Three Irish Writers
Screened online 10 - 14 November 2020 in collaboration with Cúirt International Festival
First shown in 1991, Arena’s Three Irish Writers is a unique look at the social history of Dublin and three of its most infamous writers. A classic from the BBC archive, it offers a rare glimpse of an era long gone, when culture was part of the everyday and the everyday an intrinsic part of culture.
Cúirt International Festival of Literature at Galway Arts Centre screened this memorable Arena film, produced by Kay Meynell and Rosemary Wilton. Commenting on the film’s portrait of three brilliant writers and the times they lived in are four contemporary Irish authors: Jaki McCarrick, Paul McVeigh, Ciara Ní É and Jessica Traynor, who you can still watch here. Enjoy new poems inspired by the film from Belfast-Jamaican poet Raquel McKee and Irish-Indian British poet John Siddique, and learn how to start your own personal writing journey with a masterclass from acclaimed author Gabriel Gbadamosi.
YOUR LOCAL ARENA: RESPONDING TO Three Irish Writers
Watch acclaimed poet and dramaturg Jessica Traynor, award-winning playwright and author Jaki McCarrick, Polari First Novel winner Paul McVeigh and Ciara Ní É, spoken word artist, activist and broadcaster, respond to the Arena film.
INSPIRED BY ARENA’S Three Irish Writers: New Poetry by Raquel McKee and John Siddique
Listen to and read specially commissioned poems inspired by the Three Irish Writers film from two poets, Raquel McKee and John Siddique, who are linked to Ireland through geography and history.
Raquel McKee
‘...Sometimes Learn...’
John Siddique
‘It All Takes Place in the Whole’
WRITING YOUR MEMOIR: A Masterclass from Gabriel Gbadamosi
Taking Arena’s Three Irish Writers as a starting point, explore how you can begin to craft your own memoir or life writing with award-winning novelist, playwright and poet Gabriel Gbadamosi.
Listen to Lucy Hannah in conversation with Anthony Wall about the making of Three Irish Writers.
Listen to Lucy Hannah in conversation with Sasha de Buyl, Director of Cúirt International Festival of Literature.
Sasha de Buyl is the Director of Cúirt International Festival of Literature in Galway. She worked for over ten years as a programmer and literature development professional in Scotland. Prior to Cúirt, she managed Scottish Books International, and has held roles with StAnza International Poetry Festival, Edinburgh International Book Festival, Scottish Book Trust and Aye Write Book Festival. She was part of the inaugural team working on Book Week Scotland, and then joined the Literature team at Creative Scotland, where she worked on national and international literature development.
Kenneth Tynan, the great English theatre critic, observed when reviewing Brendan Behan’s memoir Borstal Boy ‘The English hoard word like misers, the Irish spend them like sailors.’ National stereotyping maybe, but the proposition is undeniably demonstrated in full measure by the protagonists of Three Irish Writers. Flann O’Brien, Patrick Kavanagh and Brendan Behan were all exponents of a particular blend of alcohol and eloquence.
Theirs was an Ireland emerging from literally centuries of oppression by the British. In 1922, Ireland achieved its independence, but as late as 1949 links remained with the Commonwealth. Ireland was impoverished in the 50s but the three writers were heirs to one very rich tradition — the Irish contribution to English Literature, as great, if not greater, than that of the English themselves. Congreve, Swift, Sheridan, Wilde, Yeats, Shaw … the list goes on and on.
However, all those literary figures were from the patrician, protestant class. The three writers featured on Arena were of an altogether different cut. Behan was a working-class Dubliner with deep republican convictions; Kavanagh was a smallholding farmer in County Monaghan; and O’Brien, real name Brian O’Nolan, was a reluctant (to say the least) civil servant.
They were all devotees of James Joyce, the first great published Irish writer born and raised a Catholic. Joyce was not enamoured of religion, but anyone who has read his Portrait of the Artist As A Young Man will see that a hard-line Catholic upbringing ran through his bones. The film was the brainchild of Anthony Cronin, cultural adviser to the former Taoiseach Charles Haughey. A poet himself and friend and contemporary of all three writers, Cronin contended that they constituted a new, culturally Catholic, post–Joycean literary movement.
Behan, O’Brien and Kavanagh inhabited a kind of impecunious bohemia in Dublin in the 1950s. Theirs was a long way from the bohemia running concurrently on the Left Bank in Paris or the turbo-charged world of the Beats in the USA. It was fuelled by words, song and stout; and their work was as universal and magical as that of Albert Camus or Jack Kerouac.
Directors Kate Meynell and Rosemary Wilton assembled a fabulous array of witnesses, from O’Brien’s coolly authoritative colleagues on The Irish Times to the working-class locals on Dublin’s Baggot Street, who recalled the fathomless eccentricity of Kavanagh. Kavanagh and O’Brien remained in Ireland; Behan, like so many before him, left for the UK and then New York. He became a star on both sides of the Atlantic, a reliable source for the media of outrage and mischief, always made forgivable by his effortless wit.
Central to the film is the special richesse of the film archive of Ireland’s state broadcaster RTE. There’s Behan lacerating Ireland’s leading TV interviewer, a po-faced Eamonn Andrews; O’Brien denouncing Saint Augustine from the fastness of the Martello Tower in Joyce’s Ulysses; Kavanagh, in his fields in Monaghan, calmly cradling a live kingfisher in the palm of his hand.
They died within three years of each other, all in Dublin – Behan in 1964, O’Brien ’66, Kavanagh ’67, so essentially of their time – but as Behan would say, ‘Death, where is thy sting a ling a ling?’
Their legend lives on.
