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Long Day's Journey into Night  By  cover art

Long Day's Journey into Night

By: Eugene O'Neill
Narrated by: Bill Camp, Elizabeth Marvel, Ato Blankson-Wood, Jason Bowen
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Publisher's summary

"Inarguably one of the greatest dramas in the history of the American theater” (Chicago Tribune), Eugene O'Neill’s Long Day's Journey into Night receives a vibrant and timely update in this interpretation by prolific, Tony Award(R)-nominated director Robert O’Hara (Slave Play). At the heart of O’Neill’s masterwork is the Tyrone family, living together again under lockdown. As the pressure builds, each family member retreats to their own destructive vices. This must see production inspired by the events of 2020 is a visceral and provocative exploration of addiction and mental health speaking to our present moment. Starring Emmy(R) Award-nominee Bill Camp (The Crucible, The Queen’s Gambit), three-time Obie Award(R)-winner Elizabeth Marvel (Hedda Gabler, Homeland), Tony Award-nominee Ato Blankson-Wood (Slave Play), and Jason Bowen (The Play That Goes Wrong).

©2022 Eugene O'Neill (P)2022 AO Media LLC

Go Behind the Scenes With The Cast of Long Day’s Journey Into Night

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About the Director

Robert O'Hara is the Tony-nominated director of Slave Play and is currently working on several film, television, and Broadway projects. He’s a two-time Obie Award and two-time NAACP Award winner whose work has been seen around the country.

About the Performer

Bill Camp is best known for his Emmy-nominated performance in HBO's critically acclaimed limited series The Night Of as well as his SAG-nominated performance as Mr. Shaibel in the hit Netflix limited series The Queen’s Gambit. A veteran of the stage, Camp received a 2016 Tony Award nomination for his performance as Reverend John Hale in Arthur Miller's The Crucible, directed by Ivo Van Hove. He also received a Drama Desk nomination for his role as Charley in Mike Nichols's production of Death of a Salesman (Tony Award for Best Revival). Additional theater credits include Coram Boy, Heartbreak House, Jackie, The Seagull. Off-Broadway: Homebody/Kabul (Obie Award winner), The Misanthrope, Olly's Prison. Camp is a graduate of the Juilliard School. He was also recently ranked as the #1 Greatest Character Actor by New York Magazine for his prolific work in the past decade, and recently reteamed with his The Looming Tower team of Jeff Daniels and Dan Futterman in American Rust on Showtime.

About the Performer

Elizabeth Marvel was last seen in Marvel's Helstrom for Hulu, as well as Paul Greengrass’ News of the World for Universal. Prior to this, Marvel was seen in the critically acclaimed limited series Unbelievable for Netflix. Additional work on Netflix includes The Meyerowitz Stories co-starring Adam Sandler and Ben Stiller and directed by Noah Baumbach. This was a stark contrast to her series regular role of the first female President on Homeland for Showtime. Elizabeth also played series regular Heather Dunbar' on House of Cards for yet another Netflix collaboration. An integral part of the New York theater scene, Marvel portrayed Marc Anthony in Shakespeare in the Park’s ground-breaking production of Julius Caesar. She has won 4 Obie Awards for her Off-Broadway work, most notably for the title role in Ivo Van Hove's 2004 production of Hedda Gabler. She also received a Drama Desk nomination for her performance in Fifty Words. Of her numerous Broadway roles, she is best known for her portrayal of Brooke Wyeth in Other Desert Cities, a role which she originated off-Broadway. Marvel is a graduate of the Juilliard School. Up next, Marvel will star in Hulu limited series The Dropout about the rise and fall of Elizabeth Holmes and her company, Theranos.

About the Performer

Ato Blankson-Wood received a Tony nomination (Featured Actor in a Play) for his explosive and moving performance as Gary, one half of an interracial gay couple struggling with the multilayered complexities that follow in Broadway’s Slave Play. Ato was with the production since its sold-out off-Broadway run, for which he was the only cast member nominated for a Lucille Lortel Award (Featured Actor in a Play). Slave Play isn’t the first time the graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and the Yale School of Drama has tackled a provocative and politically charged role. He is most recognized for his 2017 breakout performance in the Public Theater musical The Total Bent (Drama League and Lucille Lortel Award nomination) which explored the life of a black musical prodigy in a nation on the verge of social upheaval. He also starred in Chris Urch's The Rolling Stone at Lincoln Center as Dembe, a young man who is forced to keep his true identity a secret in Uganda where being gay is illegal. Ato was most recently seen alongside Michael Keaton, Stanley Tucci and Amy Ryan in the biographical drama Worth which premiered on Netflix in September.

