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Thomas Kilroy
Thomas Kilroy
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Thomas F. Kilroy (23 September 1934 – 7 December 2023) was an Irish playwright and novelist.[1]

Biography

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Thomas F. Kilroy was born in Callan, County Kilkenny.[2] He attended St Kieran's College and played hurling for the school team, captaining the senior team in 1952.[3] He studied at University College Dublin.[citation needed] In his early career he was play editor at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin. In the 1980s, he sat on the board of Field Day Theatre Company, founded by Brian Friel and Stephen Rea in 1980, and was Director of its touring company.

In 1978, Kilroy was appointed Professor of English at University College Galway,[4] a post from which he resigned in 1989 to concentrate on writing.

Kilroy lived in County Mayo and was a member of the Irish Academy of Letters, the Royal Society of Literature, and Aosdána.

The Thomas Kilroy Collection, his archive, was deposited at Galway University's James Hardiman Library; Kilroy addressed the launch event in March 2011, which was attended by, amongst others, Brian Friel and the future President of Ireland Michael D. Higgins.[5]

Kilroy died on 7 December 2023, at the age of 89.[6]

Plays

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  • The Death and Resurrection of Mr Roche, The Dublin Theatre Festival, 1968. Published by Faber & Faber, Grove Press, 1968;
  • The O'Neill, The Peacock Theatre, Dublin, 1969. Published by The Gallery Press, Oldcastle, Co Meath, 1995;
  • Talbot's Box, The Peacock, 1973. Published by The Gallery Press/Delaware, Proscenium Press, 1979;
  • Sex and Shakespheare, The Abbey, 1976. Revised edition published by The Gallery Press, 1998;
  • Double Cross, Field Day Theatre Company, 1986. Published by Faber & Faber, 1986. Translated into French as Double jeu by Alexandra Poulain, 1996;
  • The Madame MacAdam Travelling Theatre, The Field Day Theatre Company, 1992. Published by Methuen, 1992;
  • The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde, The Abbey, 1997 and Melbourne Festival 1998. Published by The Gallery Press, 1997;
  • Blake, 2001. Published by The Gallery Press, 2015;
  • The Shape of Metal, The Peacock, 2003. Published by The Gallery Press;
  • My Scandalous Life, 2004. Published by The Gallery Press;
  • Christ Deliver Us!, 2010, Abbey Theatre.[7]

Adaptations

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Books

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  • The Big Chapel, Faber & Faber, 1971; Liberties Press, 2009. This novel was awarded the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1971 and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.
  • Sean O'Casey: a Collection of Critical Essays, Ed., Prentice Hall, 1975, ISBN 0-13-628941-X

Pieces for Radio

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  • The Door, BBC Radio 4, 27 October 1967;
  • That Man Bracken, BBC Radio 3, 20 June 1986;
  • The Colleen and the Cowboy, RTÉ Radio, Prod. Kate Minogue, 11 September 2005.

Pieces for Television

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  • Farmers, Radio Telefís Éireann, 1978;
  • Gold in the Streets, 1993;
  • The Black Joker.

