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Desire Under the Elms
Tickets and Information


SHOW INFORMATION

Average of 3 stars from 1 ratings.

CURRENTLY CLOSED
Opened Apr 27, 2009
Closed May 24, 2009
Running Time:
1hr. 40min.

Visit the Desire Under the Elms website:
http://www.desireonbroadway.com

TICKETS TO THIS SHOW BUY TICKETS CHECK FOR DISCOUNTS

WHAT IS IT ABOUT?

Robert Falls directs Eugene O'Neill's Desire Under the Elms, starring Brian Dennehy, Carla Gugino, and Pablo Schreiber.

Elder Ephraim Cabot returns to his remote New England farm with his third wife -- the young, alluring, headstrong Abbie -- setting his three disapproving grown sons on an emotional roller coaster and bitter fight for their inheritance. When Ephraim's youngest son Eben sets his sights on Abbie, the resulting tempest brings tragic consequences.

Desire Under the Elms comes to Broadway directly from its critically acclaimed run at Chicago's prestigious Goodman Theatre.

THEATER/VENUE INFORMATION:



St. James Theater
246 W 44th St
New York, NY 10036


WHAT ARE CRITICS SAYING?

In an introduction to Eugene O'Neill's Desire Under the Elms, the celebrated chronicler of shattered illusions notes about those titular trees that "there is a sinister maternity in their aspect, a crushing, jealous absorption?.They brood oppressively over the house." Taking such care --and imposing prose -- to describe the elms, O'Neill obviously considers their presence of no little importance. But in the only intermittently effective revival of the 1924 bodice-ripping gloom-and-doomer, which has transferred to Broadway's St. James Theatre from Chicago's Goodman Theatre, director Robert Falls waves the elms off and has set designer Walt Spangler replace them with stones the size of bou[...]


Reviewed by David Finkle on Apr 28, 2009

What are other members saying?

Don't Miss This
The Goodman Theatres _Desire Under the Elms_ has come to the St. James Theatre. Last night was the first night of previews in this limited NYC production. Starring Brian Dennehy, Carla Gugino Suddenly Last Summer and Pablo Schreiber Awake and Sing and directed by Robert Falls Death of a Salesman, Long Days Journey into Night this remarkable production is going to create a stir. The play itself Eugene ONeill holds few surprises but packs an emotional wallop nonetheless. It has good structure and as bizarre as this sounds, is the perfect starting point for this production. What is really going on, on the very large stage, is cinematic in scope. This production is HUGE. There are hydraulics, gargantuan set pieces, farm animals and lots of smashing and hurling. It is a credit to the cast that they were never overpowered by the set and design. There is an actual house that is raised and lowered throughout the production, that often hangs over the family. Metaphor aside, I was terrified. Call me a worry wort, but I did not entirely trust the cables. This being the first night, the hydraulics were often a bit slow on the uptake, leaving yawning holes in the stage for minutes. I was concerned for the actors safety. All of this motion is not actually distracting, in fact it takes a relatively sedate play and brings it into the 21st century attention span demands. Music is used as a powerful device in this production. There is one scene that has no dialogue, just a riveting musical accompaniment, lending a modern cinematic touch. At one point a "violinist" comes on upstage. He is obviously "bow synching" his playing Im not sure why and lends an edgy touch. The opening and closing music that accompanies father and sons as they tow rocks is pitch perfect in tone and emotion. The set is very dark, and the music works to give it a more colorful dimension. The set and costuming echoes the bleakness of the storyline, and in such a large space does not feel overly oppressive. Although, it is clear that this production dictates the use of a large stage, the St. James is not the right venue. It is very large. Musical large. The actors are wearing body mics, although where, remains a mystery, as we saw one of the actors disrobe. The distortion is a travesty. The set is dark, and several times I could not discern who was actually speaking. The volume settings were off at times, creating a pearl crashing Singing In The Rain reality that just didnt work. A smaller theatre would have allowed the actors to be free to unplug. The accents are a bit off as well. Mr. Dennehy was using his lovely brogue with no reference to being Irish, but Ms. Gugino seemed to struggle with a New England accent. I much prefer no accents as a rule, as so few people, save Meryl Streep, can actually master one. The acting is phenomenal, the direction perfection, and the staging out of this world. It is a dark and sad play, with very little humor. See it if you can, but not for a first date.

Reviewed by Brenda_1054748 on Monday, May 11th, 2009

RE:Thrilled & Disappointed
Saw it last night on Bdwy. This is a thrilling, early ONeill masterpiece that was unfortunately cut in key places and left me baffled. The set was way overblown and detracted from the supurb acting. I wish they would have left the script intact and let these incredible actors do their stuff - the heat and passion they generate could carry this play without the huge house lifting to the ceiling and the Bob Dylan music.

Reviewed by markbrose on Friday, Apr 24th, 2009


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