Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Dr. Patrick Lonergan views on 2013 synge summer school as his last year in charge but Stuart Carolan wont discuss what has happened to Darren “he wouldn’t say anything”!

Scenes from the Bigger Picture

I’m just back from the Synge Summer School in Rathdrum in Wicklow. I’ve been directing that event since 2008 and because this was my last year in charge I decided to invite eight Irish dramatists to come and speak about Irish playwriting today. So we heard from Stuart Carolan, Deirdre Kinahan, Mark O’Rowe, Owen McCafferty, Marina Carr, Dermot Bolger, Declan Hughes and Enda Walsh. Rita Ann Higgins also attended and while she is better known as a poet, she has also written plays. And we went to see Colin Murphy’s Guaranteed! and heard him and Gavin Kostick speaking about it afterwards.

This is something we’ve always done at the Synge School: although most of the talks are by academics, during my time as director we’ve also had occasional interviews/readings with Sebastian Barry, Una McKevitt, Colm Toibin, Joseph O’Connor, Bernard Farrell, Louise Lowe, Pat McCabe, Christina Reid, Billy Roche and Conor…

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June 9 is Broadway’s biggest night of the year for both musicals and plays. In an MC style

” Here are 2013 Nominees and winners of Tony Awards”

 

BEST PLAY

 
 
Author: 

 
 

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE (MUSIC AND/OR LYRICS) WRITTEN FOR THE THEATRE

 
Music and Lyrics: 

 and 

 
 
WINNER
Music & Lyrics: 

 
 
Music & Lyrics: 

BEST REVIVAL OF A PLAY

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

BEST REVIVAL OF A MUSICAL

 
 
 
 
WINNER
 
 

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE IN A MUSICAL

 
 
 
 

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A FEATURED ROLE IN A PLAY

 
 
 
 

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A FEATURED ROLE IN A MUSICAL

 
 
 
 

SPECIAL TONY AWARD® FOR LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT IN THE THEATRE

 
 

REGIONAL THEATRE AWARD

ISABELLE STEVENSON AWARD

TONY HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN THE THEATRE

 
 
 
 
 
The four actresses who created the title role of Matilda The Musical on Broadway – 

 and 

 

BEST MUSICAL

WINNER
 

BEST BOOK OF A MUSICAL

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE (MUSIC AND/OR LYRICS) WRITTEN FOR THE THEATRE

WINNER
Music & Lyrics: 

BEST REVIVAL OF A PLAY

BEST REVIVAL OF A MUSICAL

WINNER
 

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE IN A PLAY

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE IN A PLAY

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE IN A MUSICAL

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A LEADING ROLE IN A MUSICAL

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A FEATURED ROLE IN A PLAY

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A FEATURED ROLE IN A PLAY

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A FEATURED ROLE IN A MUSICAL

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A FEATURED ROLE IN A MUSICAL

BEST DIRECTION OF A PLAY

BEST DIRECTION OF A MUSICAL

BEST CHOREOGRAPHY

BEST ORCHESTRATIONS

BEST SCENIC DESIGN OF A PLAY

BEST SCENIC DESIGN OF A MUSICAL

BEST COSTUME DESIGN OF A PLAY

BEST COSTUME DESIGN OF A MUSICAL

BEST LIGHTING DESIGN OF A PLAY

BEST LIGHTING DESIGN OF A MUSICAL

BEST SOUND DESIGN OF A PLAY

BEST SOUND DESIGN OF A MUSICAL

SPECIAL TONY AWARD FOR LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT IN THE THEATRE

 
 

REGIONAL THEATRE AWARD

ISABELLE STEVENSON AWARD

TONY HONORS FOR EXCELLENCE IN THE THEATRE

 
 
 
 
 
The four actresses who created the title role of Matilda The Musical on Broadway – 

 and 

a good friends blog on french festivals 🙂

You Can Call Me Ashley

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This week in France, marking the first week of the French summer there were numerous celebrations and festivals! Fête de la Musique, the International Folklore Festival, the soldes, Fête du Cinéma and of course Gay Pride was thrown in there in the mix too. Chaos!

