This article is from page 16 of the 2011-07-12 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 16 JPG
‘MISTERMAN’, one of the most important theatre pieces at this year’s Galway Arts Festival, was inspired by a tragedy which led to Clare man Brendan O’Donnell being convicted in 1996 of the murders of Imelda Riney, her three-year-old son Liam, and Galway priest Fr Joseph Walsh.
The playwright Enda Walsh revealed in an interview this week that he was inspired to write the drama after reading about O’Donnell and the three tragic deaths in Whitegate.
“I like characters who are always on the edge and there’s something about a one-man show; it feels very, very concentrated and it’s like cracking open someone’s skull and dropping the audience in there and going, ‘There you are now, what do you think of that?’” he said.
O’Donnell was arrested after a massive manhunt following the disappearance of 29-year-old Imelda, her three-year-old son, Liam and local priest Fr Joe Walsh. All three had been shot and O’Donnell was subsequently convicted of killing them. He subsequently died in prison.
Clare author Edna O’Brien came in for a storm of criticism when she wrote In The Forest , a book based on the murders.
Landmark Productions and Galway Arts Festival’s co-production of ‘Misterman’ is written and directed by Walsh and stars Cillian Murphy. Walsh described the reworked version of the one-man show as a psychological examination of a sympathetic yet unnerving character living on the periphery of a small town.