One of the greatest American dramas of the 20th century, Eugene O’Neill’s hugely moving and personal Pulitzer Prize-winning Long Day's Journey Into Night delves into the private lives and failings of a conflicted family, while revealing insights into his own upbringing. Read more …
The four members of the troubled Tyrone family each have their vice to dull their memories of their painful past and face their current trials. Over the course of one devastating day at their Connecticut summer home the resentments of the family are exposed, pushing their bonds to the limit.
Long Day’s Journey Into Night is a very good production. It looks sharp and has terrific performances. But it is one that is far easier to admire than enjoy.
Dominic Hill's direction is fine, letting O'Neill's wise, tender words on religion, morality and thwarted ambition really sting like slaps.
In its sense of dark and relentless existential despair, it echoes Hill’s earlier productions, ranging from Crime and Punishment to the plays of Samuel Beckett; bleak, feverish and compelling.
At just over three hours with an interval Long Day's Journey Into Night is an exhausting watch. The cast do a magnificent job with Eugene O'Neill's intense script and the evening flies by.
Pulsed by the fractured languor of Claire McKenzie’s score, this is a show that aches with the pain of a dynasty in freefall.
The quartet of actors playing the doomed Tyrone family does a fine job of harnessing O’Neill’s angry poetry, creating real, flawed individuals who are by turns infuriating, repellent even, and finally desperately sad.
An emotional rollercoaster that never loses sight of the humanity of the characters, this is not a show to be missed.
A gruelling and enthralling account of a great 20th century drama.
Beautifully-weighted.
George Costigan and Brid Ni Neachtain--Long Day's Journey Into Night
Theatre Preview: Long Day's Journey Into Night
Citizens' Theatre, Glasgow from Friday April 13, 2018, until Saturday May 5, 2018. More info: www.citz.co.uk