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Synopsis Murder, love, lust and betrayal. Eugene O’Neill’s supremely powerful masterpiece retells the Greek tragedy of Orestia in the context of the American Civil War. As one of the greatest American dramatists, O’Neill crafted the relentlessly passionate and striking drama centred around a family’s loss of love, humanity and compassion. Running time 4 hours 30 minutes (including two intervals)
Dates: Opens 27 November 2003. Nov 17,18,19,20,21,22,24,25,26,28,29, Dec 1,2,3,18,19,22, Jan04 6,7,8,9,10,15,16,17,19,20 at 18:15. Dec 4, Jan04 8 Mats 13:30. Dec 20, Jan04 17 Mats 15:00. Nov 27 18:00
This dramatic marathon is Eugene O'Neill's take on the Oresteia, served up with a hefty wedge of Freud and a slice of old-fashioned melodrama on the side. O'Neill's vision - which contains enough murder, adultery, suicide and incest to keep a soap opera producer happy for months - offers us a world of family horror as id and thanatos collide on the way to the inevitably doomed conclusion.
Mourning Becomes Electra is even darker than Aeschylus' original. Here, there's no redemption for Orestes; the play unfolds adding horror to horror. But Howard Davies' production never slips into histrionics and concentrates on sexual desire and guilt that lies at the heart of this unremitting examination of family politics.
O'Neill's version of Clytaemnestra, Christine Mannon, is more one-dimensional than the Greek original. It's too easy to present her as an unfeeling, murderous adulteress. But, in an outstanding performance, Helen Mirren breathes life into the character.
We see a woman terrified at the thought of her beauty fading, her voice choking when she tries to imagine herself old and ugly, and driven by jealousy of her daughter whom she knows is going to grow up to be the desired one. And Mirren's anguished, mocking cry of "life" just before going into the house to shoot herself is a chilling moment, the word left hanging as an admonishment to those still living.
Eve Best as Lavinia, the Electra of the title, is nearly as good. She struggles with the American accent at times, lending a strange quality to her speech, but she copes admirably with the huge demands of the role. She's required to capture desire and hatred, guilt and jealousy, often at the same time. Best succeeds in giving us a woman who's seemingly always on the verge of bursting into life but never really managing it. While her desire for her father is played down, her secret passion for Brant, her mother's lover is very much to the fore - kissing his corpse before fleeing the murder scene.
For me, the best performance of the night, however, comes from Paul Hilton as Orin, the Orestes figure. He grasps the decay at the heart of the Mannon heritage and is compelling from the moment he first appears on stage. We fully comprehend that this self-mocking and troubled man is destined to be the nemesis of his doomed family.
There are strong performances elsewhere, too: from Paul McGann as the doomed Brant, from Clarke Peters as the Chorus-like figure of the gardener, and from Rebecca Johnson and Dominic Rowan, who manage to flesh out the characters of Hazel and Peter Niles when they could so easily be mere cyphers - the wholesome flipside of the corrupted Lavinia and Orin.
Bob Crowley's set admirably complements Davies' vision of the play - complete with a dramatic scenery transformation halfway through. This is a superbly realised production, draining for the audience perhaps, but a salutary reminder of the darkness that lies at the heart of many families - and just in time for Christmas too.
A curious thing: with a four-and-a-half-hour marathon you'd expect to start the evening feeling bright and end it by wilting. This great production did exactly the revese to me: after a week of snow and headaches I only made the trek up to London because I couldn't bear to waste my precious ticket. By 10.40pm I was on a high, such is the greatness of this magnificent achievement. Maxwell Cooter is spot on in his review - not least in singling out Paul Hilton for praise. He was astonishing, and hasn't received the credit he deserves for this play. It was a wonderful evening.
Job - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.144.130.1)
30 Jan 04
There are some productions that stand out as absolutely exceptional and this is unquestionably one of them. It is quite remarkable. A play of extraordinary psychological depth - don't be put off by the accusations of melodrama. Riveting performances all round but particularly from Eve Best who gives the performance of a lifetime. Howard Davies directs magnificently. Bob Crowley's design is just breathtaking. As others have said, this is why he have a National Theatre. Congratulations to everyone involved in this production. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (195.93.34.14)
10 Jan 04
After Helen Mirren kills herself at the end of act 2 the play goes downhill fast.
Nice set but nothing that fantastic. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (205.188.209.82)
21 Dec 03
I never thought 4.5 hours could be quite so rivetting! This is a thrilling evening - a truely great play given a magnificent production with an ensemble to match. It's what the National is for. Miss it at your peril. - USER: Whatsonstage.com (212.211.102.28)
02 Dec 03
Helen Mirren, Eve Best (up for an award, surely) and Paul Hilton are superb in, admittedly, a very long evening. Despite my concerns about drifting off in the Stalls and completely losing the plot, I was completely hooked. Bob Crowley's sliding set is very impressive - and never better than when it transforms into a ship in the second play. The final scene - maybe less than a minute long - burns itself into your memory. Four stars, easily... and nearly five. Andrew B - USER: Whatsonstage.com (193.130.127.205)
01 Dec 03
Still thrilling from seeing this wonderful production last night. A contender for best production of the year of the near 50 I've seen this year. O'Neill, what a wonderful writer; Long Day's Journey is one of my favourite 'modern' plays and Mourning, while tipping into melodrama at times, is beautifully and unerringly realised here by Howard Davies. The cast are magnificent including Helen Mirren, Eve Best and Paul Dillon. Dominic Rowan, who usually sounds like Swiss Tony whenever I've seen him, hear sounds like Mayor Quimby. The set is great with a terrific coup in the seond act. Don't be put off by the length; it flies by. I was gripped throughout and my partner, who has been known to fall asleep, was similarly rapt. Five stars no question and wonderful way to round off a day that began with England finally winning a world cup.Hurrah! - USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.35.62.168)
27 Nov 03
Well it's certainly long, and it's full of typically repetitive O'Neill emoting, but I though it was wonderful (and it was only the first preview that I saw). In place of the inexorable fates of the Greek tragedy upon which it is loosely based is the relentlessness of the damaged Mannon family psyche - Howard Davies ensures that you feel them all being dragged into the abyss just as if the furies were on them. Helen Mirren and Eve Best are outstanding, and there are some other very good performances (especially from Clarke Peters - and the chorus-like neighbours who start each of the three plays are very engaging), but it's the women's play. For once O'Neill has written women of depth who aren't merely mother-or-whore ciphers (although these two, as Gary Lineker once said of Princess Diana, are undoubtedly trouble). The set is remarkable; it evolves half way through like one of those toy transformers of the 80s, and made me exclaim out loud, which I don't do as a rule. I can't say the last half hour didn't seem long. But, as with the NT's Three Sisters from last month, that suits the mood...as with the sisters, you are left in no doubt that the life of the final character that you see is going to pass very slowly.
- USER: Whatsonstage.com (82.35.62.168)
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