|
Billboard, November 7, 1931 "Mourning Becomes Electra"By EUGENE BURRMourning
Becomes Electra (or, if you care for subtitles, Down the
Centuries with Eugene O’Neill) is the long-awaited trilogy by
American’s First Dramatist, which the Theater Guild raptly
presented at 4 O’clock Monday afternoon and kept on presenting
until late Monday night. As
everyone – including the Scandinavian – must know by this time,
it is composed of three plays concerning the same characters, each
play a separate dramatic entity or at least intended to be so by the
author, but if anyone tells you you can enjoy the evening’s
entertainment without having been present at the afternoon’s,
leave him quickly. The
three parts are intertwined in theme, treatment, ploy and everything
else. The
plays are an adaptation and modernization of the Electra theme which
the ancient Greeks handled more briefly and (may curses be upon the
head of the blasphemer!) a great deal better.
In O’Neill’s hands the locale is shifted to New England,
the time is shifted to the period immediately following the Civil
War, and the audience is shifted out to supper and back to the
theater again during the almost unending course of action.
The Guild is presenting the show (a three-ring circus it is,
with a few extra rings to go under the eyes of the customers) as
both the second and third productions of its 14th
subscription season. It
could present it as an entire season in itself and this corner would
certainly not argue about it. It
might be overrash to state that Mr. O’Neill’s Mourning is
a good one-acter stretched into 14 acts, but it is definitely a good
three-act melodrama pulled out to a marathon by an author who takes
himself too seriously, by an author who wastes his own and his
audiences’ time by delving into morbid psychology that is just as
unreal, just as fundamentally unimportant – and certainly as
unentertaining – as the sentimentality that is verboten by
his devotees. It is
this taking of himself too seriously which is, at bottom, the cause
of all the unnecessary turmoil at the Guild.
When in brief intervals, such as the grandly effective scene
that is laid on the deck of a clipper, O’Neill forgets his
self-seriousness and writes straight meller, he is splendidly
effective and moving, bringing back the day s of those fine earlier
pieces which were done before he was saddled with the realization of
being America’s First Dramatist. For
Mourning Becomes Electra is really just meller, meller like,
say, Payment Deferred, only far less ably written and with
far less real ability to move the emotions of an audience.
The magnificent acting makes it occasionally stirring, but
for long, long, stretches one merely watches the twisted puppets of
Maestro O’Neill going thru their prescribed paces without feeling
much more than a perfunctory interest in what they are going to do. Your
reporter realizes that all of this is going to be set down as rank
heresy and also as rankly untrue.
Intelligent faces will bob out of the dark at him to exclaim
that they were profoundly moved. But those intelligent faces will be talking thru their
probably just-as-intelligent hats.
O’Neill, digging and searching thru the muck and scum of
the human soul, emerges with his mud /17/ dy monstrosities, proudly
exhibiting them to a breathless worlds as something real and
fundamental and profound. They are actually none of those things. They are far from ordinary human experience; profound,
possibly, if we mistake abstruse unearthing for profundity, but
certainly ordinary human reaction in a theater –at least as
O’Neill present them. They
utterly fail to plumb the depths of emotion and experience; they are
merely very special cases of abnormal psychology placed upon a stage
and given pretentious platitudes to mouth, platitudes that reach
profundity in the popular mind merely because they have been written
by O’Neill. These
same characters, treated as the melodramatic figures that they are,
might have been powerfully effective.
But, smothered in the author’s voluminous spadings from the
back of the human mind, they lose their true and original values,
assuming false ones that are never borne out by fact. It
is the seriousness with which O’Neill takes himself and with which
he is taken by almost everybody else that indirectly imparts those
false meanings. The
trilogy, written as an unknown’s first attempt, would be
considered the arresting but misguided outpourings of a playwright
who had still to realize the comparative importance of his various
values. But, coming
from O’Neill, it is all-sacrosanct.
Audiences going to the show are self-consciously intelligent,
and the whole affair assumes the aspect of an event.
The customers did everything but stand up and sing a hymn
yesterday afternoon before the curtain rose on the first play. Getting
belatedly to the plot, it details (and how it details!) the story of
Lavinia Mannon, who seeks to keep her father’s honor while her
mother galavants about with a sea captain.
Father is away fighting the Civil War, and things are further
complicated by the fact that Vinnie wouldn’t mind having the
captain for herself. She
forces her mother to throw over the lover, and the older woman, wild
with the only that has reached her life since the bleak dawn of her
honeymoon, plans to murder the father on his return.
She manages to do it, undetected by any but Lavinia, and the
first act ends with Pa Mannon dead in bed, Ma Mannon in a faint on
the floor and Vinnie prostrate upon her knees.
And the audience can go out for supper, leaving a body-strewn
stage. The
second play features the return from war of Orin, Vinnie’s
brother, between whom his mother there was always a powerful bond.
Vinnie tells him of the liaison and the murder, and proves
her statements when she takes him to follow Ma Mannon on a visit to
the captain’s ship. Orin waits until his mother has gone, shoots the sailor to
avenge family honor and then goes back home with the news. His mother seen the stark and horrible passing of the love to
which her starved life has clung, goes quietly into the house and
shoots herself. The
third play shows Orin going mad with remorse for having indirectly
murdered his beloved mother, and Vinnie, her stern duty to the
family code completed, out to live, live, live!
She engages herself to a good-looking young swain, but Orin
follows his mother along the suicide route, the ghosts of the dead
rise up to confound Vinnie’s stern sense of justice, and she
breaks her engagement, shutting herself up forever with the evil
past in the grim and moldering house of Mannon. That’s
all there is to it, but O’Neill tells it with minute attention to
every emotional detail and with his usual complete incompetence in
even the fundamentals of recent play-making.
As an example, his “planting” in the first scene is the
most obvious since the days when butlers would talk to telephones in
order to let the audience in on the plot.
And the play, so long that its genuine emotional values are
lost and foundered in the surging and disordered sea of distracting
detail, is padded unconscionably.
It is complicated with overtones, such as the captain’s
relation to the Mannons, that have no bearing on the fundamental
plot. Its outlines are
buried deep, and the whole thing is far too long and too diffuse –
too minutely occupied with abstruse psychological states – to
leave a single, lasting impression. All
of this, however, doesn’t mean that it won’t be popular.
The splendid cast alone should make it so, with Alice Brady
turning in a grand performance as Lavinia; Earle Larimore doing well
by Orin, the minor parts all being capable hands and Nazimova rising
to almost unscalable heights as the mother.
Nazimova, in fact, turned in so sustained an emotional
performance that it must be seen to be believed. Mourning Becomes Electra will, unless the $6 price and the early opening work against it, be popular in spite of all. Audiences bored stiff will probably stay to the bitter end and go home to tell their friends how magnificently stirring, how classically inevitable, how superhumanly splendid it all is – merely because it happens to be by America’s First Dramatist, he might again turn out a good play, a stirring play, a play that would create a single lasting impression instead of going beyond all possible human endurance thru its diffuseness and the self-conscious iconoclasm of its author. |
© Copyright 1999-2015 eOneill.com |