Difference between revisions of "The Patrick Pearse Motel (1975)"
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
− | + | Act I The living room of Dermod and Grainne Gibbon in Foxrock - a suburb in vodka and bitter lemon belt. a winter's evening. | |
+ | |||
+ | Act II Scene 1 The Motel. Fifteen minutes later. Scene 2 The same. A few minutes later. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Time - the present. | ||
== Cast == | == Cast == | ||
Line 16: | Line 20: | ||
*Dermod Gibbon - [[John Lyne]] | *Dermod Gibbon - [[John Lyne]] | ||
− | * | + | *Grainne Gibbon - [[Ruth Shettle]] |
*Fintan Kinnore - [[Dennis Packham]] | *Fintan Kinnore - [[Dennis Packham]] | ||
*Niamh Kinnore - [[Pam Lyne]] | *Niamh Kinnore - [[Pam Lyne]] | ||
Line 25: | Line 29: | ||
== Crew == | == Crew == | ||
− | *Stage Manager - [[ | + | * Stage Manager - [[Don North]] |
− | *Lighting Design - [[ | + | * Assisted by - [[John Kennedy]], [[John Kidd]], [[Bob Griggs]], [[Lesley Morris]], [[Tony Rowland]], [[Glen Vaal]], [[Marion Murphy]], [[Cheryl Webb]], [[Val White]] |
− | *Lighting Operator - [[ | + | * Set Designer - [[Gerald Smith]] |
+ | * Set Construction - [[Gerald Smith]], [[Sid Marks]] | ||
+ | * Sound Recording - [[Brian Playford]] | ||
+ | * Sound Operator - [[Brian Playford]] | ||
+ | * Lighting Design - [[Colin Stokes]] | ||
+ | * Lighting Operator - [[Colin Stokes]] Assisted by [[Tony Rapson]] | ||
+ | * Wardrobe - [[Yvonne Rowland]] | ||
+ | * FOH Manager - [[Frank Howcutt]] | ||
+ | * Box Office Manager - [[Helen Boutall]] | ||
== Reviews == | == Reviews == | ||
− | " | + | "WE WERE NOT AMUSED" |
− | After the last production, I had high hopes for their latest offering. So maybe it was my fault that I | + | After the last production, I had high hopes for their latest offering. So maybe it was my fault that I came away disappointed - not at the acting but at the play. |
The plot was shallow, the jokes predictable and the language a little bit strong when it needn't have been. | The plot was shallow, the jokes predictable and the language a little bit strong when it needn't have been. | ||
Line 42: | Line 54: | ||
(Uncredited newspaper.) | (Uncredited newspaper.) | ||
+ | |||
+ | "BED, BEAUTY AND BLARNEY" | ||
+ | |||
+ | Perhaps it is only when the Irish laugh at themselves that we feel it right to laugh with them. And there is no contemporary Irish playwright with whom we laugh more heartily than Hugh Leonard. | ||
+ | |||
+ | His humour is deadly but quite without malice. He chides his people, like a fond but exasperated parent, for their deep religious conservatism and their obsessive reverence for national heroes. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Both themes are well to the fore in "The Patrick Pearse Motel", which is concerned with the desperately serious business of adultery in a land ruled by saints and martyrs. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The Christian names Demod, Grainne, Fintan, Niahm - are Hiberian to the core. The humour leaps out at us with unexpected variants of old clichés. "The night is still a pup!" exclaims Grainne, as she gleefully prepares for her first-ever infidelity. The victim - he has to be a victim: it is one of the rules of Irishness - is a TV personality who has only to whistle for a bevy of beauties to come running. | ||
+ | |||
+ | But Mr Leonard, for all his rare qualities, is hardly a master of farce; and farce is the chosen convention of this play. The dashes in and out of bedrooms (all named after Irish heroes) are in the end self-defeating, a fact which the producer Leslie Lidyard, for all his careful plotting, did not mange to conceal. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I commend the production for its pace and its exuberant sense of fun, but it remains even though in the best sense, an imitation. The accents are commendable, but somehow not quite right. The nearest to authenticity is Dennis Packham's Fintan Kinnore, a riotously uxorious businessman moved to righteous anger when it seems his wife is two-timing him. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Pam Lyne, as his wife Niahm, has a nice feeling for the gentle revolt of the submissive cow-woman she is supposed to be, and Ruth Shettle plays her friend Grainne with a cool determination masking the underlying futility of her resolve to become at last a sinful woman, like her English cousins over the water. It won't work but hard luck all the same. | ||
+ | |||
+ | John Lyne leaves us in no doubt as to why she bothers, presenting as he does a husband whose sacred substance is money. Brian Scoltock produces some amusing foolery, while lacking the higher voltage of a TV idol. Hazel Edwards plays a sex-obsessed English girl with single-minded resolve, and Charles Cheetham as an entrancing old derelict washed up from the troubles of '16. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Donald Madgwick, in The Croydon Advertiser. | ||
== Gallery == | == Gallery == | ||
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− | [[Category:Productions]] | + | [[Category:Productions|Patrick Pearse Motel (1975), The]] |
− | [[Category:Bell Theatre Productions]] | + | [[Category:Bell Theatre Productions|Patrick Pearse Motel (1975), The]] |
Latest revision as of 22:46, 1 September 2010
by Hugh Leonard
Directed by Leslie Lidyard
Performances: Sun 4th - Sat 10th May 1975, Theatre
Contents
Introduction
Act I The living room of Dermod and Grainne Gibbon in Foxrock - a suburb in vodka and bitter lemon belt. a winter's evening.
