Hell's Kitchen

Hell's Kitchen is the blog of TheWildGeese.com (WGT), a leading online destination chronicling "The Epic History and Heritage of the Irish." Hell's Kitchen is written by Patricia Jameson-Sammartano, Gerry Regan and Joe Gannon. TheWildGeese.com, which draws nearly 200,000 visits per year, is the flagship project of GAR Media, "forging new frontiers for the past."

Monday, May 29, 2006

Music to the Ears

One of our correspondents is looking for help sharing his music collection of Irish songs. His e-mail is quoted in full.

Patricia Jameson-Sammartano,
WGT Culture Editor

From: James T. Curran [mailto:jtcgen@earthlink.net]
Sent: Tuesday, May 23, 2006 11:22 PM
To: info@garmedia.com
Subject: How Do I Do It?


I have an unusual problem I hope you can help me with. I have an
extensive collection of Irish music. Roughly 900 albums collected over the last 30 years. I am breaking up the collection and would like to donate it to some Irish organization or someone who would make it available to a wider audience. The only request is that whoever gets has to pay the shipping. It would be nice, but not a requirement if I could deduct the donation from my taxes. I have tried several local organizations and can not even get my calls returned.

Can you help me in any way to find an organization that can use and
would deserve such a library of music? I would be most appreciative for any help you can give me.

James T. Curran (AKA Seamus Tighearnagh Corrain)
1529 Denniston Ave
Pittsburgh, PA 15217

(412) 422-8076

Film About IRA Takes Top Prize at Cannes


Ken Loach's film The Wind That Shakes The Barley has won the 2006 Palme d'Or (Golden Palm), the Cannes Film Festival's top prize, beating out 19 other films, including Spain's Volver and Mexico's Babel, this year's two favorites. The winning movie, whose title is inspired by the Irish folk song, is about the struggle for Irish independence during the Black and Tan War of the early 1920s, and is told from an Irish republican perspective. Shot on location in County Cork, the film was written by Paul Laverty, an Irishman who often partners with British director Loach, and stars an all-Irish cast, including Cillian Murphy, Orla Fitzgerald, Liam Cunningham and Padraig Delaney. It is a direct commentary on British imperialism, and director Loach said, "Maybe if we tell the truth about the past, maybe we tell the truth about the present," alluding to the film's stance as an allegorical anti-war critique of the war in Iraq.

Above, Cillian Murphy and Padraig Delaney as brothers Damien and Teddy, serving in the Irish Republican Army, in "The Wind That Shakes the Barley." Pathe.co.uk photo

Cillian Murphy, who is from Douglas, County Cork, is making quite a name for himself (Breakfast on Pluto, Red Eye, Batman Begins, Cold Mountain, Girl with a Pearl Earring). According to IMDB.com, Murphy had this to say about Loach: "If there's an opportunity to work with Ken Loach, you can't really turn that down. He's made some of the finest films of the past 25 years. Whether you like or dislike his movies, there's never a bad performance in them, ever. There's none of the bullshit. There's no trailers, no nonsense, no pampering. It's a breath of fresh air." He plays a medical student who joins the guerilla war against the British, akin to the real-life story of Kevin Barry of H Company, Dublin Brigade of the IRA, whose story is chronicled in our pages (at(
http://www.thewildgeese.com/pages/forgten.html.)

Shake Hands with the Devil, released in 1959, is another movie that deals with the Irish War of Independence and a medical student; Jimmy Cagney played an Irish-American medical student who gets drawn into the conflict against his better judgment (http://imdb.com/title/tt0053272/).

Above, lads seen taking up the armed struggle for Irish freedom, in another scene from Ken Loach's award-winning film, "The Wind That Shakes The Barley." Pathe.co.uk photo

According to the BBC, The Wind that Shakes the Barley is to be released in Europe, but no date is scheduled yet for the United States. Laverty, though, tongue firmly in cheek, claims to have a notion about how to get distribution in the U.S., commenting to an American journalist covering Cannes: "If you could tell George Bush you have just seen a remarkable film about Republicans." The word is that the producers hoped to find a distributor while they were in Cannes; there is pre-Oscar buzz for Murphy, despite the lack of a current release date here.