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The week consisted of free music, free spectacles, clothes so cheap in the sales that they were almost free and a few free spirits roaming the streets of Paris on Saturday, clad in rainbow flags and not much else. Not forgetting the Fête du Cinéma, a festival in France celebrating cinema across the entire country which reduces the prices of tickets everywhere to €3.50.

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Making the most of the cinema festival we thought it would be best to see Les Stagiares (The Interns) in one of France’s most expensive cinemas which is of course of the Champs Elysées, right across from Louis Vuitton…

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"Is he Brian Friel?"

Posted: July 2, 2013 in Uncategorized

All About The Exposure

Published on studentnews.ie, 25 Oct 2011

NUIG’s Jessica Thompson reviews an event on campus titled ‘An Audience with Brian Friel’.

I arrive at the almost packed Kirwan theatre, with my notepad, pen, recording device, and a bad-ass-journalist attitude, ready for two hours of Brian Friel. I find myself a seat beside a socket, where I can plug in my recorder, ready to pick up absolutely everything that Brian Friel will say, and I sit back and wait for him to arrive.
At approximately 19:10, I turn to my colleague, Ian Colgan, and note that the playwright is ’fashionably late’. It is at 19:15 when someone finally enters the hall, and it is now that I realise I’ve walked into a completely different world – the world of Lit and Deb.
When I say ‘fashionably  late’, I mean it literally. At 19:15, two students walk through the doors wearing…

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All About The Exposure

Current GMIT President, Joe O’Connor was elected President of the Union of Students in Ireland (USI) for 2013/2014 at USI Congress last week.

O’Connor served as President of GMIT Students’ Union for two years, and was previously Vice President for Welfare, proving that he has no shortage of experience for the position of USI President.

The GMIT SU President was the sole candidate for the position of USI President.

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Text of the inroductory address delivered by Ms Finola Cronin on 15 June 2013, on the occasion of the conferring of the Degree of Doctor of Literature, honoris causa on Patrick Mason

 

Patrick Mason is a gargantuan of Irish theatre who has brought to the stage many of the most important plays of the Irish, European and American canons in landmark, memorable and definitive productions.

The sheer scale and breath of his achievement is extraordinary and remarkable; producing over 150 new Irish plays his award-winning work includes premier productions of among the most important texts from Ireland’s leading playwrights including Tom Murphy’s The Gigli Concert; Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa; Frank McGuinness’ Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme; and Marina Carr’s By The Bog of Cats. He has worked as choreographer, voice coach, and opera director, written drama for radio, and adapted plays for the stage. He has directed new plays by Stewart Parker, Hugh Leonard, Seamus Heaney, and Sebastian Barry, and is known for his accomplished revivals which reveal his deep understanding of theatre history and stagecraft.

For Dancing at Lughnasa he was awarded a Tony for Best Theatre Direction and a Drama Desk for Outstanding Direction of a Play; he received a Harvey’s Award for Thomas Kilroy’s Talbot’s Box and an Irish Times Special Theatre Award for his work as Artistic Director at The Abbey Theatre.

Mason is possibly the most important artistic import that Ireland has ever had the pleasure to offer citizenship; born to an Irish mother and English father, he was educated in England and studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London. He first came to Dublin to assist Hugh Hunt in his production of The Silver Tassie for the Abbey Theatre – Mason would return to O’Casey’s masterpiece, in courageous and acclaimed theatre and opera productions, and, as significantly he was to return, after a sojourn lecturing in Performance Studies at Manchester University, to the Abbey Theatre – his Alma Mater.

Mason claims the Abbey theatre defines his work because it is a ‘writer’s theatre’ and his quest to reveal a rich text for what it – ‘a deeply human thing – emotional and intellectual’ – found form brilliantly in his now legendary collaborations with playwright and poet Tom MacIntyre, actor Tom Hickey, and designer Bronwen Casson.

MacIntyre’s adaption of Patrick Kavanagh’s The Great Hunger in particular was a ground-breaking performance of radical imagistic innovation – it was a call to ‘the psyche and the senses’ and invigorated Irish theatre.

