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Eugene O'Neill Theater Center

The Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, Connecticut, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit theater company founded in 1964 by George C. White. It is commonly referred to as The O'Neill, seating just over 1,000 guests. The center has received two Tony Awards, the 1979 Special Award and the 2010 Regional Theatre Award.[3] President Obama presented the 2015 National Medal of Arts to The O'Neill on September 22, 2016.[4]

This article is about the theater in Waterford, Connecticut. For the theater in Manhattan, New York, see Eugene O'Neill Theatre.

Address

1964

40 acres (16 ha)

1822

Federal, Gothic Revival, et al.

September 21, 2005

The O'Neill is a multi-disciplinary institution; it has had a transformative effect on American theater. The O'Neill pioneered play development and stage readings as a tool for new plays and musicals. It is home to the National Theater Institute[5] (established 1970), an intensive study-away semester for undergraduates. Its major theater conferences include the National Playwrights Conference (est. 1965); the National Critics Conference[6] (est. 1968), the National Musical Theater Conference (est. 1978), the National Puppetry Conference (est. 1990), and the Cabaret & Performance Conference (est. 2005). The Monte Cristo Cottage, Eugene O'Neill's childhood home in New London, Connecticut, was purchased and restored by the O'Neill in the 1970s and is maintained as a museum. The theater's campus, overlooking Long Island Sound in Waterford Beach Park, has four major performance spaces: two indoor and two outdoor. The O'Neill is led by Executive Director Tifanni Gavin.[7]


The estate, also known as Walnut Grove or Hammond Estate, was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 21, 2005, for its architectural significance, and its associations with Revolutionary War Colonel William North and Edward Crowninshield Hammond, a wealthy railroad tycoon who frequently had the young O'Neill thrown off of the property when he owned it.[1]

- Jeremy O. Harris (2018)

Slave Play

I'm Gonna Pray For You So Hard – (2014)

Halley Feiffer

Jennifer Haley (2011), Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, 2012

The Nether

Adam Bock (2006)

The Receptionist

David Lindsay-Abaire (1998)

Fuddy Meers

Trueblinka – (1997)

Adam Rapp

August Wilson (1994)

Seven Guitars

August Wilson (1986)

The Piano Lesson

August Wilson (1984)

Joe Turner's Come and Gone

August Wilson (1983)

Fences

Danny and the Deep Blue Sea – (1982)

John Patrick Shanley

August Wilson (1982)

Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

John Pielmeier (1979)

Agnes of God

David Henry Hwang (1979)

FOB

Martin Sherman (1978)

Bent

Wendy Wasserstein (1977)

Uncommon Women and Others

A History of the American Film – (1976)

Christopher Durang

Wole Soyinka (1970)

Madmen and Specialists

John Guare (1966)

House of Blue Leaves

The following is a list of plays, musicals, and performance pieces first developed at the O'Neill that have gone on to further success.

Emily Bergl

(The Receptionist)

Adam Bock

(NYPD Blue)

Gordon Clapp

(Heroes)

Jack Coleman

Michael Douglas

(Saturday Night Live)

Rachel Dratch

(Saturday Night Live)

Chris Elliott

Michael Emerson

Jennifer Garner

(US Congressman, New Hampshire)

Paul Hodes

Kristina Klebe

(The Office)

John Krasinski

(Entourage)

Jeremy Piven

Michael Portnoy

(How I Met Your Mother)

Josh Radnor

(Six Feet Under)

Kate Robin

Sam Robards

Britain Simons

Mark Teschner

Rebecca Taichman

Elizabeth Olsen

Adam Shulman

Cynthia Wade

Daniel Dae Kim

National Register of Historic Places listings in New London County, Connecticut

Official website