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Emmet Dalton
   
Life
1898-1978; b. 4 March; joined British Army, 1915; MC and promoted to Major; returned to Ireland in 1919; joined the IRA; appt. aide and adviser to Michael Collins; became director of military training; led abortive rescue of Seán Mac Eoin from Mountjoy Jail, dressed in British uniform; supported Treaty side; commanded artillery at the Four Courts, 28 June 1922; with Collins at Béal na mBláth; became Clerk of Seanad Éireann after Civil War; embarked on film-making in Hollywood and London; established Dublin Film Productions
Management with Louis Elliman at Ardmore Studios (12 May 1958), following
purchase of Ardmore House, Bray, Co. Wicklow, and established with funding
from the ICC of the State Dev. Bank supplied by Sean Lemass; he produced
Mackens Home is the Hero (1960), directed Fielder Cook (RKO);
also Broth of A Boy (1959), and The Poachers Daughter (1960), the former is based on The Big Birthday, a play by Hugh
Leonard, and directed by George Pollock, with Barry Fitzgerald as
a 110-year old man, and Harry Brogan as his 80-year old son; the he latter,
released in Ireland as Sallys Irish Rogue, was based on The
New Gossoon by George Shiels, first seen on stage in New York in 1930,
and here directed for film by George Pollock also, with Julie Harris and
a supporting cast of Abbey players; other Dalton productions from Ardmore
were This Other Eden (1959), Lies My Father Told Me, and The Devils Agent; d. 4 March 1978 [DIB], Dublin. DIB FDA
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Notes
Anthony Slide, The Cinema and Ireland (McFarland & Co.
1988), pp.29-30, 32, gives details as in Life.
Kevin Rockett, et al., Cinema
& Ireland (1988), calls him a veteran of World War I, the War
of Independence and the Civil War, turned film distributor and producer;
successfully filmed Professor Tim by George Shiels, and filmed St. John
Ervines play Boyds Shop, 1936 play, directed as film
by Emmet Dalton (1960) [var 1957; Conor McCarthy, Modernisation [...]
in Ireland, 2000, p.166.)
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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