Moreover this work, which toured to critical acclaim nationally and internationally was one that linked the national theatre directly back to its founder, to Yeats’ experimental dance plays, to the power and potency of pure theatrical gesture.
Yeats is for Mason, the constant conscience of the Abbey and his tenure as Artistic Director of the National Theatre Society from 1994-99 resounded with Yeats’ call for ‘art and intellect to integrate with the political and the social’. Putting The Abbey at the centre of public debate, Mason questioned adroitly artistic policies of the time that sought to undermine the institution’s position as the ‘locus of dramatic dialogue between the Irish people and their writers’, and the theatre’s purpose ‘to speak the deeper thoughts and emotions of Ireland’.

Mason’s artistic directorship secured ultimately not only the financial future of the national stage but reinforced its powerful voice – and its relevancy – most notably when – in 1994 in response to the IRA ceasefire, Mason seized the moment with a new production of McGuinness’ masterpiece Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards The Somme. When the UVF called a ceasefire that happened to coincide with the production run – there occurred a powerful chiming of politics, history and art.

A distinction of Mason’s programming as Artistic Director was the inclusion of world theatre alongside Irish repertoire and while his brilliant and daring production of Tony Kushner’s Angels In America demonstrated both his innate artistic and moral courage, productions such as Arthur Miller’s The Crucible and Luigi Pirandello’s Six Character’s in Search of an Author affirmed Mason’s belief that most especially in a national theatre, art has no national borders.

Mason’s work has been acclaimed on the international stage: in London, Edinburgh, New York, and on mainland Europe in The Netherlands, Denmark, Russia and farther afield in Australia and the Far East. His fascination with and love of music, evident in productions such as Friel’s Performances is given full rein in his in opera where his directing credits include, among others, Janacek, Verdi, Mozart, and Lortzing in productions for the English National Opera, Buxton Festival, Opera Zuid, Welsh National Opera, Opera North, and Wexford International Festival.

As much as Mason has been associated with The Abbey Theatre his work more latterly for The Gate Theatre Dublin animates and re-imagines classic productions for new audiences and includes Noel Coward’s Hay Fever, Friel’s Molly Sweeney and G.B. Shaw’s Mrs. Warren’s Profession and Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia.

Mason has forged enduring creative partnerships throughout his career with playwrights such as McGuinness, Kilroy, Friel and Murphy, and believes the playwright to be an essential elucidating presence in rehearsal – integral in the process to make word and action in performance, vivid to the imagination.

He has collaborated with the foremost actors and scenographers of his generation; with Maureen Toal, Olwen Fouéré, Donal McCann, Ingrid Craigie, and with Monica Frawley, Wendy Shea, Frank Hallinan Flood, and Francis O’Connor to name but a few, while his very considerable body of work with scenographer Joe Vanek marks a creative affiliation that inspires and enthralls.

Preferring the term producer to director as it best describes his multifaceted process – his leading out of something with a group of very disparate talents from writer to actor to designer and lighting designer – Mason’s work in rehearsal is to create the fabric of a production; to make curious, to stimulate, to provoke, to make – ultimately form and meaning – it is, really, the stuff of the alchemy of theatre – the leading out of the imaginations of artists to meet and hold the imagination of audiences.

It is our great fortune to have Patrick Mason at work in Irish theatre where his immense craft, his intellect, his generosity, his artistry, and his imagination, emplace the director as producer, at the core of Irish theatrical experience.

Praehonorabilis Pro-Praeses, totaque Universitas,

Praesento vobis hunc meum filium, quem scio tam moribus quam doctrina habilem et idoneum esse qui admittatur, honoris causa, ad gradum Doctoratus in Litteris; idque tibi fide mea testor ac spondeo, totique Academiae.