About the Performer

Jason Bowen's previous credits include Broadway: The Play That Goes Wrong. Off-Broadway: Native Son (The Acting Co.), If Pretty Hurts (Playwrights Horizons), Alternating Currents (Working Theater), My Mañana Comes (Playwright's Realm). Regional: Native Son (Yale Rep.), Skeleton Crew (Studio Theatre), Jazz (Baltimore Center Stage), As You Like It, Black Odyssey (Denver Center Theatre Co.), June Moon (Williamstown Theatre Festival), Ruined (La Jolla Playhouse), Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (IRNE Award for Best Actor - Drama) (Huntington Theatre Co.). TV/Film: Orange Is The New Black (Netflix), Blue Bloods, Madam Secretary, Elementary, Braindead (CBS), Law & Order: SVU (NBC), The Upside, What's Your Number?

Dear Listener,

How did I approach editing Eugene O'Neill's classic work in a way that brought it into the modern era (specifically the time of quarantine)?
"The great thing about editing A Long Day’s Journey Into Night was that I didn’t have to do it alone. Beth Marvel and I did a few passes early on, and then when we started rehearsals the entire cast sat around the table for about a week and we all dug in and read the play several times, and everyone suggested cuts. So, it was about the actors, their choices and how they saw their characters, and the removal of anything that made it feel like it wasn’t present day. "Consumption," for instance, is what Edmond has in the original play, so to make it present day COVID a line that would normally read as "The doctor thinks it’s consumption… doesn’t he?" Now reads as "The doctor thinks it’s…. doesn’t he?" That coupled with face masks and boxes of hand sanitizer and modern setting and costumes is all one needs to know what we’re talking about. We also removed a character of a maid/cook because, of course, during quarantine you wouldn’t have someone outside the family coming and going in and out of the house. So, references to food were turned into visual references to food deliveries. Small removals of words allowed the imagination to live in the present day." – Robert O’Hara, director of Long Day’s Journey Into Night

What listeners say about Long Day's Journey into Night

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not my cup of tea

I try to make sure that I include classics whenever I can. some are a hit with me, and some not so much. this just isn't really the thing I usually listen to. having said that, the performance seems like a performance, not pulling you in and making you forget that it's a performance.
The story is obviously a classic for good reason. I didn't listen to the entire book, but enough to form an opinion about the complexity of the story and how well it's written. I think if I were reading the book myself it would have been better than listening to the obviously acted performance.

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Not well adapted for audible

Perhaps this was great as a play but with characters constantly talking over each other, loud arguments immediately giving way to whispers, it’s frustrating to even try to listen.

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Depressing View of Life

I found this to be a very depressing view of life. It’s the story of a most dysfunctional family caught in the throes of alcoholism and drug abuse. And yet, it explores the intensity of peoples’ feelings and relationships in a way that’s quite interesting. People who are into psychology would find it fascinating.

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Dark and honest

This is a dark and honest snapshot of a family of addicts. Many listeners will find it too morbid for entertainment, but it was well edited (from the original text) and flawlessly performed.

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Well this was depressing

And maybe that was the point? The horrors of addiction and what they do to the addict and the people around them. And when everyone you know is an addict? Well then. You’ve got this story to see what that looks like.

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Terrific production of a classic play

The play is classic, and I liked the script but didn't love it. The performance, however, was terrific and really lifted it off the page in a way I find rare for audio productions.

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Depressing and a little disappointing

I had never read or seen this play in its entirety. I guess my disappointment is more with the play itself than with the acting and production.

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Amazing

Absolutely Amazing in that I could close my eyes & feels as tho I'm in the theater. Intense family with many unsettling desires and dreams.

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DREADFUL FAMILY EXAMPLE...

Listening to this was like witnessing a terrible, unavoidable accident. To say this is a dysfunctional family fueled by drugs of choice is an understatement. Good acting, but a dreadful tale, nonetheless. GRADE: B-

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Of course it's depressing....

This is a great performance of a timeless play. It's timelessness is evident in the many pandemic references in other reviews.

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1 person found this helpful