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Brendan Behan's Teapot By Neil Titley

at

Keats Community Library

London

Friday 1st of May 2020

19:00

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Brendan Behan's Teapot By Neil Titley Event Title Pic

Brendan Behan's Teapot By Neil Titley

Event Type

Genre : Theatre

Description

'BRENDAN BEHAN'S TEAPOT' by Neil Titley

Brendan Behan 1923-1964
A Rabelaisian, raucous, foul-mouthed, hugely talented writer and pub raconteur, he spent most of his early life in and out of English and Irish jails because of his Republican activities. These experiences gave him the material for his novel 'Borstal Boy' and his two great plays 'The Quare Fellow' and 'The Hostage'. His death aged 42 was hastened by his chronic alcoholism.

The play will be performed by Dr Jim Boylan who will be coming over from Ireland to be with us.
Jim is an experienced actor who nevertheless settled for a career as a Consultant Psychiatrist (and who retired in 2016 after 33 years as a front-line clinician including 12 years as a Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist).

His theatre portrayals include such leading roles as:
Pastor Manders in Ibsen's 'Ghosts', Reverend Hale in Miller's 'The Crucible', Claudius in 'Hamlet', the title role in 'Macbeth', Falstaff in 'The Merry Wives of Windsor, Bottom in 'The Midsummer Night's Dream', King Rat in 'Dick Whittington' and Prof Plum in 'Cluedo'.

He wrote the script of 'Dandelions' for the 'North of Watford Theatre' and is currently a company Member of the Foundry Theatre Project (Darlington Hippodrome). The sharp-eyed may have spotted him in the TV advert for 'Fasttrackreclaim.com'


Jim Boylan writes on 'BRENDAN BEHAN'S TEAPOT':

'I became beguiled by Behan after researching his character for this production. Against the backdrop of his idealistic and somewhat naive Irish republicanism Behan did a jig into the spotlight of the 1950s and early 1960s theatre scene and held a mirror up to the moral hypocrisy of institutions such as the state and organised religion.

A brief and brilliant firework of a playwright before his untimely death, Behan was at heart a humanist. He was both wonderfully witty and fatally flawed and it has been a tremendous challenge and an honour to try and capture his essence on stage.'


Keats Community Library

Venue Type

Library

Keats Community Library Profile Pic

Description

10 Keats Grove,

Hampstead,

Greater London,

England,

NW3 2RR.

Sorry, This Event is in the past!

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