Text of the inroductory address delivered by Dr Cathy Leeney on 15 June 2013, on the occasion of the presentation of the Ulysses Medal on Bob Crowley

For the Royal Shakespeare Company production of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, the stage of the Music Box Theater has been remodelled into a sex-drenched boudoir of late Eighteenth-century France. Signs of reckless carnal abandon are everywhere. Huge linen sheets, rumpled from hectic use, drape the proscenium and boxes. Lacy silk underthings tumble in messy profusion from the hastily slammed drawers of a towering chiffonier. Tall slatted screens, the better for servants to peep through, cast distorted shadows. All that’s missing is a proper regal bed. Instead, there’s a constellation of settees and chaise longues; this is an arena for men and women who copulate on the run. The setting, at once in period and nightmarishly abstracted in Bob Crowley’s inspired design, does not belie the action.’ Thus wrote Frank Rich in the New York Times, the notorious critic giving a vivid sense of the stunning design achievement of Bob Crowley, Costume designer and Scenographer for theatre, opera and film, director, and native of Cork. Les Liaisons Dangereuses was hugely successful in Stratford, London and New York and and won Crowley a Tony Award for Best Scenic Design in 1987. Bob Crowley’s complete list of nominations and awards is far too long however to rehearse now; suffice it to say that the Oliviers are many, the Tonys are multiple, the Drama Desk and London Critics Circle repeated and he was the recipient the Royal Design for Industry award. In addition he has twice been part of the British team entry for the Prague Quadrennial International Exhibition of Theatre Design and Architecture, the theatre design equivalent of the Venice Biennale.

Bob Crowley creates worlds. The stage is his space of infinite possibility. Each time he begins the process of creating a design for a production, settings and/or costumes, when he first encounters a new script or hears music from a new score, he faces the empty white page with a ‘rush of delight’ as he explains. This quality of energy, clarity and spatial vision is palpable in his work. He describes the unrelenting stream of decisions that must be made at every point in the process – about time, colour, light, texture, space. He talks about finding chairs for his design for Phèdre; the urgency in searching out exactly the right chair which tells the period, the culture, the civilisation – his words: ‘you can place that space instantly by the information that chair gives you.’ God and the designer are in these details, making and remaking worlds that return the gaze of the audience, that transport us into the action.

Bob Crowley is an artist in four dimensions and his early training in fine art at the Crawford College of Art and Design in Cork points towards the quality of painterly and sculptural awareness of form, light, colour, and depth so apparent in his designs, for example, for Mourning Becomes Electra, and The Year of Magical Thinking with Vanessa Redgrave both at the Royal National Theatre. For the solo performance of Redgrave, the design included six paintings on silk that spanned the breadth of the stage, charting the character’s journey to the heart of grief, images that are internal landscapes of desolation.

Crowley trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School and built his career in Britain. His breakthrough production was The Duchess of Malfi for the Royal Exchange in Manchester with Helen Mirren and Bob Hoskins.

In fact Bob Crowley’s working relationship with both the RNT and the Royal Shakespeare Company have been at the core of his non-stop career for over thirty years. He has made designs for many productions of Shakespeare’s plays, and for contemporary works by Alan Bennett, Tom Stoppard, Christopher Hampton, and David Hare, and his designs for opera include work at the Royal Opera, ENO, and Welsh National Opera and for mainland European and US companies.

Some of his major designs have been for musicals, and as a boy in Cork, he loved going to the theatre, musicals and pantomimes with his grandparents; when he saw a touring production of Oliver! designed by another Irish legend in British theatre, Sean Kenny, he was hooked.

In researching the production of Carousel, a huge success in London and on Broadway, he travelled with director Nicholas Hytner, to New England. They stopped at the Shaker community in Sabbathday Lake and saw the meeting house, built in the 1880s, the walls painted a beautiful indigo blue, symbolizing heaven. An image grew of an empty blue box with a revolving floor which was the essence of his design.

Theatre scenography is an elusive art, disappearing into the exquisite temporality of the performance moment; but traces remain: on the web, in photographs, model boxes, on film, and in memories. You may have seen Bob Crowley’s work in the costumes for the film of Arthur Miller’s The Crucible with Daniel Day-Lewis, or in his designs for opera in London or New York, or you may have lapped up the pleasure of his creations for Carousel or Once, Mary Poppins, Tarzan or Aida, or if you’ve seen Sting or Duran Duran in concert.

