|
Gabriel Fallon
   
Life
1898-1980; [Gaby]; London civil service, joined Abbey, 1920;
played Capt. Brennan The Plough and the Stars and appeared in the
first productions of others of OCasey plays; objected on moral grounds
to Denis Johnstons planned production of Tollers Hoppla
with Drama League, 1928; became director; wrote on OCasey; reviewing
for The Evening Press (14 May 1955), he advised Graham Greene to
take with him, and read with more humility, a copy of the Catechism;
Abbey Director at time of Shaughraun revival (1967); Sean OCasey,
the Man I Knew (London: Routledge & KP 1965); The Abbey and
the Actor [autobiog.] (Dublin 1969); Irish Times theatre critic;
hailed as oul buttie; in Sean OCaseys letters.
DIW
Works
The Ageing Abbey [Part II], in The Irish Monthly, LXVI (May
1938), pp.339-344; The Man in the Plays, in Sean McCann, ed.,
The World of Sean OCasey [New English Library] (London: Dent
1966), pp.196-210; Fragments of Memory, in Ann Saddlemyer
and Colin Smythe, eds., Lady Gregory, Fifty Years After (Gerrards
Cross 1987), pp.30-34.
[ top
]
Notes
Ronald Ayling, [ed.,] Sean OCasey: Modern Judgements (London: Macmillan 1969), Introduction, cites Gabriel Fallon: My basic dislike of the autobiographies was to be found mainly in three directions; first of all, the narcissism of the style which the use of the third person gave the writing as well as the attempts to out-sing Synge or to out-jump Joyce in the manufacture of "portmanteau" words - "playing Jeff to Joyces Mutt" was how Padraic Colum put it. Then the unreliability of the content, the total absence of dates; indeed, the absence of what even the common reader would describe as material evidence. Finally, his unaccountable bitterness. Fallon went on to document what he regarded as the artistic decline of the playwright in terms of his response to international acclaim, such that he lost the run of himself as a result of fortune, fame, and friendship of the great. Ayling strenously contests the view that OCasey, author of the Autobiographies is a different person from the man I knew of Fallons title, adding what on earth does that mean?; he also cites articles in Dublin Magazine (Autumn/Winter 1965) and Massachussetts Review (Summer 1966) in which Fallons interpretation of the career is hotly contested. (See Sean OCasey: The Man I Knew, p.160; Ayling p.35ff.).
Programme notes to The Two Shadows: Florence Festival Productions (Monday
13 May 1968), productions of In the Shadow of the Glen (Synge;
dir. Frank Dermody; with Kathleen Barrington, Michael Ó Briain,
John Kavanagh, Eamon Kelly), and The Shadow of a Gunman (OCasey;
dir. Vincent Dowling, with Patrick Laffan, Philip OFlynn, and Bernadetta
McKenna);, et al. NOTE also essay, The Man and the Plays by
Gabriel Fallon in Sean McCann, intro. and ed., The World of Sean OCasey (New English Library 1966), pp.196-210. See also Fallon, quoted under
RX Seamus Byrne, ... The following May Grahame [sic] Greene came
under fire both from Mr Fallon and Seamus Byrne, neither of whom thought
much of The Living Room. ... On 14 May Gabriel Fallon, writing
in the Evening Press, advised Grahame Greene that when next embarking on the hazardous voyage between God and evil he should take
with him and read with more humility, a copy of the Cathecism. His
article was headed "Read your Cathecism Mr Greene." [...] A
few years later Mr Fallon resigned from the Amateur Drama Movement of
Ireland in protest at the number of priests who were holding positions
of influence with the movement. As the clergy have always regarded Mr
Fallon as the one pillar of respectability within the puzzling and disturbing
world of the theatre, his resignation fell on many of them with the force
almost of the announcement of a papal elopement. That year, at the annual
diocesan examination which young priests are required to undergo for the
first five years after ordination, the young clerics of Dublin were asked
to give their opinions to what the resignation signified. / It signified
nothing except that Mr Fallon was acting according to his conscience ...
.
Fallon reviewed The Quare Fellow
for Irish Times (9.11.1954), when Mr Behan finds himself
technically the Irish theatre will have found another and, I think, a
greater OCasey (cited in Ulick OConnor, Brendan,
p.169).
[ top
]
Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
|