Ah, Wilderness!

Ah, Wilderness!

Poster for WPA production of Ah, Wilderness! at Federal Theater Playhouse, New Orleans
Written by Eugene O'Neill
Date premiered 2 October 1933
Place premiered Guild Theatre
New York City
Original language English
Genre Comedy
Setting The sitting room of the Miller home in a small town in Connecticut, July 4, 1906.
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Ah, Wilderness! is a comedy by American playwright Eugene O'Neill that premiered on Broadway at the Guild Theatre on 2 October 1933.

Contents

Plot summary

The play takes place on the Fourth of July, 1906, and focuses on the Miller family, presumably of New London, Connecticut. The main plot deals with the middle son, 17-year-old Richard, and his coming of age. The title derives from Quatrain XI of Edward Fitzgerald's translation of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, which is one of Richard's favorite poems.

Plot

On the Fourth of July 1906 in a small Connecticut town, the Miller family is finishing breakfast. Nat Miller owns the local newspaper and, with his wife Essie, who have a total of 6 children (yet the oldest 2 are never referred to by name). Eleven-year-old Tommy dashes outside to set off fireworks. Mildred, fifteen, teases her nineteen-year-old brother, Arthur, who plays football at Yale. Sharing the breakfast are Nat's sister Lily and Essie's brother Sid, who have had an on-and-off relationship for years, currently off because of Sid's drinking.

Richard, nearly seventeen, is the one member of the family who has not come in from breakfast. His mother worries about the "subversive" books he is reading by the likes of Swinburne, Shaw, Oscar Wilde and the poet Omar Khayyam. She wonders if he will become an anarchist. Richard is passionately in love with Muriel, the girl next door.

The family gathering is broken up by Muriel's father, McComber, who accuses Richard of corrupting his daughter with love letters featuring quotations from the books. Miller defends his son, even though McComber is one of the paper's biggest advertisers. McComber has punished Muriel, and presents her letter to Richard ending their relationship. Richard is devastated.

Later, Wint Selby, Arthur's classmate at Yale, is looking for someone to go with him on a double date. With Arthur unavailable, Wint hesitantly agrees to take Richard. The "date" turns out to be a rendezvous with prostitutes. While Wint is upstairs Richard sits in the bar, drinking with twenty-year-old Belle, unsure what to do. He starts a fight with a salesman who has insulted Belle.

Richard's parents fret about his late hour and, when he finally arrives, drunk and disheveled, Sid, expert in such matters, puts him to bed while his parents discuss his punishment. The next day, Nat comes home for lunch to punish Richard, who is still asleep. He and Essie disagree about what to do, and Nat goes back to work, secretly happy to postpone the confrontation. When Richard does come downstairs, his mother tells him that he must stay in the house. Almost immediately his sister Mildred arrives with a letter from Muriel promising her love and offering to sneak out that night to meet on the beach.

That evening, the young couple review the events of the holiday, and their future, and they kiss for the first time.

Back home, Nat and Essie discuss possible punishments, and the news that Muriel's father has changed his mind about Richard. Richard arrives looking lovestruck, and Essie leaves him with his father. They talk about the dangers of drinking and loose women, and the play ends happily with Richard gazing at the moon while his parents enjoy a kiss.

Characters

Productions

Ah, Wilderness! was revived four times in on Broadway 1941, 1975, in 1988 with Jason Robards and Colleen Dewhurst, and again in 1991.

Adaptations

The story was also made into the 1959 Broadway musical Take Me Along starring Jackie Gleason as the drunken Uncle Sid (Beery's role in the film), Walter Pidgeon as Nat and Robert Morse as Richard. The production ran for 448 performances. Gleason won the 1960 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical.

The play was made into a 1935 film of the same title and again in 1948 as the musical Summer Holiday. Mickey Rooney starred as Tommy in the former and Richard in the latter.

The play was also adapted for the radio on the Campbell Playhouse and Ford Theatre.

References

Further reading

External links