A Long Day’s Journey into Night

The cast of Long Day’s Journey Into Night. Image credit: Elysium Theatre Company

Written by Eugene O’Neill

Directed by Jake Murray

The Empty Space, Salford

There are family dramas and then there is Long Day’s Journey Into Night, Eugene O’Neill’s monumental autopsy of love, addiction, regret and the peculiar violence families inflict while insisting they only want what’s best. In Elysium Theatre Company’s touring production, directed by Jake Murray this American classic is stripped back and painfully exposed like an angry, infected wound.


The setting may be a Connecticut summer house in 1912, but the emotional climate is timeless: stifling, storm-heavy and thick with the fog of things left unsaid for too long. Across one increasingly unbearable day, the Tyrone family circle each other like wounded animals, armed with whiskey, morphine, recriminations and a fragile nostalgia.
Murray’s production wisely trusts O’Neill’s text, so there are no gimmicks here, no attempts to modernise or shrink the play’s formidable emotional architecture. Instead, the direction leans into the work’s bruising humanity, allowing its rhythms of affection, accusation and self-deception to unfold with agonising inevitability.


The performances carry the evening’s considerable weight. Joyce Branagh has taken on this substantial and demanding role of Mary Tyrone at short notice, so performs script-in-hand. Despite this, she captures both the ethereal delicacy and terrifying evasiveness of a woman retreating ever deeper into morphine-fogged memory. She drifts through the household like a ghost rehearsing happier versions of herself, all soft smiles, fluttering hands and tremulous denial, while grief and petulant resentment leak through the cracks.
As patriarch James Tyrone, Edmund Dehn does balance bluster with buried shame of his impoverished past and its impact on his family. Beneath the penny-pinching pragmatism lies a man haunted by compromises and squandered artistic promise. The physicality of Dehn convinces but this is a performance that never seems to fully invest in his characters’ rich Shakespearean history to fully grab his role by the teeth and run with it.

It is Elysium stalwart Danny Solomon who dives headlong into his role as elder son, Jamie embracing the cynical and self-destructive character and weaponising dark humour against bitter despair. Daniel Bradford as Edmund has a  frail and searching quality. Based on O’Neill himself, Edmund becomes the aching conscience of the piece. Bradford does a good job handling all the monologues and flitting fluidly between Baudelaire, Shakespeare and Nietzsche. Macy Stasiak adds some much needed lightness and energy as Cathleen, the family maid.


What emerges most powerfully is the terrible elasticity of familial love. The Tyrones know exactly how to wound because they know exactly where the wounds already are.
The Empty Space proves an ideal venue for this chamber piece of emotional demolition. Its intimacy denies audiences any safe observational distance.


At nearly three hours, Long Day’s Journey Into Night demands stamina and an armchair but Murrays’ production understands that O’Neill’s play must feel uncomfortably long. The title is not decorative. This is a slow descent from morning optimism into nocturnal despair, where memory becomes both refuge and prison. The past, as O’Neill reminds us, does not stay politely behind us. That said, the production ran over and that is problematic in such a lengthy piece where theatrical goodwill may start to be as watered down as the family whiskey.


A  compassionate and earnest revival that honours the grandeur of O’Neill’s masterpiece without ever losing sight of its ordinary human heartbreak.

Tour Dates

VIGNETTES

Joyce Branagh 1978-2023. Vignettes at CONTACT Image credit: Shay Rowan

Written by Alex Keelan, Zoe Iqbal, Maz Hedgehog, Debbie Oates, Lekhani Chirwa and Lyndsay Williams

Directed by Kate Colgrave-Pope, Gitika Buttoo, Ifeoma Uzo, Bryony Shanahan, Amy Gavin and Ellie Rose

CONTACT THEATRE

VIGNETTES has been showcasing the work of local female and non-binary writers since 2020 and has rapidly become an established part of the Manchester theatre network. Set up by HER Productions and local playwright Alex Keelan each one focuses on stories from the female perspective.

The latest offering honours 45 years of Manchester Rape Crisis , with each of the short plays inspired by stories from the organisation woven around a play by Alex Keelan which outlines the history of the organisation. 1973-2023 introduces each of the other pieces by the haunting ring of the helpline phone. Joyce Branagh is excellent in her portrayal of one of the women inspired by her own experience to establish an organisation to support women after rape or sexual assault. Her portrayal of neat as a pin Joyce reflects the quiet stoicism of a woman who can be wearily matter of fact that you could be the most ladylike lady and you could still get raped. She appears in each segment as the decades pass reflecting the grass roots start, the gradual growth, the failed bids for funding and the successful ones that see the organisation both flounder and expand at the mercy of never having core government funding. Unseen and powerfully moving is Mary who remains on stage throughout in her cardboard house. Keelan uses a less is more approach to beautiful effect by keeping her unseen but never forgotten as a tribute to all those unseen traumatised women that rape imprisons in their homes or minds while the perpetrators roam free in a Society that still makes convictions for sexual assaults so difficult.

The other 5 short plays are varied and rich in their subject matter. Zoe Iqbal uses Bhaijaan to look at issues around abuse and consent within an arranged marriage when family shame can be more damning than abuse. Burdens by Maz Hedgehog explores a mother/daughter relationship where history repeats itself when both find themselves in abusive relationships and a daughter initiates help for her mother but finds herself asking the helpline Can a woman rape another woman? This is a well written piece with strong performances with an excellent Krissi Bohn stepping into her role as the mother at very short notice.

A Day in the Life Of by Lekhani Chirwa and Broken by Lindsay Williams both focus on the stress and difficulties for staff working for Manchester Rape Crisis. The first piece explores coping mechanisms and the importance of mentoring and features a really vibrant performance by Alicia Forde. The second piece features a blistering performance by Lois Mackie as an I.S.V.A (Independent Sexual Violence Advocate). It outlines the unimaginable strain on victims who wait for court dates and the difficulties of getting a conviction. In raising awareness of the importance of victim support it also asks the question why the lack of convictions seems to make sexual assault virtually decriminalised.

The central play by Debbie Oates bridges all the other plays as Lifelines tells the story of Yvonne who was supported by the helpline and is now ready to take her first call as a volunteer. At the heart of this subject matter is the importance of women listening to each other and creatinga safe space. Director Bryony Shanahan and the always wonderful Julie Hesmondhalgh make every word count in this sensitive piece. There is humour and a huge heart at the core of this story of a middle aged woman raped as a young girl who through the support of the helpline has finally learned to breathe again and most days can walk beside it…around it…most days.

Julie Hesmondhalgh in Lifelines. Vignettes at CONTACT.
Image credit: Shay Rowan

The production closes with a celebration for Yvonne as she finally retires. Joyce Branagh and the cast raise a glass on stage, then invite the audience to stand and for a moment think of all those unseen women in Manchester, the North West and of course within the audience itself. VIGNETTES producers Hannah Ellis Ryan and Alex Keelan can be justly proud of their achievements as tonight was a fitting tribute to an amazing and vital organisation.

CONTACT THEATRE 4th/5th October 2023