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  1. Agnes Boulton, Eugene O'Neill Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press , 2000 - Biography & Autobiography - 328 pages "William Davies King's introduction puts the correspondence into the context of O'Neill's rapidly evolving career, while also introducing Boulton as a figure of interest in her own right.

  2. 12 de sept. de 2007 · "Part of a Long Story" is a must-have for anyone who is seriously interested in examining the life of Eugene O'Neill, or Agnes Boulton for that matter. In any case, the book achieves it true purpose: the crowning glory of the woman who successfully took her rightful place in history as the second Mrs. O'Neill along with all the heartache and glory that went along with it.

    • Agnes Boulton
  3. Abstract: The collection consists of writings, correspondence, and other papers broadly relating to Agnes Boulton. Writings include a typescript for Agnes Boulton's memoir about her marriage to Eugene O'Neill, Part of a Long Story (1958), and a partial typescript of Trouble in the Flesh (1959) by Max Wylie, as well as handwritten and typed notes (perhaps those of Boulton) for story and play ideas.

  4. 27 de sept. de 2019 · Oona O'Neill fue una actriz británica, reconocida por ser la hija del dramaturgo estadounidense Eugene O'Neill y la escritora inglesa Agnes Boulton, y más aún, por haberse robado el corazón de Charles Chaplin. Oona nació el 14 de mayo de 1925 en la Parroquia de Warwick en Bermudas. Sus padres se divorciaron cuando ella tenía solo 4 años ...

  5. On April 14, two days after he and Boulton had married, O’Neill declared himself “up to the ears” in preparing the script for the producer John D. Williams, to whom George Jean Nathan had ...

  6. 24 de feb. de 2002 · Her mother was Agnes Boulton, her father was Eugene O'Neill, and her husband was Charlie Chaplin. She was beautiful, charming, intelligent and appealing, and more than a half century ago, Oona O ...

  7. Author Agnes Boulton begins her story in 1917, five years after the end of Long Day’s Journey, when O’Neill’s first one-acters were making him the symbol and idol of the Provincetown Players.