexander brings much clarity, and sometimes defensiveness, to mistakingly held views and some outright fictions of both O'Neill's life and his late plays, all without lowering this playwright's stature." Midwest Book Review"Eugene O'Neill's Last Plays ... is welcome because it foregrounds the necessity of reassessing the ways in which biography-in particular about O'Neill-is considered and canonized ... provides persuasive insights ... Alexander's study provides a window ... into O'Neill's last, great plays."-Theatre Journal |
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