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Synge and the Making of Modern Irish Drama Examination of Synge's journey to becoming a national playwright and his legacy to contemporary Irish dramatists.

Synge and the Making of Modern Irish Drama

Publication Date 21st, January, 2013

ISBN 978-1-904505-64-8

Cost €20.00

In Synge and the Making of Modern Irish Drama, Anthony Roche draws on twenty-five years of engagement with Synge's plays to present ten chapters on the unfolding of a double narrative. The first argues the extent and ways in which John Millington Synge self-consciously undertook to become the founding playwright of an Irish national theatre. Synge's rapid development as a playwright is examined in relation to Yeats and Joyce. His love affair with Abbey Theatre actress Máire O'Neill (Molly Allgood) is treated in depth, both in terms of their troubled life together and the vibrant roles he wrote for her. The book's second narrative moves from Synge's historical time to the present day, to consider what subsequent Irish playwrights have made of his dramatic legacy. Samuel Beckett, asked by his biographer to name the dramatists whose plays had meant the most to him, uttered only the name of Synge in reply. This study also traces in illuminating detail the impact of Synge's revolutionary plays on a range of contemporary playwrights: Brian Friel, Stewart Parker, Marina Carr and Martin McDonagh, to examine how this influence and recent productions of Synge's work have enabled him to remain our contemporary. It will be of considerable interest to students of Irish drama both in Ireland and worldwide.

 

 

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Reviews

Synge and the Making of Modern Irish Drama

Reviewed by : Joseph O'Connor

"(Synge's) work is appreciated, cherished, even loved, and as long as we have scholars of Tony Roche's wisdom and insight to reveal its new facets to us, it will continue to haunt and beguile".

 

About the Author(s)

Anthony Roche

ANTHONY ROCHE is an Associate Professor in the School of English, Drama and Film at University College Dublin. He is the author of the pioneering Contemporary Irish Drama (Second Edition, 2009) and the acclaimed Brian Friel: Theatre and Politics (2011). He was the director of the Synge Summer School in Rathdrum, Co. Wicklow, from 2005 to 2007.

 

Table of Contents

There are no Table of Contents for this publication at present.

 

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