Academic Works

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  • Satirical elements in the prose of Thomas Nashe. Thesis (M.A.), University College Dublin, 1959.
  • Kilroy, Thomas (1958). "Mervyn Wall: The Demands of Satire". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 47 (185): 83–89. JSTOR 30098954.
  • Kilroy, Thomas (1959). "Groundwork for an Irish Theatre". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 48 (190): 192–198. JSTOR 30103597.
  • Kilroy, Thomas (1967). "Reading and Teaching the Novel". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 56 (224): 356–367. JSTOR 30087248.
  • The Outsider., The Irish Times 16 April 1971.
  • Synge and Modernism., in J. M. Synge Centenary Papers. 1971. Ed. Maurice Harmon. Dublin. Dolmen Press, 1972. 167–79.
  • Synge the Dramatist., Mosaic 5.1 (1972): 9–16.
  • Tellers of Tales., Times Literary Supplement. 17 March 1972: 301–02.
  • The Writer’s Group in Galway., The Irish Times. 8 April 1976.
  • Two Playwrights: Yeats and Beckett., Myth and Reality in Irish Literature. Ed. Joseph Ronsley. Toronto: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1977. 183–95.
  • Kilroy, Thomas (1979). "Anglo-Irish Playwrights and Comic Tradition". The Crane Bag. 3 (2): 19–27. JSTOR 30059621.
  • The Moon and the Yellow River : Denis Johnson’s Shavianism., Denis Johnson : A Retrospective. Joseph Ronsley Ed. Irish Literary Studies 8. Gerrards Cross, Bucks : Colin Smythe, 1981; Totawa, New Jersey : Barnes and Noble, 1982. 49 – 58.
  • The Irish Writer: Self and Society, 1950–1980., Literature and the Changing Ireland. Irish Literary Studies 9. Ed. Peter Connolly. Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe, 1982. 175–87.
  • The Anglo-Irish., The Irish Times. 7 December 1983.
  • Goldsmith the Playwright., Goldsmith, the Gentle Master. Ed. Sean Lucy. Cork: Cork University Press, 1984. 66–77.
  • Brecht, Beckett, and Williams., Sagetrieb 3.2 (Fall 1984): 81–87.
  • The Autobiographical Novel., The Genius of Irish Prose. Augustine Martin Ed. Thomas Davis Lecture Series. Dublin : Mercier Press in collaboration with Radio Telefís Éireann, 1985. 65–75.
  • Ireland’s Pseudo-Englishman. , Magill 11.5 January 1988 : 52–54.
  • Reassessment. Thomas Kilroy on J.M. Synge : The Complex Creator of a Closed World., The Irish Times 29 April 1989.
  • Secularized Ireland., Culture in Ireland : Division and Diversity ? Proceedings of the Cultures of Ireland Group Conference, 27–28 September 1991. Ed. Edna Longley. Belfast : Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University Belfast, 1991. 135 – 141.
  • Kilroy, Thomas (1992). "A Generation of Playwright". Irish University Review. 22 (1): 135–141. JSTOR 25484471.
  • Theatrical Text and Literary Text., The Achievement of Brian Friel. Ed. Alan J. Peacock. Gerrard's Cross: Bucks, Colin Smythe, 1993. 91–102.
  • Some Irish Poems of Yeats,, Eibei-Bungaku. Koka Women's University, 11.3 (March 1994) : 41 – 53.
  • The Literary Tradition of Irish Drama., Anglistentag 1994 graz : Proceedings. W. Rioehle, H. Keiper edc. Tübingen : Niemeyer, 1995. 7 – 15.
  • John Bull’s Other Island : Shaw’s Irish Play. , Banado Sho Kenkyu. Vol. 3, 1995, 11.1 1–20.
  • Chekhov and the Irish., Program Note. Chekhov's Uncle Vanya adapt. Frank McGuinness. Field Day Theatre Company. 1995.
  • From Page to Stage., Irish Writers and Their Creative Process. Ed. Jacqueline Genet and Wynne Hellegouarc’h. Gerrards Cross: Colin Smythe, 1996. 55–62.
  • The Anglo-Irish Theatrical Imagination., Bullan, an Irish Studies journal 3.2 (Winter 1997/ Spring 1998), 5 – 12.
  • Kilroy, Thomas (1999). "Friendship". Irish University Review. 29 (1): 83–89. JSTOR 25511532.
  • The Seagull, an Adaptation., The Cambridge Companion to Chekhov. Ed. Vera Gottlieg and Paul Allain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. 80–90.
  • The Wildean Triangle., What Revels Are in Hand ? Assessment of Contemporary Drama in English in Honor of W. Lippke. B. Reitz, H. Stahl, eds.
  • Contemporary Drama in English., (CDE Studies) 8 Trier : WVT Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2001. 47 – 55.

