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  1. Strange Interlude is an experimental play in nine acts by American playwright Eugene O'Neill. It won the 1928 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. Strange Interlude is one of the few modern plays to make extensive use of a soliloquy technique, in which the characters speak their inner thoughts to the audience.

  2. Strange Interlude is a 1932 American pre-Code drama film directed by Robert Z. Leonard and released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The film stars Norma Shearer and Clark Gable, and is based on the 1928 play Strange Interlude by Eugene O'Neill.

  3. Strange Interlude, Pulitzer Prize-winning drama in two parts and nine acts by Eugene ONeill. It was produced in 1928 in New York City and was published the same year. The work’s complicated plot is the story of a woman in her roles as daughter, wife, mistress, mother, and friend.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Strange Interlude (1928), by American dramatist Eugene O'Neill, was a huge success when first produced by the Theatre Guild at the John Golden Theatre in New York City in 1928. It won the Pulitzer Prize and became the most successful American play to date.

  5. ‘What they really saw: using archives to reconstruct the censored performance of Eugene ONeills Strange Interlude.’ Pp 99-116 in Performance reclamation: research, discovery, and interpretation .

  6. Strange Interlude is an experimental play by American playwright Eugene ONeill, first published and performed in 1928. Making extensive use of stream-of-consciousness asides and soliloquies, the play tells the life story of Nina Leeds, whom we meet just after her fiancé’s death in World War II.

  7. Jun 5, 2013 · Anne-Marie Duff captivates in Eugene O’Neill’s novelistic and utterly gripping Strange Interlude.

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