Eugene O'Neill's "Mourning Becomes Electra" (1931) is a modernized retelling of Aeschylus's ancient Greek tragedy, exploring psychological conflict in themes of revenge and family betrayal at a New England seaport in 1865, immediately following the American Civil War. It is widely considered one of O'Neill's masterpieces, contributing significantly to his 1936 Nobel Prize in Literature.
Eugene O'Neill's "Mourning Becomes Electra" (1931) is a modernized retelling of Aeschylus's ancient Greek tragedy, exploring psychological conflict in themes of revenge and family betrayal at a New England seaport in 1865, immediately following the American Civil War. It is widely considered one of O'Neill's masterpieces, contributing significantly to his 1936 Nobel Prize in Literature.