Unpublished

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Works about Thomas Kilroy

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Awards and honours

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  • Guardian Fiction Prize, 1971;
  • Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, 1972;[8]
  • Heinemann Award for Literature;
  • AIB Literary Prize;
  • American-Irish Foundation Award for Literature;
  • Rockefeller Foundation Residency;
  • Kyoto University Foundation Fellowship;
  • Prix Nikki Special Commendation;
  • Lifetime Achievement, Irish Times / ESB Theatre Award, 2004;
  • 2008 Irish PEN Award;
  • Honorary Fellow of Trinity College Dublin 2011[9]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Thomas Kilroy was an Irish playwright, novelist, and academic known for his profound influence on modern Irish theatre through intellectually rigorous plays that examine themes of personal and national identity, religion, sexuality, and historical change. His work, spanning more than five decades, bridged traditional Irish dramatic forms with innovative techniques, often adapting European classics to reflect contemporary Irish experiences. Kilroy's contributions helped expand the scope of Irish drama beyond rural and historical narratives, introducing complex explorations of urban life, repression, and cultural transformation. Born on 23 September 1934 in Callan, County Kilkenny, Kilroy studied at University College Dublin before embarking on a career that combined writing with teaching and lecturing at universities across Europe and the United States. His breakthrough came with early plays such as ''The Death and Resurrection of Mr Roche'', followed by notable works including ''Tea and Sex and Shakespeare'', ''Talbot's Box'', and ''Double Cross''. He also produced acclaimed adaptations, including versions of Chekhov's ''The Seagull'' and Ibsen's ''Ghosts'', which recontextualized these texts within Irish social and political realities. In addition to his theatrical output, Kilroy authored the novel ''The Big Chapel'' and contributed as a critic and essayist to Irish literary discourse. His plays were staged at prestigious venues including the Abbey Theatre, the Royal Court in London, and Druid Theatre, earning praise for their daring stagecraft and unwavering intellectual courage. Kilroy remained an active and respected figure in Irish arts until his death on 7 December 2023 at the age of 89.

Early Life

Early Life and Education

Thomas Kilroy was born on 23 September 1934 in Callan, County Kilkenny. He was one of ten children born to May (née Devine) and Thomas Kilroy, a Garda sergeant; his parents, originally from Caltra in east Galway, had both participated in the Irish War of Independence. Kilroy attended St Kieran's College in Kilkenny as a boarder, where he excelled in hurling and captained the senior team in 1952. A notable early influence on his interest in theatre came during his time at the college when the touring actor-manager Anew McMaster delivered a lecture on Hamlet. He went on to study English at University College Dublin, where he was elected auditor of the English Literature Society and earned his degree. He later completed an MA at UCD on the sixteenth-century poet Thomas Nashe.

Academic Career

Academic Career

Thomas Kilroy held academic positions in English literature, beginning with his appointment as senior lecturer at University College Dublin in 1965, where he lectured on English, Anglo-Irish literature, and 18th-century drama. In 1978, he was appointed Professor of English at University College Galway (now National University of Ireland, Galway), a position he held until 1989. During his tenure at Galway, he also held visiting positions at North American universities, including Notre Dame, Vanderbilt, and McGill. In 1989, Kilroy resigned from the professorship to concentrate on writing full-time.

Theatre Involvement

Theatre Involvement

Thomas Kilroy held a number of significant administrative and editorial roles in prominent Irish theatre institutions throughout his career. He served as script editor at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin from 1977 to 1978, contributing to the development of new work during his early involvement with the organization. In the 1980s, Kilroy sat on the board of the Field Day Theatre Company, and he was appointed director of the company in 1988. He maintained a long association with the Abbey Theatre, returning in later years as writer in association in 1998 and serving as a board member from 2010 to 2016. Kilroy was a member of Aosdána, the affiliation of distinguished Irish artists that recognizes contributions across literature and the arts.

