Brendan Behan
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 60 years ago |
Date of birth | February 9,1923 |
Zodiac sign | Aquarius |
Born | Dublin |
Ireland | |
Date of died | March 20,1964 |
Died | Dublin |
Ireland | |
Spouse | Beatrice Behan |
Job | Poet |
Playwright | |
Screenwriter | |
Novelist | |
Movies/Shows | Borstal Boy |
The Quare Fellow | |
Children | Blanaid Behan |
Parents | Stephen Behan |
Kathleen Behan | |
Plays | The Hostage |
The Quare Fellow | |
Siblings | Dominic Behan |
Brian Behan | |
Albums | Songs from "The Hostage" |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 457683 |
Bekenntnisse eines irischen Rebellen
Brendan Behan's Island: An Irish Sketch-book
Brendan Behan's New York
After the wake
Richard's cork leg
The complete plays
Hold your hour and have another
Brendan Behan: Interviews and Recollections
The wit of Brendan Behan
The King of Ireland's Son
The letters of Brendan Behan
The Methuen Drama Anthology of Irish Plays: Hostage; Bailegangaire; Belle of the Belfast City; Steward of Christendom; Cripple of Inishmaan
Poems and a Play in Irish
El Principe y el Gigante / The Prince and the Giant
L'Escarpeur
The Dubbalin
Behan Complete Plays
Sayings of Brendan Behan
Confessions of an Irish rebel
Encore un verre avant de partir
Enas omēros : [suite for voice and orchestra from Brendan Behan's stage play The Hostage]
Brendan Behan's 'The Scarperer'
Abbey Theatre Reads: Plus the Confirmation Suit by Brendan Behan: Poetry, Kavanagh Back to Keats
The Complete Plays: Brendan Behan ; Introduced by Alan Simpson ; with a Bibliography by E. H. Mikhail
Brendan Behan Life story
Brendan Francis Aidan Behan was an Irish poet, short story writer, novelist, playwright, and Irish Republican activist who wrote in both English and Irish. He was named by Irish Central as one of the greatest Irish writers of all time.
A life too interesting: Shane MacGowan
... Streams of Whiskey is a tribute to a MacGowan hero and inspiration, the poet and playwright Brendan Behan, who once described himself as a " drinker with a writing problem"...
Sylvia Syms: Veteran British actress dies at 89
... She gave a powerful performance as the wife of a condemned prisoner in the screen version of Brendan Behan s The Quare Fellow in 1962 and played Tony Hancock s wife in The Punch & Judy Man...
A life too interesting: Shane MacGowan
By David SillitoArts correspondent
The songs of The Pogues are what happens when rural folk songs are hit over The Head by the amphetamine punk spirit of 70s London.
But they are More Than that.
These " gutter hymns" of the Irish abroad are celebrations of tough lives that are sprinkled with wit, literary references and Simple Truth telling.
Shane Macgowan once said: " I couldn't believe that nobody else were doing it, so we went on doing it ourselves…"
But The Problem is that The Story of Shane Macgowan the legendary drinker has overshadowed Shane the Songwriter - and His Best songs are remarkable.
Take Fairy Tale of New York , it's a masterpiece because it captures the Christmas other festive tunes ignore.
It's a celebration of those bleak December days of rumination on mistakes made or married:
" I could have been someone.
" Well so could anyone.
" You took my dreams from me when I first found you. "
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The Bbc is not responsible for the content of external sites. YouTube content may contain adverts.It takes a rare talent to turn a grim truth of this midwinter festival of drink, regret and loneliness in to the One Christmas song that never seems to overstay its welcome.
However, The Man himself almost went out of His Way to keep us from seeing it.
Interviews and profiles begin with stories of journalists waiting for hours in Dublin bars.
There are descriptions of stained clothing, missing teeth and his laugh, which the Daily Mirror compared to " a cross between a rattlesnake's hiss and a portable toilet being flushed".
But there's not much about how well-read he was, or what his songs were about.
For A Man who came from a culture that prizes conversation as a High Art form, and has provided More Than its fair share of hyper-articulate storytellers, he was famously uncommunicative with journalists and writers.
His official biographer, Richard Balls, once compared interviewing him to making a wildlife documentary.
It was a matter of waiting hours and hours in The Hope he might give you some brief insight into a Songwriter who had quite clearly read a lot books. Thankfully, we can get a sense of his literary tastes by listening to The Records .
