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The O'Neill/Boulton correspondence was published in 2000 by Fairleigh Dickinson University Press in a volume called A Wind Is Rising. [12] For a full biographical study of Boulton, see William Davies King, "Another Part of a Long Story: Literary Traces of Eugene O'Neill and Agnes Boulton" (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2010). .
As a classicist and philosophy scholar, O'Neill taught at Yale, Princeton, [2] Fordham University, Sarah Lawrence College, and the New School for Social Research. [1] He was the editor of a collection of Greek plays; shortly before his death he had contributed book reviews to The New York Times and the Saturday Review of Literature, and also been featured on the CBS radio show, "Invitation to ...
Eugene Gladstone O'Neill (October 16, 1888 – November 27, 1953) was an American playwright. His poetically titled plays were among the first to introduce into the U.S. the drama techniques of realism, earlier associated with Chekhov, Ibsen, and Strindberg.
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Ella met James O'Neill at her father's house, and later married him on June 14, 1877 in Manhattan. [3] Ella was on tour with James in San Francisco when in September 1878, her first son, James, Jr., was born in the house of one of the actor's friends. [4] A second son, Edmund Burke O'Neill was born in 1883 in St. Louis.
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A Black supermodel of the 1980s and ‘90s, Gail O’Neill found success as a journalist before her death at age […] The post Remembering model and journalist Gail O’Neill appeared first on ...
The establishment of Eugene O’Neill National Historic Site is justified by two reasons. First, the site is needed to commemorate Eugene O’Neill, one of the greatest writers in American literature. Eugene O’Neill lived in Tao House from 1937 to 1944, and wrote his most brilliant playwrights.