Dramatic Works

Original Plays

Thomas Kilroy established himself as a distinctive voice in Irish theatre through his original plays, which frequently interrogate themes of Irish identity, personal repression, historical trauma, the conflict between individual conscience and societal expectations, and the role of imagination and art in confronting these issues. His works often centre on real or historical figures to reflect contemporary concerns, blending realism with meta-theatrical elements and psychological depth. His breakthrough came with The Death and Resurrection of Mr Roche, which premiered at the 1968 Dublin Theatre Festival and became a controversial hit after rejection by the Abbey Theatre. The play presents a savage yet compassionate portrait of wasted lives in Dublin, focusing on a night of male drinking that turns violent and surreal with the arrival of an enigmatic homosexual character, Mr Roche, exploring repressed sexuality, homophobia, and male camaraderie in 1960s Ireland. It marked one of the first major Irish stage works to address homosexual rights openly and established Kilroy's reputation for probing uncomfortable social truths. Subsequent early works engaged Irish history and personal transformation. The O'Neill premiered at the Peacock Theatre in 1969 and examined the late-16th-century conflict with England through the Battle of the Yellow Ford. Talbot's Box (1977, Peacock Theatre) dramatised the life of Matt Talbot, the Dublin labourer who overcame alcoholism through extreme religious asceticism. Tea and Sex and Shakespeare (1976, Project Arts Centre; revised 1998) offered a dark comedy about a solitary writer whose imagination conjures Shakespearean figures and nightmares, reflecting on creativity and psychological states. In the 1980s and 1990s, Kilroy collaborated with the Field Day Theatre Company on plays that interrogated identity and historical division. Double Cross (1986) juxtaposed William Joyce (Lord Haw-Haw) and Brendan Bracken to explore propaganda, divided loyalties, and Irish neutrality during the Second World War. The Madame MacAdam Travelling Theatre followed in 1991, continuing Field Day's engagement with performative and cultural themes. The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde (1997, Abbey Theatre) centred on Oscar Wilde's wife, examining her life amid personal and social upheaval. Kilroy's later original plays sustained his interest in historical and imaginative figures. Blake (2001) drew on the visionary poet William Blake. The Shape of Metal (2003, Peacock Theatre) continued his exploration of personal and artistic identity. My Scandalous Life (2004) addressed themes of personal revelation and scandal. Christ Deliver Us! (2010, Abbey Theatre) confronted religious authority and repression through a story involving clerical judgment of youthful transgression. Across his oeuvre, Kilroy's original plays consistently probe the intersections of history, sexuality, religion, and national self-understanding, using the stage to challenge Irish social norms and illuminate the complexities of individual experience within broader cultural forces.

Stage Adaptations

Thomas Kilroy has produced notable stage adaptations of major European dramatic works, reinterpreting classics by Chekhov, Ibsen, and Pirandello, often transposing them to Irish settings or contexts to explore parallel social and cultural tensions. Kilroy's version of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull (after Chekhov) relocates the action from provincial Russia to the West of Ireland in the late nineteenth century, drawing analogies between the fading Anglo-Irish estates, the rise of the Land League, and the original's reflections on political and social upheaval. This free adaptation preserves Chekhov's plot—centered on the fading actress Arkadina, her son Konstantin, the writer Trigorin, and the young Nina—while infusing Irish character names (such as Constantine, Dr. Hickey, and Cousin Gregory) and functioning as both tribute and independent work, described by Kilroy as "a form of privileged conversation" with Chekhov. James Fenton hailed it as "a work of illumination" in reviewing the premiere at the Royal Court Theatre, London, on 8 April 1981, directed by Max Stafford-Clark. His adaptation of Henrik Ibsen's Ghosts (after Ibsen) similarly shifts the narrative to an Irish milieu, evident in character names such as Mrs. Helen Aylward, Father Manning, and Jacko English, to examine inherited moral failings and the struggle against outdated ideals in a contemporary Irish framework. The play premiered at the Peacock Theatre (Abbey Theatre) in Dublin on 5 October 1989, produced by the Abbey Theatre in association with Gemini Productions during the Dublin Theatre Festival. Kilroy's version of Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author remains set in a theatre in the present, preserving the meta-theatrical core of the original while offering a fresh staging for Irish audiences. It received its world premiere at the Abbey Theatre on 1 May 1996, directed by John Crowley. These adaptations highlight Kilroy's engagement with European dramatic traditions, adapted sensitively for Irish theatrical contexts.

