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Oscar Wilde

Pacino Does Wilde

By Patricia Danaher, Contributor
April / May 2012

March 13, 2012 by Leave a Comment

The American actor was in Ireland to pick up an award for his documentary on Oscar Wilde’s Salomé. Al Pacino was back in Ireland in February for a very fond return visit and to be presented with a Volta Lifetime Achievement award by President Michael D. Higgins. Guest of honor at the 10th Jameson Dublin International Film Festival, he also screened his documentary Wilde … [Read more...] about Pacino Does Wilde

Oscar Wilde on Show

By Cahir O'Doherty, Contributor
June / July 2009

June 2, 2009 by Leave a Comment

An exhibition at the Morgan Library attracts Oscar Wilde enthusiasts. Expensively dressed, impeccably mannered and gifted with a voice so beguiling his contemporaries marveled at him, Oscar (Fingal O’Flaherty Wills) Wilde was also one of the wittiest men of his age. Even today, just to hear his name is to anticipate delight. That’s why his cult, which began in his own … [Read more...] about Oscar Wilde on Show

A Wilde Hotel in London

By Patricia Harty, Editor-in-Chief
August / September 2008

August 1, 2008 by Leave a Comment

The Irish are travel birds. There’s probably not a spot on the globe where they haven’t touched down and built a nest or two. And finding corners of Ireland even in the most obscure places is always a fun travel thing to do. On a trip to London late last year, I stayed at the Cadogan Hotel, which proved the perfect spot for an Irish-tinged weekend (I was in London to attend … [Read more...] about A Wilde Hotel in London

The Importance of Being Oscar’s Mother

By Irish America Staff
December / January 2005

December 1, 2004 by 1 Comment

Appearing before an Irish-American group in St. Paul, Minnesota on St. Patrick's Day, 1882, Oscar Wilde was introduced not as a rising literary star, but as "the son of one of Ireland's noblest daughters -- of a daughter who in the troublous times of 1848 by the works of her pen and her noble example did much to keep the fire of patriotism burning brightly." Oscar may have been … [Read more...] about The Importance of Being Oscar’s Mother

Irish Director Honors Wilde

By Irish America Staff
December / January 2005

December 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

"Society often forgives the criminal; it never forgives the dreamer," Wilde once remarked. One hundred and fifty years after his birth, Wilde, dreamer or no, is not only forgiven but lionized. To mark the anniversary, Irish director Bill Hughes has assembled an array of stars for a film project in association with Art for Amnesty and Amnesty International. The program, … [Read more...] about Irish Director Honors Wilde

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April 16, 1871

On April 16, 1871, celebrated Irish playwright John Millington Synge was born in Rathfarnam, Co. Dublin. Born into an upper class Protestant family, Synge would take his own path, nurturing his fascination with the Catholic peasant class of rural Ireland with frequent trips to Wicklow, theWest of Ireland and the Aran Islands. Recording everything he noticed, Synge became one of the first and most thorough chroniclers of country life and language in Ireland, most notably in his still-famous plays, which include The Playboy of the Western World, Riders to the Sea and Deirdre of the Sorrows. With W.B Yeats and Lady Gregory he founded the Abbey, Ireland’s first national theater. Troubled by health problems for much of his life, Synge died young, in 1909 at age 37, from Hodgkins disease.

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