Theatre
Theatre reviews, interviews and features from Ireland and elsewhere
The demise of touring since Anew McMaster
In March 1951, or perhaps it was 1952, Limerick’s cinemas all went on strike. There was a travelling theatre company going about Ireland at the time, doing Shakespeare and the odd murder mystery, and at its head was an aging, eccentric aristocrat of the theatre, the actor-manager Anew McMaster, often known simply as Mac. For… read more +
From Michael Collins to pastiche Charlie
A great, but tragic, Irish leader struggles with his fate. He is the foremost Irishman of his day, though he divides the country. He is confronted by treachery, and distracted by beautiful women. And as chaos threatens to consume his world, he replies… with a song. Plays dealing with Irish politicians are rare, and Irish… read more +
Interviewing Enda Walsh
“I’ve no idea what this means,” said Enda Walsh to his cast. “Why the fuck did he write that?” Walsh, a playwright, was trying his hand at directing. It wasn’t going well. The script he was directing was particularly obtuse. “Why is he clouding this all up?” Walsh asked, incredulous. “Surely, he has to explain… read more +
Irish neutrality during WWII: on trial, on stage
After the Night of Broken Glass in Germany, in November 1938, the Department of Foreign Affairs sought a report from our man in Berlin. Almost 100 Jews had been murdered in the Kristallnacht pogrom, and thousands of businesses ransacked. The tiny Berlin legation was headed by Charles Bewley. His report back made no mention of… read more +
Synge and his lover’s song
It was any girl’s dream: young Molly Allgood, just 19 years old, an assistant at Switzer’s drapery, was about to make her debut on the Abbey stage. As she waited nervously in the wings, the stage manager called out, “beginners please”. And Molly dissolved in tears. It was the conventional call for the actors to… read more +
The actress, the condom and the dunken writer
In 1957, at the age of 32, Anna Manahan found herself at the centre of one of the greatest controversies in Irish theatre history when she didn’t drop a condom on stage. The alleged condom was in fact an envelope; the script she was playing, Tennessee Williams’s ‘The Rose Tattoo’, called for a condom to… read more +
How High School Musical took over the world
Steve Fickinger was sitting in his office on 42nd Street when he got a call from someone at the Disney Channel “We’ve got a new film coming up,” said the colleague. “We thought you might like to do a stage version of it.” “Send it over,” said Steve Fickinger. Fickinger works for Disney’s theatrical group…. read more +
For Prospect Magazine: Beckett begins again
Is the work of Ireland’s greatest dramatist being ossified by reverence? Colin Murphy watches three productions on tour and asks Beckett’s first British publisher what the future holds, in the current issue of Prospect. See also ‘Back on the road in rural Ireland’ in the March issue of Le Monde Diplo: an interview with Henry… read more +
Review: High School Musical
Review by Colin, Aifric & Maeve About 2,500 years ago, in Ancient Greece, a lone actor stepped out of the chorus and spoke back to them, and invented modern theatre. After about 2,400 years, people were getting bored of that, and one day an actor found himself humming on stage. The chorus hummed back, and… read more +
‘Endgame’ in the Wicklow Mountains
Henry Woolf is the 79-year-old playing Clov in the Godot Company’s ‘Endgame’. I spoke to him about his life in theatre, which started with a tour in 1957 with Anew McMaster’s legendary travelling theatre company. henry-woolf Interview broadcast as a podcast on Le Monde Diplo to accompany the print article.