NEW YORK, NY.- Of the time-honored classics of American theater, Eugene ONeills Long Days Journey Into Night is one that usually takes its own concept of time seriously. A four-act work based on the playwrights own dysfunctional parents, it follows the disintegration of the Tyrone family by disease, ego, addiction and codependency through the course of a claustrophobic August day at their seaside home in Connecticut. Widely considered ONeills masterpiece, it typically runs just under four hours.
Writer-director Robert OHara, a Tony nominee for his direction of Slave Play, is doing it in under two.
Presented without an intermission by Audible at the Minetta Lane Theatre, Long Days Journey Into Night has reunited OHara with fellow Slave Play alums, actor Ato Blankson-Wood and designer Clint Ramos, for a shortened production that confronts the plays themes head-on and brings them into 2022.
There is so much velocity in the writing that it moves at a fast clip, and with so much richness, OHara said after a rehearsal last week. The family doesnt get an intermission throughout this one long day, so its quite interesting to get to sit with them in real time.
The decision to trim the material happened early and organically, OHara explained.
Once you put the knife in, youre just like, Are we going to pretend that were not editing this? he quipped. It was then bolstered by his wariness of having people gather for too long, given the latest COVID-19 variant.
For me, it feels like a COVID production of Long Days Journey Into Night, built for right now, he said. We didnt want to ask an audience to sit for four hours in a theater just because thats the way its usually done. If anyones coming in looking for that experience, they should know that its not this.
He began conceiving the production, now in previews and opening Tuesday, before the pandemic. Initially he was hesitant to tackle the play because of the demands placed upon producing classics.
Its difficult to get these big chestnuts if youre going to do it off-Broadway, he said, referring to the challenges of securing production rights. You can ask, but someones usually holding them in order to bring them back in a big way.
OHara credits actress Elizabeth Marvel, who portrays the morphine-addicted mother, Mary, as instrumental to getting the production off the ground.
We started just talking about this play, but then the world made its urgency all the greater, Marvel said. Ive seen probably 11 or 12 productions in my lifetime, and its always the same: in the same drawing room with billowing curtains, and with period corsets.
But theres absolutely no reason, she continued, it cant be right here, right now. It very much speaks to this moment, when a lot of people are having to return home to their families, dealing with addiction and codependency during a crisis, while not being able to get out.
In addition to contemporary allusions to the opioid crisis, reflecting Marys own addiction, the production is set amid the coronavirus pandemic. The youngest Tyrone son, Edmund (Blankson-Wood), afflicted by what is traditionally hinted to be tuberculosis, now wears a face mask. Projections at the beginning of the play display CDC announcements and news footage from the early days of the pandemic, including surreal revelations like the Bronx Zoo tiger testing positive for the virus.
We wanted projections to be a dreamlike window into Marys psychological space, especially when she succumbs to her addiction, Ramos said on a video call. The visual landscape, through Yee Eun Nams projections, gets very dreamy and dense to directly represent that.
Marvels husband, actor Bill Camp, plays the familys patriarch, James.
He was cast as the eldest son, Jamie, in a 1996 production at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The edited script, he said, became about distilling the storys actions rather than experiencing the longness of the situation.
The familys desires and dysfunctions are streamlined in a way that is already in the writing; we just hit it really fast, he added. Its in your face, just like everything that is happening is in our faces now, and we dont have time to sit around and meander our way into those things; theyre immediate.
Jason Bowen rounds out the Tyrone clan as Jamie: a colorblind casting choice (Bowen and Blankson-Wood are Black, Camp and Marvel are white) that OHara said is intentional, though not one he wanted to factor into the DNA of the production.
I was never going to do this play with all white people; it wasnt anything that I had to think about, OHara said. Elizabeth had mentioned Ato, being a fan of his, so we only held auditions for Jamie, and Jason killed it. There was no manufacturing of the casts racial dynamics for any reason other than wanting the best actors we could find.
Bowen notes that the heft of the storys themes, as written, override any possible racial interpretation the cast could have envisioned.
Its a play about a family as they navigate addiction, and thats something that transcends any racial aspect that we could even attempt to investigate, Bowen said. The plays not about that. Robert couldve come in with some conceptual idea he wanted to introduce, but its still going to boil down to these relationships.
Blankson-Wood, who was performing a return engagement of his Tony-nominated role in Slave Play while rehearsals for Long Days Journey took place during the day, said being able to act in a production that did not take his own race into account was liberating.
The fact that I do not have to carry how I, as a Black person, fit into this family is just pure acting to me, because it focuses only on the imaginative truth of the work, he said. From an outsiders perspective, I get the impulse to want to understand the racial dynamic, but thats something Im excited for the audience to do; thats their job.
OHara, who directed an audio production of another American classic, A Streetcar Named Desire, as part of Williamstown Theatre Festivals Audible season in 2020, will direct an audio presentation of the production once the Minetta Lane run closes Feb. 20.
He said Audibles expansive reach helped in securing the rights to the radically altered production, which might have been denied to a regional theater.
Whats amazing about this turn to streaming and digital is the democratization of theater, so more people will be able to access it, Blankson-Wood said, though I do feel pretty strongly about sitting in a dark room with other human beings. But, with an audio production like this, when you take all the scenery and stuff away, and theres only talking and listening, it deepens the work.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.