Ireland
Juno and the Paycock, National TheatreThursday, 17 November 2011![]() “The whole world's in a terrible state of chassis,” says Captain Jack Boyle more than once during Sean O'Casey's great play, set in 1922 and the second of his Dublin trilogy, bookended by The Shadow of a Gunman (1923) and The Plough and the... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Wexford: Wexford Festival Opera's 60th Anniversary SeasonSunday, 13 November 2011![]() I’m within 20 yards of Wexford Opera House when I stop a couple for directions, convinced that my map is some sort of Irish practical joke. Approached down a narrow and frankly rather unpromising side street, from the exterior Wexford Opera House... Read more... |
Halloween Special: Patrick McGrath on Sheridan Le Fanu's horror storiesMonday, 31 October 2011![]() Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, son of a Protestant clergyman and grand-nephew of the playwright Sheridan, was born in Dublin in 1814. He spent part of his boyhood in County Limerick, where from local storytellers he heard legends of fairies and demons.... Read more... |
Fabulous Beast Dance Theatre, Rian, Sadler's WellsTuesday, 25 October 2011![]() Wallets have been emptied by the proliferation of outstanding dance evenings in the past month - Akram Khan’s Desh, Lucinda Childs, the Merce Cunningham farewell - but increase your overdraft, for here is a heart-lifting and ingeniously ingenuous... Read more... |
The Veil, National TheatreWednesday, 05 October 2011![]() Conor McPherson has set his latest play at an interesting point in Irish – and European – history. It is 1822, post-Napoleonic wars, and Ireland is in an economic mess, with impoverished peasants facing the failure of their crops for the second year... Read more... |
The Playboy of the Western World, Old VicWednesday, 28 September 2011![]() It's difficult for modern theatregoers – in or beyond Ireland – to understand the extraordinary furore The Playboy of the Western World caused when it was first performed in 1907 at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin. Protesters, who believed the play was... Read more... |
Q&A Special: Pianist Barry DouglasTuesday, 13 September 2011![]() The Russians have always been particularly picky about the playing of the piano. Chief among the piano gods on the 20th century’s pantheon are Richter, Gilels, Horowitz - and even now names such as Ashkenazy, Kissin, Sokolov still elbow out many of... Read more... |
The GuardWednesday, 17 August 2011![]() Directing and writing his first full-length feature, John Michael McDonagh fully exploits the wild and windswept landscapes of Connemara, and similarly extracts maximum value from his leading man, Brendan Gleeson. Perhaps he picked up tips from his... Read more... |
Lay Me Down Softly, Tricycle TheatreTuesday, 12 July 2011![]() Until quite recently, plays about sport were as rare as British Wimbledon winners. Then, over the past couple of years, came a whole slew of plays about various sports, led by punchy stories about boxing, from Roy Williams’s Sucker Punch to Bryony... Read more... |
Maverick Sabre, Jazz CaféFriday, 10 June 2011![]() Until a few weeks ago, I’d never heard of Maverick Sabre. Then I saw his weird potato-face looks and heard his utterly distinctive voice on Later... With Jools Holland, and was intrigued; thus I found myself last night at the Jazz Café in a sold-out... Read more... |
Exploring Tom Crean, Antarctic HeroTuesday, 24 May 2011![]() The tiny Kussuluk airport, halfway up the jagged eastern coast of Greenland, caters mostly for intrepid climbers. Like all airports it sells mementoes and knick-knacks that nobody needs, including in this case a set of classic polar pipes. No matter... Read more... |
Villagers, Liquid Room, EdinburghMonday, 23 May 2011![]() Last week Villager-in-Chief Conor J O’Brien was awarded an Ivor Novello award (Best Song Musically and Lyrically, in case you’re curious) for the title track of his Mercury Prize-nominated debut album Becoming a Jackal. Several questions arise from... Read more... |
![Subscribe to Ireland](https://theartsdesk.com/misc/feed.png)