For Field Day Theatre Company you’ll have seen his work for St. Oscar with Stephen Rea as Oscar Wilde, or his co-direction with Rea of Seamus Heaney’s The Cure at Troy. His design for The Three Sisters at the Gate Theatre staged the Cusack family father and daughters in unforgettable form. And if you were lucky enough to catch Sean O’Casey’s Juno and the Paycock at the Abbey in 2011, you will have seen his acclaimed representation of the Georgian tenements of Dublin in 1922, what he calls the ‘falling down filthy decrepit grandeur’ in which Sean O’Casey’s Juno Boyle and her family lived. Crammed into subdivided rooms by ruthless landlords, the misery of their absolute poverty was framed with brutal irony by the fine proportions of pillar, cornice and oak floor, remote ceilings of shadowy Italian plasterwork, doorways made wide for elegant egress, their desperation defined by the exquisite light slanting through tall sash windows. The space lived with the actors, materialized the terrible lucidity of O’Casey’s vision. Bob Crowley’s respect for the collaborative process of theatre, for the world of the play and for the audience’s connection into it make him a designer of infinite variety and of genius.

Praehonorabilis Pro-Praeses, totaque Universitas,

Praesento vobis hunc meum filium, quem scio tam moribus quam doctrina habilem et idoneum esse qui admittatur, honoris causa, ad gradum Doctoratus in Litteris; idque tibi fide mea testor ac spondeo, totique Academiae.

 

Text of the introductory address delivered by Dr P.J. Mathews on 15 June 2013, on the occasion of the conferring of the Degree of Doctor of Literature, honoris causa on Conor McPherson

Deputy-President, Honoured Guests, Ladies and Gentleman.

Conor McPherson attended UCD between 1988 and 1993, where he was awarded a BA in English and Philosophy, followed by an MA in Philosophy. Simultaneously, McPherson distinguished himself as one of the most talented and active members of UCD Dramsoc, writing plays, directing, and acting in some of the most memorable the society’s productions during that period. In the twenty years since Conor left UCD he has enjoyed international success as a theatre director and film-maker but it is his monumental achievement as a playwright that most distinguishes him as an outstanding contributor to world theatre over the last two decades, an achievement that we honour this afternoon.

In the mid-1990s Conor McPherson quickly emerged as one of the most innovative and energetic playwrights working in the London theatre. In 1996 the Bush Theatre produced his play This Lime Tree Bower (which had previously been produced by Fly By Night Theatre Company in Dublin) followed closely by St. Nicholas in the same theatre a few months later. In 1997 the Royal Court Theatre staged his play, The Weir, which established his reputation as a playwright of international significance, winning numerous awards including the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Play, the Critics’ Circle Award and the Evening Standard Award. The Weir enjoyed hugely successful runs at the Gate Theatre, Dublin, on Broadway and, in subsequent years, in countless theatres across the globe. (Note: just finished a run in the West End).

McPherson’s creative burst continued into the new century with productions of Dublin Carol (2000), Port Authority (2001), Shining City (2004) enjoying acclaim in London and Dublin. In 2006 The Seafarer opened at the National Theatre, London and later transferred to Broadway, receiving Tony Award nominations for Best Play and Best Director, and later again to the Abbey Theatre, Dublin for a highly successful run. More recently Conor returned to the National Theatre, London with The Veil in 2011 and his new play, The Night Alive, opened last Wednesday in the West End.

This is by no means an exhaustive list of McPherson’s plays and productions; nor, indeed should we forget his film credits: Conor wrote the screenplay for I Went Down; wrote and directed Saltwater; directed Endgame as part of the Beckett on Film project; and in 2003 wrote and directed The Actors, wrote and directed The Eclipse in 2009.

Conor McPherson can be counted among the last of a pre-Celtic Tiger generation whose formation was enacted in an Ireland of recession and limited opportunity but whose coming of age coincided with the giddy excitement of more prosperous times. In some cases he writes from the perspective of the beleaguered vestige—an older Ireland that is being rapidly eclipsed by the frenzy of an economic boom.

In other works he explores the dynamics of a new amorphous culture where social constraints seem less binding but personal demons still need to be confronted. Consistently, though, his plays register the tectonic movements taking place in Irish culture and society as they are happening. Much of his genius lies in his prescience and in a consciousness acutely tuned to the subterranean tremors of profound social change. In this regard we can align his work with great exponents of Irish theatre such as John Millington Synge, Brian Friel, and Frank McGuinness.

