Brian Friel’s Ballybeg

An Exhibition Mapping the world of Ballybeg, Co Donegal, as imagined in the plays of Brian Friel

The Gentle Island

First performed 1971

Ballybeg as Imagined

Ballybeg Time

The present, June 1971

Ballybeg Place

The island of Inishkeen off the west coast of County Donegal, Ireland.

Ballybeg Set

INSIDE: Kitchen of Manus Sweeney’s cottage, with fireplace and two doors to two bedrooms.
OUTSIDE: The street around the house with 12 cottages. Against the gable wall are a curragh, fishing nets, lobster pots, farming equipment, ancient gramophone.

The Action Takes Place

The action takes place on the island of Inishkeen in June. The inhabitants are leaving for good – all except Manus Sweeney and his family. Most of the islanders are already in the boats. The last few hurry down past Sweeney’s house on their way down to the harbour. They are wearing their best clothes.

Ballybeg on Stage

Performance

✭ Corn Mill Theatre & Arts Centre, Carrigallen, Co. Leitrim 1993
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Ballybeg Atmosphere

Quotes from the Play

MANUS: A man that never saw a town bigger than Ballybeg.

MANUS: Fifty years ago there were two hundred people on this island; our own school, our own church, our own doctor. No one ever wanted…They belong here and they’ll never belong anywhere else! Never! D’you know where they’re going to? I do. I know. To back rooms in the back streets of London and Manchester and Glasgow. I’ve lived in them. I know. And that’s where they’ll die, long before their time – Eamonn and Con and Big Anthony and Nora Dan that never had a coat on her back until this day. And cocky Bosco with his mouth organ – this day week if he’s lucky he’ll be another Irish Paddy slaving his guts out in a tunnel all day and crawling home to a bothy at night.

PETER: My God, it’s heavenly. Look, Shane, everywhere you turn, look at the view; you can see for a hundred miles. And the clarity. Look – there’s a river where we camped the night before last and the lake where the lorry picked us up and the old railway station and the plantation where the men were cutting the spruce. And the sea, Shane, look at the sea.

JOE: You’re king of the whole island now, father… King of Inishkeen. King of nothing.

SARAH: That he’s down there in the boathouse at the far slip, your Philly, my husband. That they’re stripped naked. That he’s doing for the tramp what he couldn’t do for me. That’s what I’m trying to say. And that if you’re the great King of Inishkeen, you’ll kill them both – that’s what I’m saying.

JOE: To the Ballybeg hospital.
MANUS: He’s lying there in Ballybeg?

Real Places

Derry

MANUS: Joe – you know Joe – he was fussing about missing the Derry bus
JOE: They’ll be dry before I get to Derry.

GLASGOW

BOSCO: Get the knickers off, all you Glasgow women! The Inishkeen stallions is coming!

MANCHESTER

MARY: I’m not leading you into Manchester like an early Christian pilgrim!

Inspiration

THE GENTLE ISLAND AS IRELAND

BRIAN FRIEL: We see most facets of Irish life, love, hate, loneliness, tensions in the life of the gentle island.¹

BRIAN FRIEL: I would like to write a play that would capture the peculiar spiritual, and indeed material, flux that this country is in at the moment. This has got to be done, for me anyway, and I think it has got to be done at a local, parochial level.²

BRIAN FRIEL: The title The Gentle Island is satirical and it’s a direct translation of the word.³


Dublin and rural Ireland

BRIAN FRIEL: One of the big problems is that there are two societies, and I feel very strongly about this. There is the Dublin society in the Dublin environs, and then there is the rest. This is not quite the same as purely urban-rural… you have two distinct societies… A much closer link with rural roots is necessary4.

BRIAN FRIEL: The end of a kind of life that fashioned a people.5

QUOTES FROM THE PLAY

JOE: Two strangers from Dublin were here.

PETER: If you think teaching’s tiring, spend a morning cutting turf.


SHANE: The simple, upright, hardworking peasant holding on manfully to the real values in life, sustained by a thousand-year-old culture, preserving for my people a really worthwhile inheritance.


Violence

BRIAN FRIEL: Violence in Irish life may be suggested in my play but it is not specifically reflected in the story.6

QUOTES FROM THE PLAY

SARAH: You’ve had enough with Philly, engineer. He robbed you, Manus. He robbed me. Shoot him! Shoot him!

SHANE: Acute unease on paradise island. War thought imminent. All men over seventeen report for military service.


Short story – The saucer of Larks 1959

EXTRACT: He was a young airman from Hamburg and he crashed into that stump of a hill over there. It was a night in the summer of ’42 and his plane was burned to ashes… The fishermen found him about fifty yards from the plane. They made a grave and laid him to rest.

QUOTE FROM THE PLAY

MANUS: That’s a comfortable chair. Sit down on it, I’ll tell you about that chair. It came out of a German airplane that crashed into the side of that hill… We buried him in the old cemetery alongside the British sailors that were washed in.

WRITING PROCESS

Alternative Titles

The Last Seven
A Modest Permanence
The Engineer & the Piano Tuner
The Strangers
Bounty
Seven Faces
The Fifth Island
The Stone Abbey
The Stone Monks

THE ARCHIVE

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SOURCES

IMAGES

The Gentle Island, Book Jacket, courtesy of The Gallery Press
Postcards of Donegal, Courtesy of Donegal County Museum
Poster and images of Performance courtesy of Corn Mill Theatre


PLAY TEXT

The Gentle Island (1971) by Brian Friel (London: Davis-Poynter) 1973

SHORT STORY TEXT

Brian Friel, The Saucer of Larks (1959) in Brian Friel: Selected Short Stories, (Co. Meath: Gallery Books), 1979

PUBLISHED SOURCES

¹Brian Friel’s Other Island, Aodhan Madden 1971 in Delaney, Paul (ed.) Brian Friel in Conversation. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press 2000, p.110
2&6Brian Friel to Fergus Linehan in 1970 quoted in Brian Friel’s Other Island, Aodhan Madden 1971 in Delaney, Paul (ed.) Brian Friel in Conversation. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press 2000, p.109
3&4Kathleen Mavourneen, Here Comes Brian Friel, Desmond Rushe (1970) in Delaney, Paul (ed.) Brian Friel in Conversation. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press 2000, p.82

MANUSCRIPTS

Courtesy of the National Library of Ireland

5 National Library of Ireland Collection List No. 73 BRIAN FRIEL PAPERS, MS 37,063/1 note dated 28 September 1970.