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Irish America magazine - Oct/Nov '08 issue: The Legacy of the San Patricios Lives On , Stars of the South, The Legal 100, Roots: The Mighty Mahers, All Hail The Humble Spud! , Music: Still Fiddlin’ Away , The Real Bill , The Battle over Ulysses, Broadway's Irish Colleen

 
Stephen Rea
He returns to the Abbey stage in a play written for him by Sam Shepard - premiere next June.
 
Irish America's First Family
Before the Kennedys of Boston, there were the Carrolls of Maryland.
 
Clan Harrington
The Barony of Kinalmeaky has one of the highest concentrations of the name.
 
 
 
 
Brendan Opens in Boston

Brendan, a new work by Irish-born playwright Ronan Noone, is being premiered by Boston University’s renowned Huntington Theatre this fall.

The play explores the humorous and touching experiences of a recent Irish immigrant as he battles homesickness while looking for love and meaning in his adopted country. It runs from October 12-November 11 at the Boston Center for the Arts in the South End.

Noone was born in Newry, County Down in 1970. He moved to the US in 1994 and settled on Martha’s Vineyard, where he painted houses and began to write.

He submitted his first play, The Lepers of Baile Baiste, to Boston University’s MFA program, where it caught the attention of Nobel Laureate playwright Derek Walcott, who invited him to join the writing program. Lepers won the National Playwriting Award, and was produced at the Kennedy Center in Washington.

His second play, The Blowin, was produced by Gabriel Byrne at the Irish Arts Center in New York in 2005 and won the coveted Elliot Norton Award in Boston.

Another of Noone’s one-man plays, The Atheist, was premiered by Huntington Theatre this past September, starring Campbell Scott and directed by Justin Waldman.

During the run of Brendan, the Huntington Theatre has slated two events to complement the play.

On Saturday, October 27, Brendan Cronin, Irish-born master chef and culinary arts

professor at Endicott College, presents a cooking course at the Boston Center for Adult Education entitled Comfort Food and Plays of Ireland. The lecture and cooking demonstration is followed by the afternoon matinee.

On Sunday, November 4, Harvard scholar Joyce Flynn, an authority on Irish-American theatre, delivers a lecture at Huntington’s Humanities Forum that examines Brendan in the context of drama by the Irish Diaspora. The lecture follows the matinee.

– By Michael P. Quinlin

For more details, visit www.irishmassachusetts.com/ events-Oct07.htm or www.huntingtontheatre.org.

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
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