The reluctance of contemporary Irish playwright Brian Friel to speak with the press is legendary. Fortunately, his willingness on occasion to grant interviews has fortuitously coincided with the productions of his pivotal works, including the highly celebrated Dancing at Lughnasa , recently released as a motion picture starring Meryl Streep. In this comprehensive volume, theater critic and scholar Paul Delaney gathers an amazingly broad and consistently engaging range of Friel's conversations with interviewers on both sides of the Atlantic. Friel talks with disarming openness about his own life. He is also surprisingly candid in decrying a "dehydration of humanity" in Pinter and an "abnegation of life" in Beckett, in pondering the dangers of Irish writers who are "having to use a language that isn't our own," in revealing that his plays grow out of a willingness to "delve into a particular corner of yourself that's dark and uneasy," and in talking about the way that Dancing at Lughnasa manifests his sense of "a need for the pagan in life." Friel has preferred to talk primarily with Irish interviewers throughout much of his career, and many of his most important interviews were printed in rather obscure publications. Brian Friel in Conversation makes available interviews that were formally virtually inaccessible, as well as more recent interviews in places such as the New York Times, Vanity Fair , and Vogue . The book concludes with an extensive bibliography and discography of Friel interviews to aid further reading and research. Paul Delaney is Professor of English, Westmont College. He is the author of Tom The Moral Vision of the Major Plays and editor of Tom Stoppard in Conversation , a collection of interviews.
Although this book is within my possession for further reading to do with my English coursework (and those are usually utter crap), this is brilliant.
This is basically a collection of interviews from Friel, a chronology of his plays, what he thinks of them and some history about his life so far- all extremely interesting and makes for a good read whether you’re studying English at A Level or not.
Known for his reluctance to speak to the media, and reticence in general, it came as somewhat of a surprise for me to discover that, yes, there are interviews with the man himself and they are actually extremely informative and contain a lot of information on his famous and not so famous plays, along with the critical reactions to them, what Friel thought- or thinks- and many a critical opinion.