Loach has won the jury prize at Cannes in 1990 for the film Hidden Agenda, about the implementation of shoot-to-kill policy by the British army in Northern Ireland. This year's is his first Palme d'Or. The Wind that Shakes the Barley will be released in June in England, with future release dates of September in Argentina and November in France. We eagerly await it stateside. -- Patricia Jameson-Sammartano, WGT Culture Editor, pjs@thewildgeese.com

Related Resources



* Official Preview Site (Pathe.com) (Select Coming Soon, Then The Film Title)

* 'The Wind That Shakes the Barley' Review, TimeOut, London, May 19, 2006

*
FilmExposed.com

* "Loach Films Wins Top Cannes Prize," BBC News, May 29, 2006

* "Loach Revisits Irish Struggle," BBC News, May 28, 2006

* 'The Wind That Shakes the Barley' Set Visit,' TimeOut London, July 18, 2005

Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Remembering the Great Hunger

The Committee for the Commemoration of Irish Famine Victims has asked that Irish people at home and abroad observe a minute's silence at 2:00pm on May 28 for victims of the Great Famine. The group believes the 19th-century disaster, in which roughly one million died and more were forced to flee the country, as equally important in Ireland's history as the 1916 Easter Rising. On the designated day the Dublin-based commemoration committee will lead a small procession from the city's Garden of Remembrance to the Famine Sculptures at the docklands. The committee is also lobbying the Government to designate an annual all-Ireland memorial day to the victims of the Famine.

Committee chairman Michael Blanch argues, "Every country remembers disasters in its history, whether it is the Holocaust or America's 9/11 atrocity, and we cannot understand why Ireland doesn't have an annual event".

How about it, can you give up a minute of your time?

Yours in our motto of Friendship, Unity and Christian Charity,
Kathy Sullivan Llera

Sunday, May 14, 2006

Black 47's Larry Kirwan: At 'Sixteen'
Still a Voice for the Underdog

The Latest from WGT:

Whether singing about James Connolly or Bobby Sands or quoting Lorca, Wexford-born rocker Larry Kirwan casts a discerning, empathetic and sometimes angry eye on the world. With "Bittersweet Sixteen," a new retrospective album out, he takes time out to discuss his oeuvre, old and new, with writer Alex Féthière.

  • 'Bittersweet Sixteen': A Review
  • Kirwan's Take On Irish History


  • Labor Conflicts a Focus in 2 Film Projects

    Two dramatic stories from the annals of the history of the Irish seem set for production.

    According to a story in the May 12 edition of The Irish Examiner, Ireland's largest trade union, SIPTU, has decided to invest in a major motion picture about James Connolly, who served as acting general of the Irish Transport and General Workers’ Union, SIPTU's predecessor. Connolly commanded the Republican headquarters at the GPO in Dublin during the Easter Rising. Though badly wounded, he was propped in a chair and executed by a British firing squad on May 12, 1916, less than two weeks after the Irish insurgents surrendered.

    The film is to star Scottish actor, writer and director Peter Mullan as Connolly, and Dublin native Patrick Bergin as "Big Jim" Larkin, who was, with Connolly, co-founder of the Irish Labour Party. It will be directed by Adrian Dunbar and produced by Rascal Films. Mullan was the writer and director of the much acclaimed film, "The Magdalene Sisters," which raised the hackles of many in Ireland with its no-holds-barred depiction of the brutality that the Church in Ireland sponsored in its Magdalene laundries.

    The union’s General Secretary Joe O’Flynn made the announcement at a ceremony to mark the 90th anniversary of Connolly’s death. “James Connolly was passionately committed to organising workers,” O'Flynn said. “The cause of labour is the cause of Ireland,” Connolly wrote, O'Flynn noted. “The cause of Ireland is the cause of labour. They cannot be dissevered.”

    Meanwhile, the April 27 issue of The (Allentown, Pa.) Morning Call reports that Galway-based ikandi Productions has received 90 minutes of access to Schuylkill County Prison in Pottsville, Pa. The prison, still in use, was the site of the executions of six Irish coal miners on June 21, 1877. They were part of a secret organization known as the Molly Maguires, accused of murder. The Molly Maguires arose in the 1870s in the face of oppressive conditions in the mines, and attempted to counter the bosses' tyranny through murder and intimidation.

    A film version of their story, "The Molly Maguires," was released in 1970. The film starred Sean Connery and Richard Harris, with a cameo by Irish raconteur and auteur Malachy McCourt. A county official told the Morning Call that the documentary would appear on the History Channel in the United States and on Irish television. The company plans to shoot May 22 at the prison. The company also plans to film in the Philadelphia area, a county official told the paper. WGT

    Resources Mentioned: