Upstairs at the TAO HOUSE of Eugene O'Neill Danville, CA

Carlotta's dressing room off her bedroom   His wife was an actress whom he met in NYC first when she was in one of his plays and then some years later at an event.  They had no children but were devoted to their dog.  Edith Wharton also was very devoted to her dogs, and remained childless.  
The desk where his manuscripts were placed,

O'Neill's desk where he wrote in seclusion

O'Neill penned his plays at this desk.  At Tao House he wrote "A Touch of the Poet", 1935-39.
part of the cycle plays.  In 1939, he wrote what has become a classic, the last play produced on Broadway in O'Neill's time, or "The Iceman Cometh", which I saw at BAM this past year in Brooklyn.   "Hughie" was performed last year in the San Ramon Museum in Danville, and I also attended this play, which seems a prelude to David Hare and David Ware's plays.   "Long Day's Journey into Night", his most autobiographical play, which is being performed in Ashland Shakespeare Festival this summer, which I will attend, as will many other board members, as well as the last play Eugene O'Neill wrote, but also famous, "A Moon for the Misbegotten", another product of his term at Tao House.  He liked to write from early morning into afternoon, and then take a swim in their pool and relax  with dinner with Carlotta in the evening. ,  

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