McPherson’s work shines the light into the dark recesses and taboo spaces of Irish life but it also celebrates the gentle and unspoken civilities of the local at a time when these attributes are perceived, to be under threat by brash consumerism.

Much of the power of his drama lies in the simplicity and intensity with which he deploys the art of storytelling. A central theme that emerges in his work is the idea that a community’s sanity and civility can be gauged by the extent to which it provides a warm, courteous space for people to tell their stories without fear of being judged or ridiculed.

Yet there is never a total surrender to the redeeming potentials of pastoral or the palliative effects of nostalgia in these plays. As an audience we may be impressed by the warmth, openness, and richness of McPherson’s characters in story-telling mode but we are equally aware of the material and emotional poverty that underwrites many of their exchanges. These compelling stories often find their origins in delusional ideas of male self-sufficiency or in pathological attachments to place. They flourish, too, in societies caught between impulses of heroic isolation and willing submission to the forces of globalization.

McPherson is now widely recognised as one of the English language’s leading theatrical voices. His distinctive use of the Irish voice, his humour and his masterful story-telling combine to create a distinctive theatrical experience, at once challenging and uplifting. Conor received an early schooling in theatre and performance at UCD; formally, in classes given by Professor Anthony Roche and other colleagues in the then Department of English; and informally in the rehearsal rooms and performance spaces of UCD Dramsoc. In more recent years he has returned to UCD on a regular basis to teach on the MA in Directing and the MA in Drama and Performance. It is eminently fitting that, today, his outstanding contribution to world theatre should be recognised here, in his alma mater, with the award of this honorary doctorate.

Praehonorabilis Pro-Praeses, totaque Universitas,

Praesento vobis hunc meum filium, quem scio tam moribus quam doctrina habilem et idoneum esse qui admittatur, honoris causa, ad gradum Doctoratus in Litteris; idque tibi fide mea testor ac spondeo, totique Academiae.

Text of the inroductory address delivered by Dr Eamonn Jordan on 15 June 2013, on the occasion of the presentation of the Ulysses Medal on Tom Murphy

Deputy-President, Honoured Guests, Ladies and Gentleman.

Ireland has produced wonderful artists, performers, film makers, musicians, poets, writers, and, probably most successfully, a significant number of playwrights of world renown. Without doubt, and over a fifty year period, Tom Murphy has produced a body of work that matches the very best of those writing in the English language since the turn of the twentieth century.

Tom Murphy has had an extraordinary career as an award winning playwright, as a novelist, as a theatre director, but also as a screenwriter for RTE, Thames Television, and the BBC. He is a member of Aosdána, a patron of the Irish Theatre Institute and he holds honorary degrees from Trinity College, Dublin and NUI Galway.

His playwriting career started in 1959 with On the Outside, a play co-written with Noel O’Donoghue. The ground breaking A Whistle in the Dark, which premiered in 1961 at the Theatre Royal in London, is an exceptional play that has not been in any way diminished by time. In that decade, other landmark achievements followed with Famine (1968) and A Crucial Week in the Life of a Grocer’s Assistant (1969).

Set during Ireland’s Great Famine period, Murphy’s playFamine captures not only the horrors of starvation and the near collapse of hope during that era, but also the conflicts of the emerging nation of his own time, which had inherited in part a famine consciousness. A Crucial Week portrays the terrors of emigration, the lot of the disenfranchised, the consequences of subsistence living, and it makes visible the oppressions and repressions that Ireland’s society circulated at that time.

The 1970s saw a number of important pieces of work, includingThe Morning after Optimism (1971) and The Sanctuary Lamp(1975).  The next decade brought three extraordinary dramas,The Gigli Concert (1983), for the Abbey Theatre, which was directed by Patrick Mason, and for Druid Theatre Company,Conversations on a Homecoming (1983) and Bailegangaire(1985), both of which were directed by Garry Hynes. The Gigli Concert is notable for its extraordinary awareness of the dialectics between silence and musicality, light and shadow, despair and a magical, transformative theatricality, andConversations for its wonderful reflections on friendship, the potentials and failures of collective aspirations, and, again, how emigration brings its own overwhelming conflicts.

