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Synopsis
Written
in French in the 1950s, Rough for Theatre I features a blind man ('A') and a physically disabled
man ('B') who meet by chance and consider the possibility of joining
forces to unite sight and mobility in the interests of survival.
Each once had a woman and now has no one to help him. B is the pragmatist
while A keeps asking questions. B is reticent, never seeming to
have noticed these things. B becomes cranky, going as far as to
strike A, but being crippled he also needs him. The play ends in
uneasiness and latent violence.
'...
It seems to me sometimes the earth must have got stuck, one sunless
day, in the heart of winter, in the grey of evening ...'
'A', Rough for Theatre I
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Director
Dublin-born
Kieron J Walsh's first
film was his graduation film Goodbye Piccadilly, which was awarded three Fuji film scholarships.
He then won a British Council scholarship to study film at the Royal
College of Art, where he won numerous international prizes for his
graduation film Bossanova Blues, including the Golden Square
award for Best Graduation Film and a gold plaque at the Chicago
Film Festival. Kieron has directed films for Working Title and the
BBC and a half-hour drama written by Roddy Doyle for RTÉ.
He also directed three episodes of the popular A
Young Person's Guide to Becoming a Rock Star. His first feature
film was the highly acclaimed When Brendan Met Trudy, written by Roddy
Doyle.
'I
was quite daunted at the prospect of filming one of the plays, but
when I read Rough for Theatre
I, I immediately saw the cinematic possibilities. It reminded
me a little of Laurel and Hardy, so I shot it on location
"Street corner: day" in black and white.'
Kieron Walsh
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Cast
David
Kelly ('A') was trained at the renowned Abbey Theatre School,
Dublin. He regularly performed in plays by Sean O'Casey, John Millington
Synge, Tom Murphy, W B Yeats and Brian Friel. In 1954 he performed
in the world's première of Brendan Behan's The
Quare Fella. More recent theatre work includes the American
tour of Synge's Playboy of the Western World, which won him a nomination in Washington
for the Helen Hayes Award. His film work includes Mike Newell's
Into the West and Jack Gold's Philadelphia Here I Come; his performance
in the highly acclaimed Waking
Ned won him a Golden Satellite Award for Best Actor and a Best
Supporting Actor nomination in the Screen Actors' Guild Awards.
Milo
O'Shea ('B') began his career as a boy actor in his native Dublin
and later became a regular leading actor and revue artist at the
Gate Theatre. His London debut was opposite Dame Sybil Thorndike
in Treasure Hunt, directed
by Sir John Gielgud. His highly successful Broadway career saw him
perform in Dear World, A Touch of Poet and Staircase, which earned him his first nomination
for a Tony Award. His second nomination was for his performance
in Mass Appeal, which also earned him a Drama
League Award and the Outer Critics' Circle Award. Milo's numerous
films include Ulysses,
Romeo and Juliet, Barbarella,
The Butcher Boy and The Verdict.
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