Synopsis Amongst the sweaty, industrial claustrophobia of the merchant ship SS Glencairn we experience the realities, complexities and camaraderie of a life lived at sea in the early 20th century.
Edmund, Eugene O’Neill’s cipher in A Long Day’s Journey Into Night, tells his bitter, layabout brother, "You've just told me some high spots in your memories. Want to hear mine? They're all connected with the sea."
With that late masterpiece poised to return to London, The Old Vic has chosen the perfect moment to revisit O’Neill’s very earliest works, where the sea is no friend to man, but rather the cruel backdrop for dashed hopes and wasted lives.
The Old Vic Tunnels are an ideal location for the short pieces, the first three of O’Neill’s Glencairne plays, which make up this evening of nautical nihilism. Each play visits the same crew of characters, though each drama is self-contained, and their presentation together allows for a sense of continuity to develop, as well as one of hopelessness.
Bound East for Cardiff is simple but moving tale of one man facing the death of a long-time shipmate, In the Zone a taut psychological thriller in which cabin fever and wartime paranoia drive the crew to increasingly desperate acts and The Long Voyage Home a blackly comic vignette of the perils of shore leave. Filled with sailors’ boasts and tall tales, they have an anecdotal quality themselves, they may allude to wider themes of mortality and faith, but their true subject is the sea, and the lives of those who have given themselves to it.
It is difficult to imagine how fresh these plays seemed to an American audience when the Provincetown Players first launched them in 1816, bringing naturalism from its European cradle in the works of Ibsen or the showcases of the Théâtre Libre to a city whose theatres had yet to acknowledge the existence of the working man.
What is easier to see is O’Neill’s emergent genius; like the best of his work these plays are effortlessly multivocal, that blend of voices and characters from across the world woven together into a raucous ensemble is already in evidence. Though the plots of these plays now seem tired, there is still an energy in O’Neill’s dialogue, as fresh as ocean spray and as irresistible as the tide.
The cast is generally strong, with particularly compelling turns from Matthew Travannion as good-hearted Irishman Driscoll and Eddie Webber as Joe, a contemptible London lush roller. Director Kenneth Hoyt keeps things clear and makes dynamic use of Van Santvoord’s impressive design, with apparently weighty hull sections swirling across the stage like a tempest-tossed liner. To reach the stage we move past sweating boiler-men, who might have walked straight from the set of The Hairy Ape, toiling away in the bowls of a great steamer, and the Tunnels generally provide a perfect setting, if the odd shape of the Screening Room creates occasional problems with obstructed views.
O’Neill sceptics (or even agnostics) may find less to love, for everyone else, to see these plays at all is a thrilling opportunity, to see them tackled with such care makes The Sea Plays next to unmissable.
These three short early Eugene O’Neil plays, when played together as they are here, provide an evocative picture of seafaring life in the early 20th century. The Old Vic tunnels provide the perfect atmosphere, aided by harbour ‘installations’ (barrels and nets!) and men shovelling coal in a side tunnel as you enter. They’re far from O’Neill’s best work, but for anyone interested in this titan of modern drama, they’re a must-see.
The first two plays are set at sea (so seamlessly in this production, I thought it was one play!). In the first, Bound East for Cardiff, the ship enters stormy waters resulting in the death of one of the crew. In the second, In the Zone, set at a time of war, a seaman who is ‘different’ is suspected of being a spy and as his true story is revealed he is broken. In the third play, The Long Voyage Home, we’re in a port bar where a naïve Swedish seaman is drugged and fleeced by the bar owner in collusion with a prostitute and assorted lowlife.
They are slight stories but they do add up to something much more than the parts. They’re well staged by Kenneth Hoyt (the opening of the first is particularly thrilling) and well performed. You can almost smell the sea & the sweat and the characterisations are surprisingly deep given their short length. I was particularly impressed by the performances in the third play, with Amanda Boxer as a prostitute, Raymond M Sage as the Swedish seaman and Eddie Webber as Joe.
The best of the three shows I’ve seen in the Old Vic Tunnels and well worth catching. - Gareth James
22 Feb 12
I sat in row C. The front rows are not raked and there is no stage. I therefore could not see anything of the actors. As "radio plays" they suffered from shouting in rather ludicrous accents, so also hard to hear. Disappointing - a fantastic location and set ruined by complete lack of attention to audience needs. - JH
20 Feb 12
Full marks for atmosphere as the dark and dank tunnels underneath Waterloo Station provide an exciting setting for Eugene O'Neill's one act plays based on the time he spent at sea. It starts with an extraordinary storm sequence far more effective than any conjoured up for a production of The Tempest, but the plays themselves do not change my opinion of O'Neill. Just as in Anna Christie, the dialogue is clumsy and cliched and delivered in a range of accents that are unintentionally funny. Basically I don't really get O'Neill and not even the superb cast that has been assembled is likely to make me want to endure A Long Day's Journey Into Night - surely one of the most aptly named plays of all time.
- David Baxter
17 Feb 12
A great play with fantastic set design and top draw cast enjoyed it from beginning to end well worth a night out in the wonderful setting of the old vic tunnels - Michael Parle
13 Feb 12
typo in your review puts it in the wrong century - O'Neill naturalism arrived in 1916, not 1816! - E.T.
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