Martin McDonagh

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Martin McDonagh (born 26 March 1970) is a contemporary Irish playwright and film director.

Contents

[edit] Life

McDonagh was born in Camberwell, London, to Irish parents. His mother (originally from Killeenduff, Easky, County Sligo) and his father (originally from Lettermullen, Connemara, County Galway) later moved back to Galway, leaving Martin and his brother (screenwriter John Michael McDonagh) in London, where Martin began collecting unemployment benefits at age 16.

During visits to Galway in the summers, McDonagh became acquainted with the dialect of English spoken in western Ireland, which he would later put to work in his plays. His ironic combination of coarse country language, primal symbolism and black humour represents a peculiar fusion of the work of John Millington Synge with the modern drama of Harold Pinter, David Mamet and British television comedy.

He has been awarded Critics' Circle Theatre Awards for Most Promising Playwright in 1996.

His dramatic corpus to date incorporates two dark comedic trilogies, The Leenane Trilogy (The Beauty Queen of Leenane, A Skull in Connemara, The Lonesome West) and The Aran Islands Trilogy (The Cripple of Inishmaan, The Lieutenant of Inishmore, The Banshees of Inisheer), and the dark fantasy, The Pillowman, as well as two prize-winning radio plays, including 'The Tale of the Wolf and the Woodcutter'[1].

In March 2006 he won an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film for Six Shooter, a film he wrote and directed.

In January 2008 his first feature film In Bruges premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Subsequent to its festival premiere, In Bruges was released in theaters in February 2008 by Focus Features.

[edit] Controversy

But McDonagh has his critics - especially within Ireland - who view his work with suspicion. His English birth and London childhood have caused many to question his credentials, validity and sincerity regarding Irish life. Many Irish scholars feel that his work is in fact stage Irish. A review by Elizabeth O'Neill for RTÉ said :"A modern day Synge or an English chancer? Martin McDonagh's plays have been courting controversy since The Beauty Queen of Leenane took the world stage by storm in 1996. Audiences have been divided roughly into two camps; those who think he's captured the black humour and zeitgeist of a postmodern rural Ireland, and those who see him as making a mockery of Ireland and the Irish by lampooning that caricature of old, the 'stage-Irish' fool."[2]

[edit] The Leenane Trilogy

The story of the dysfunctional relationship between a spinster and her domineering mother, during the course of which the former faces her last chance at love, and the latter faces a rather grim end. Nominated for Tony Award for Best Play in 1998.

  • A Skull in Connemara (1997)

A Connemara man has the job of smashing the skeletons in old graves, and his newest customer is the wife he killed years before, which may or may not have been accidental.

An Erinization of Sam Shepard's True West, in which two brothers bicker in the aftermath of the supposedly accidental fatal shooting of their father. Nominated for Tony Award for Best Play in 1999.

[edit] The Aran Islands Trilogy

A crippled teenager schemes to get a part in Man of Aran. Dark comedy ensues.

The insane leader of an IRA splinter group has just found out his best friend has been killed. The best friend is a cat... hilarity and/or violence ensues. Nominated for Tony Award for Best Play in 2006.

  • The Banshees of Inisheer

The finale of the Aran Islands trilogy. (unproduced and unpublished)

[edit] Other Plays

A writer is interrogated after several of his gruesome stories appear to be the inspiration in a number of local children's murder. Awarded Laurence Olivier Award for Best new play in 2004 and nominated for Tony Award for Best Play in 2005.

[edit] Films

In 2006, Martin McDonagh won an Oscar for his short film Six Shooter.

Six Shooter, which is the playwright's first move into film, features Brendan Gleeson, Ruaidhri Conroy, David Wilmot and Aisling O'Sullivan. The black comedy follows Gleeson as he makes a sad train journey home, just hours after his wife's death, but on the trip he encounters a strange and possibly psychotic young man.

The short film was shot on location in Wicklow, Waterford and Rosslare.

In Bruges - After winning his Oscar for Six Shooter, McDonagh entered into an agreement with Focus Features to direct a feature-length film from his screenplay In Bruges, about two hit men who hide out in Bruges after a job gone wrong. Colin Farrell, Ralph Fiennes, and Brendan Gleeson star in the film, released in the USA in 2008. The film was also the Opening Night film for the 2008 Sundance Festival and the Jameson Dublin International Film Festival.

[edit] Awards

[edit] Tony Award for Best Play

[edit] Academy Award for Live Action Short Film

[edit] Critics' Circle Theatre Awards - Most Promising Playwright

[edit] Laurence Olivier Awards - Best New Play

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Tale of the Wolf and the Woodcutter
  2. ^ RTÉ.ie Entertainment: The Lieutenant Of Inishmore

[edit] External links