Prose Fiction

Prose Fiction

Thomas Kilroy's only published novel is The Big Chapel, released in 1971 by Faber & Faber. The book was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1971 and won the Guardian Fiction Prize that same year. Basing his narrative on a notorious clerical scandal from Victorian Ireland, Kilroy produced an anatomy of religious violence that remains relevant today. The novel centers on a man, a family, and a town, set in County Kilkenny, where religion and violence intersect at the core of the story. It examines the clash between enduring humanity and dogmatic ideology, portraying both private individual anguish and panoramic portraits of a community in turmoil. The narrative ranges from private and lyrical scenes to depictions of a whole community in convulsion, drawing on a deep knowledge of nineteenth-century Irish history and folklore. While infused with humor, the work ultimately achieves grave tragic proportions. Memorable characters include Father Lannigan, an anguished demagogue haunted by the implications of his own revolution; Emerine Scully, a man unable to choose at a time when all must confront choice; and Horace Percy Butler, a landlord and amateur scientist rendered as a comic yet tragic figure unique in Irish fiction, with extracts from his journal serving as a remarkable tour de force. Through these elements, the novel explores religious and social tensions in Ireland, particularly through factional conflicts within the Roman Catholic Church, clerical power, and the broader communal divisions arising from such scandals.

Television and Radio

Thomas Kilroy's contributions to television and radio, though fewer in number than his stage plays, include several original scripts written across five decades. His first dramatic work was the radio play The Door, broadcast by BBC Radio 4 in early 1968 after winning the broadcaster's radio play competition in 1967. The play, also known as Say Hello to Johnny in its broadcast version, featured Cyril Cusack in the central speaking role and drew enthusiastic responses from listeners. Kilroy returned to radio with That Man Bracken, produced by BBC Radio 3 and first transmitted in 1986. His last radio work was The Colleen and the Cowboy, produced by RTÉ Radio and broadcast on 11 September 2005. In television, Kilroy wrote the play Farmers for RTÉ, which aired in 1978. He followed this with The Black Joker in 1981 and Gold in the Streets in 1993. These broadcast pieces reflect occasional but sustained engagement with electronic media alongside his primary focus on theatre.

Awards and Honours

Thomas Kilroy received several major literary awards for his novel ''The Big Chapel'', which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and won the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1971. The work also earned him the Heinemann Award for Literature in 1972. In 1972, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. His other honours include the AIB Literary Prize and the American-Irish Foundation Award for Literature (1974). He held the Rockefeller Foundation Residency and the Kyoto University Foundation Fellowship. For his contributions to Irish theatre, Kilroy received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Irish Times / ESB Theatre Awards in 2004. He was awarded the Irish PEN Award in 2008 and appointed an Honorary Fellow of Trinity College Dublin in 2011.

Death and Legacy

Death and Legacy

Thomas Kilroy died on 7 December 2023, at the age of 89. His papers are held in the Thomas Kilroy Collection at the James Hardiman Library, University of Galway. Kilroy was widely regarded as one of the most significant Irish playwrights of his generation, alongside figures such as Brian Friel and Tom Murphy, contributing substantially to the modernization of Irish theatre through his long association with the Abbey Theatre and his role as a founding member of the Field Day Theatre Company. President Michael D. Higgins described him as a playwright of vision whose work fearlessly crossed boundaries to examine social issues rarely addressed in Irish theatre previously. His oeuvre demonstrated a sustained engagement with Irish identity, history, and the evolution of theatrical form, employing modernist techniques to offer incisive social commentary on themes including religious repression, sexual mores, nationalism, and cultural change from the mid-20th century onward. Obituaries highlighted his uncompromising spirit and intellectual courage in confronting conservative societal norms and giving voice to unspoken anxieties. He was remembered as vigorous, intellectually brave, and cosmopolitan in outlook, resisting spiritual and political authority while reimagining Irish experience beyond clichés and dogma.

References

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