Anthony Wall
21 October 2020
Biographies
Responding to the film
Jaki McCarrick is an award-winning writer of plays, poetry and fiction. Her play Leopoldville won the 2010 Papatango Prize for New Writing, and her play Belfast Girls, developed at the National Theatre Studio in London, was shortlisted for the 2012 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize and the 2014 BBC Tony Doyle Award. It premiered in the USA in Chicago in 2015 to much critical acclaim and has since been staged many times internationally. Her play The Naturalists premiered in New York in 2018. Jaki's plays are published by Samuel French, Routledge and Aurora Metro. Her short story collection The Scattering (Seren Books) was shortlisted for the 2014 Edge Hill Prize. The collection includes her story ‘The Visit’ which won the Wasafiri Prize for Short Fiction. Longlisted in 2014 for the inaugural Irish Fiction Laureate, Jaki is currently editing her second collection of short stories and her first novel, The bright, bright world.
Paul McVeigh’s debut novel, The Good Son, won The Polari First Novel Prize and The McCrea Literary Award, and was shortlisted for many others including the Prix du Roman Cezam in France. Paul's short stories have been on Sky Arts, read on BBC Radio 3, 4 & 5 and appeared in Faber’s Being Various: New Irish Short Stories, The Art of The Glimpse and Common People: An Anthology of Working Class Writers. He co-edited the Belfast Stories Anthology and The 32: An Anthology of Irish Working Class Writers which included new work by Kevin Barry, Roddy Doyle and Lisa McInerney. He is associate director of Word Factory, ‘the UK's national organisation for excellence in the short story’ (The Guardian) and co-founded London Short Story Festival. Paul reviews and interviews authors, such as Booker winners Anna Burns and George Saunders, for The Irish Times. His work has been translated into seven languages.
Ciara Ní É is a spoken word artist, activist and broadcaster who writes and performs bilingually. She is DCU’s Writer in Residence 2020, and an Irish Writers Centre ambassador. Ciara is the founder of REIC, a monthly multilingual spoken word event. She has performed across Ireland and internationally in New York, London, Brussels and Sweden. Her work has been published in a variety of journals including Icarus and Comhar and she is a recipient of the Cill Rialaig Residency through Listowel Writers’ Week. She is a cofounder of LGBTQ+ arts collective Aerach.Aiteach.Gaelach, and her first project with the group was selected for The Abbey Theatre’s 5x5 2020. Her first collection is forthcoming.
Jessica Traynor is a poet, dramaturg and creative writing teacher. Her debut collection, Liffey Swim (Dedalus Press, 2014), was shortlisted for the Strong/Shine Award. Her second collection, The Quick, was a 2019 Irish Times poetry choice. Awards include the Hennessy New Writer of the Year Award and the Ireland Chair of Poetry Bursary. In 2019, with actor Stephen Rea, she co-edited Correspondences: an anthology to call for an end to direct provision, which was a best-seller, raising funds for the Movement of Asylum Seekers in Ireland. She is Poet in Residence at the Yeats Society, Sligo, and a Creative Fellow of UCD.
Commissioned poets
A poet, actor, cultural training facilitator and storyteller, Raquel McKee has been living on the island of Ireland for nearly two decades. She uses poetry to interrogate the status quo and to push boundaries of perception. In 2019 Raquel was commissioned by the African and Caribbean Support Organisation Northern Ireland to write for the National Lottery Heritage Funded Links and Legacy 400 project; its showcase event, Gala Nia, was held in Titanic Building. Her cultural workshops (Legal Island; Herbert Smith Freehills and others) incorporate her poetry as stimulus or exposition. Raquel has performed at numerous Festivals and at the Poetry Ireland Cross Border Transitions showcase amongst others. Samples of her work can be found in Community Arts Partnership Monthly (July 2020), Four x Four (Issue 28), The Corridor literary publication – X Borders Issue, Writing Home anthology (Dedalus Press) and Her Other Language, as well as on her YouTube Channel.
Sacred teacher and writer John Siddique gently draws on his Irish and Indian heritage to straddle the complications of today’s society. He has dedicated his life to honouring the authentic in our human experience. He is the author of six books ranging though poetry, memoir and non-fiction, with two new books to be published in 2021. His meditations and teachings are listened to by millions of people around the world. His writings have appeared in the Guardian, Granta, Poetry Review and on BBC Radio 3 & 4. Siddique is the former British Council Writer-in-Residence at California State University. He is an Honorary Fellow at Leicester University, and currently serves on the editorial board of WritersMosaic for The Royal Literary Fund. The Times of India calls him ‘Rebellious by nature, pure at heart’ and Scottish Makar Jackie Kay speaks of Siddique's writing as being ‘a brilliant balancing act’. www.authenticliving.life
Masterclass
Gabriel Gbadamosi is an Irish and Nigerian poet, playwright and critic. His London novel Vauxhall (Telegram, 2013) won the Tibor Jones Pageturner Prize and Best International Novel at the Sharjah Book Fair. He was the AHRC Creative and Performing Arts Fellow at the Pinter Centre, Goldsmiths University in British, European and African performance; a Judith E. Wilson Fellow for creative writing at Cambridge University; and Writer in Residence at the Manchester Royal Exchange Theatre. His plays include Stop and Search (Arcola Theatre), Eshu’s Faust (Jesus College, Cambridge), Hotel Orpheu (Schaubühne, Berlin), Shango (DNA, Amsterdam); and, for radio, The Long, Hot Summer of ’76 (BBC Radio 3), which won the first Richard Imison Award. He presented BBC Radio 3’s flagship arts and ideas programme Night Waves and is currently the founding editor of WritersMosaic for black, Asian and minority ethnic writers at the Royal Literary Fund. www.gabrielgbadamosi.com