The literary punkThe Pogues ' album, Red Roses for Me, is named after a Sean O'Casey play.
Streams of Whiskey is a tribute to a MacGowan hero and inspiration, The Poet and playwright Brendan Behan , who once described himself as a " drinker with a writing problem". (Which is perhaps a fair description of Shane himself).
The Dark humour lurking in the descriptions of hardship and squalor is an echo of another favourite of his, Flann O'Brien. His songs are a reminder of The Time before the Celtic Tiger when Young People fled Ireland In Search of work. a world that has inspired a library of books, plays and poetry.
And listening to his songs it's no surprise that MacGowan was, in his youth, a reader.
Shane's father, Maurice, who also described himself as something of a " roustabout" would, He Said , try to read James Joyce 's famously impenetrable, Finnegan's Wake with an 11-year-old Shane.
And, if you waited long enough, and won his confidence, MacGowan The Reader might occasionally emerge with his views on Yeats, Joyce and Beckett.
Take The Moment when a roomful of dentists burst in to a round of applause when Shane finally managed to eat an apple after seven years of total toothlessness.
His 28 new teeth were described as the " Everest of Dentistry" there was even a special TV programme devoted to The Story of their nine-hour installation, and The Anxiety that the new teeth might wreck the distinctive rasp of what was left of the MacGowan voice.
And, along with The Teeth , were The Endless stories of the drinking.
In one biography, Written By his wife, Victoria, there was a description of why travelling was so difficult; the airlines frequently refused to allow him on the aircraft.
On one attempt to reach a gig with Bob Dylan , four planes came and went. And Shane himself was, at times, happy to add to the stories of " Shane the Drinker" recounting that he was given Guinness when he was five years old and downing whiskey at eight.
His departure from The Pogues was also, inevitably, preceded by an epic bender. It took place on a Japanese train where MacGowan discovered the joys of sake, and fell out of The Carriage knocking himself unconscious.
But while The Endless cycle of drinking and drying out clinics destroyed his relationship with The Band it did not seem to puncture the admiration or allure.
He was, He Said , wary of strangers but he never seemed short of famous friends. It was U2's Bono who lent him a Martello Tower To Live in when he parted from The Pogues and it was Sinead O'Connor who famously reported him to The Police when she despaired of his heroin habit.
He was not too happy About That but on his, there she was, along with Bono, Nick Cave , Johnny Depp and the Irish President, Michael D Higgins all paying honour.
Nobel laureates would have been jealous of the adulation.
At The End of the evening it felt like The Arrival of royalty as the musician was wheeled On Stage and everyone stood around staring at this ravaged, immobilised figure.
He had some years before broken his pelvis in a dancing accident. One can assume strong drink may have been involved.
It seems everyone who ever met him has A Story .
He shares a place in culture alongside Dylan Thomas , George Best and Keith Richards . It's a pity his drink, drugs and Near Death excesses have overshadowed The Music , because in an era of glossy, MTV friendly, over-produced, rah-rah skirted pop, he was the perfect counterpoint.
The 1980s really needed a peg toothed, dishevelled, drunken Irish punk poet in The Charts , albeit one who was actually born in Tunbridge Wells.
Surprised?
Once Again , the his story rather than The Music grabs your attention.
His birthplace, leafy, well-to-do Kent, was not a fact he often volunteered. It happened, He Said , only because His Mother had gone in to labour on Christmas Day while visiting family.
He was a proud Irishman. Nevertheless, while his Early Childhood was in Tipperary, his schooling was a prestigious English prep school, Holmewood House And Then a scholarship to public school, Westminster. He was soon expelled.
At 12 he was reading Dostoyevsky, at 17 he had his first spell in rehab after developing an addiction to Valium. The Cycle had begun.
He was first told he had Six Weeks To Live in the late 80s. MacGowan's survival defied medical science and became part of The Myth .
Remember the songsHis story is a page-turning catalogue of events both fascinating and frightful, but don't forget the songs.
And so, let's end with a MacGowan lyric, a little something for this moment of farewell, to what felt like a near immortal hell raiser, from The Pogues ' song The Sick Bed of Cuchulainn.
" They'll take you from this dump you're in and stick you in a box.
" Then they'll take you to Cloughprior and shove you in the ground.
" But you'll stick your head back out and shout, 'We'll have Another Round . '"
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