Then, there is the most extraordinary of plays, Bailegangaire, which encapsulates how, through storytelling, a family comes to terms with and is mobilised by obsessions, loss and grief. By embracing and unravelling, in Tom Murphy’s term, the ‘blood knot’ of family bonds, trauma may be transformed when prompted by admission and by a redeeming laughter.

The most recent phase in Tom Murphy’s career is his on-going commitment to adaptations and new writing; these includeThe Drunkard (2003), The Cherry Orchard (2004), and The Last Days of a Reluctant Tyrant (2009) and original workssuch as The Wake (1997), The House (2000) and The Alice Trilogy (2005).

Of course, theatre is a collaborative art form. In the Abbey Theatre, after an initial early career rejection, Murphy has found a theatrical partner in tune with his vision. The Abbey Theatre has premiered many of his plays and adaptations, under the stewardships of various Artistic Directors, including Hugh Hunt, Joe Dowling, Lelia Doolan, Tomás Mac Anna, Alan Simpson, Garry Hynes, Vincent Dowling, Patrick Mason, Ben Barnes and Fiach MacConghail, to name but a few. The Abbey Theatre’s Murphy retrospective in 2001 is but one brilliant example of that relationship, and this season included a production of Bailegangaire, starring Pauline Flanagan, Derbhle Crotty and Jane Brennan, with Tom Murphy directing his own play.

Last year’s Druid/Murphy season, toured both nationally and internationally with three plays: FamineA Whistle in the Darkand Conversations on a Homecoming. This award winning project played to great acclaim in Galway, Dublin, London and New York and two of these three plays are currently on tour. Garry Hynes has called Tom Murphy a ‘house playwright’, and both the Abbey and Druid Theatres have been so fortunate to have a unique collaborator in Tom Murphy.  And, in both theatres, Murphy has found brilliantly collegial and creative allies, namely an array of directors, designers and actors that have collectively shaped the performances of his work.

Thanks to these theatrical partnerships, audiences have been given privileged access to plays that are dramaturgically complex, that are richly polyvocal, and that blend multiple spaces and simultaneous time frames. There is also Murphy’s often noted love of music, and the inclusion of music is evident right across his body of work.

Tom Murphy’s work inspired not only others of his own generation but also those that followed; playwrights such as Frank McGuinness, Marina Carr, Billy Roche, Enda Walsh and Conor McPherson have acknowledged their substantial indebtedness. In public interviews for print, radio and television and in interviews with graduate researchers and scholars, Tom Murphy has been exceptionally generous and forthright.  Also, three generations of scholars have been inspired to engage with his work, producing Phd theses, books, special journal issues and edited collections dedicated to Tom’s work. The richness and complexity of this body of critical commentary is testament to the regard in which Tom Murphy is held at home and abroad.

Many of the questions that social scientists, political and gender theorists, historians and philosophers have asked are evident in Murphy’s writings; the issues of morality, inequality and justice that all great art complicates are consistently raised by Murphy’s work; and it is also apparent that Murphy’s plays have dramatised many of the mental conundrums and conflictual impulses that cognitive psychology recognises and neuroscience now demonstrates.

Tom Murphy’s great skill is to pare things right down to their essential sounds and gestures, their essential instincts and feelings, their essential conflicts and harmonies. The work is driven by a fundamental grasp of the importance of theatrical vitality and the reach of imagination, thus freeing a performative expressivity that presses towards assertions of resistance, defiance, hope and transformation. It must be said that few individual writing careers survive five decades, and fewer again can sustain a hunger and passion for their art form. Because of Tom’s remarkable creativity, because of his unusual bravery and uncanny virtuosity, and because of his immense dedication to and belief in the magic of the art of theatre, Tom Murphy’s work has not only contributed substantially to the world of  theatre, but he has addressed, articulated, and defined the consciousness of his nation. 

Praehonorabilis Pro-Praeses, totaque Universitas,

Praesento vobis hunc meum filium, quem scio tam moribus quam doctrina habilem et idoneum esse qui recipiatur insigne ulixis; idque tibi fide mea testor ac spondeo, totique Academiae.

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