Act II Scene 1 The Motel. Fifteen minutes later. Scene 2 The same. A few minutes later.
Time - the present.
Cast
- Dermod Gibbon - John Lyne
- Grainne Gibbon - Ruth Shettle
- Fintan Kinnore - Dennis Packham
- Niamh Kinnore - Pam Lyne
- James Usheen - Brian Scoltock
- Miss Manning - Hazel Edwards
- Hoolihan - Charles Cheetham
Crew
- Stage Manager - Don North
- Assisted by - John Kennedy, John Kidd, Bob Griggs, Lesley Morris, Tony Rowland, Glen Vaal, Marion Murphy, Cheryl Webb, Val White
- Set Designer - Gerald Smith
- Set Construction - Gerald Smith, Sid Marks
- Sound Recording - Brian Playford
- Sound Operator - Brian Playford
- Lighting Design - Colin Stokes
- Lighting Operator - Colin Stokes Assisted by Tony Rapson
- Wardrobe - Yvonne Rowland
- FOH Manager - Frank Howcutt
- Box Office Manager - Helen Boutall
Reviews
"WE WERE NOT AMUSED"
After the last production, I had high hopes for their latest offering. So maybe it was my fault that I came away disappointed - not at the acting but at the play.
The plot was shallow, the jokes predictable and the language a little bit strong when it needn't have been.
All farces risk becoming ridiculous and unfunny. This one has those misfortunes.
The author, Hugh Leonard, has been described as the latest in a line of Irish playwrights which runs Sheridan, Wilde, Shaw, O'Casey.
(Uncredited newspaper.)
"BED, BEAUTY AND BLARNEY"
Perhaps it is only when the Irish laugh at themselves that we feel it right to laugh with them. And there is no contemporary Irish playwright with whom we laugh more heartily than Hugh Leonard.
His humour is deadly but quite without malice. He chides his people, like a fond but exasperated parent, for their deep religious conservatism and their obsessive reverence for national heroes.
Both themes are well to the fore in "The Patrick Pearse Motel", which is concerned with the desperately serious business of adultery in a land ruled by saints and martyrs.
The Christian names Demod, Grainne, Fintan, Niahm - are Hiberian to the core. The humour leaps out at us with unexpected variants of old clichés. "The night is still a pup!" exclaims Grainne, as she gleefully prepares for her first-ever infidelity. The victim - he has to be a victim: it is one of the rules of Irishness - is a TV personality who has only to whistle for a bevy of beauties to come running.
But Mr Leonard, for all his rare qualities, is hardly a master of farce; and farce is the chosen convention of this play. The dashes in and out of bedrooms (all named after Irish heroes) are in the end self-defeating, a fact which the producer Leslie Lidyard, for all his careful plotting, did not mange to conceal.
I commend the production for its pace and its exuberant sense of fun, but it remains even though in the best sense, an imitation. The accents are commendable, but somehow not quite right. The nearest to authenticity is Dennis Packham's Fintan Kinnore, a riotously uxorious businessman moved to righteous anger when it seems his wife is two-timing him.
Pam Lyne, as his wife Niahm, has a nice feeling for the gentle revolt of the submissive cow-woman she is supposed to be, and Ruth Shettle plays her friend Grainne with a cool determination masking the underlying futility of her resolve to become at last a sinful woman, like her English cousins over the water. It won't work but hard luck all the same.
John Lyne leaves us in no doubt as to why she bothers, presenting as he does a husband whose sacred substance is money. Brian Scoltock produces some amusing foolery, while lacking the higher voltage of a TV idol. Hazel Edwards plays a sex-obsessed English girl with single-minded resolve, and Charles Cheetham as an entrancing old derelict washed up from the troubles of '16.
Donald Madgwick, in The Croydon Advertiser.
Gallery
Reminiscences and Anecdotes
Members are encouraged to write about their experiences of working on or seeing this production. Please leave your name. Anonymous entries may be deleted.
See Also
Have there been other SLTC/SLT productions of this play? Link to them here.
Or add anything that is related within this site. The author's page for instance or other plays with a similar theme.
References
<references/>