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OUTRAGE
The Civil War (1922ā23)
Dedicated to the memory
of my own
RóisĆn
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Outrage was first produced by Fishamble: The New Play Company, in partnership with Dublin Port Company, and Meath County Council, during St Patrickās Festival, as part of the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Mediaās Decade of Centenaries programme. It was commissioned by Meath County Council Arts Office, and ran in the Kells Courthouse and Pumphouse in Dublin Port from 17 Marchā3 April and then was streamed online.
| PJ | | Naoise Dunbar |
| ALICE | | CaitrĆona Ennis |
| NELL | | Mary Murray |
| Director | | Jim Culleton |
| Set Designer | | Maree Kearns |
| Costume Designer | | Catherine Fay |
| Lighting Designer | | Kevin Smith |
| Composer & Sound Designer | | Carl Kennedy |
| Hair & Make-up | | Val Sherlock |
| Dramaturg | | Gavin Kostick |
| Producer | | Eva Scanlan |
| Production Manager | | Eoin Kilkenny |
| Associate Producer | | Cally Shine |
| Stage Manager | | Sophie Flynn |
| Assistant Stage Manager | | SĆle Mahon |
| Wardrobe Supervisor | | Aoife OāRourke |
| Technical Venue Manager | | Laura Murphy |
| Chief LX | | Matt Burke |
| Production Coordinator | | Ronan Carey |
| Marketing | | Dafni Zarkadi and Freya Gillespie |
| FOH Coordinator | | Daniel Culleton |
| PR | | OāDoherty Communications |
| Music Advisor | | Gerardette Bailey |
| Original Song by | | Michael Brunnock |
| Set Construction | | Andrew Clancy |
| Cover Artwork by | | Leo Byrne and Publicis |
| Dublin | | |
| Filmed by | | Media Coop |
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Characters
ALICE
NELL
PJ
Note on Text
When lines are in bold there is an element of choral speaking.
Commisioned by Meath County Council Arts Office.
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ALICE/NELL/PJ. The sundering came slow at first.
PJ. In grumbling on street corners.
Voices raised in the heat of a public house.
NELL. Darts of accusation in jaded rebel eyes.
ALICE. But then you could see it take hold.
Take hold like a creeping contagion,
snaking through the countryside.
The sundering was like a blight rolling in on the mist.
A scourge
PJ.ā¦that whipped up anger, dissent and discord amongst towns, families, columns, councils, courts,
ALICE.ā¦lovers and friends.
PJ. Lines were being drawn now right through Irish households.
Irish villages.
Irish hearts.
NELL. It was civil war.
Civil warā¦
PJ. Despite our best efforts to avoid it.
NELL. Pat Finney.
PJ. Pat Finney.
ALICE. Pat Finney.
NELL. He came for me in the heat of it.
The fire of it.
The curse of it.
PJ. The curse of civil war.
NELL. The first night that I saw him was at the burning of Castle Saunderson, when we were all still of the one army, all still of the one mind. One of our blackened faces grinning in the moonlight.
ALICE/PJ. Finney.
NELL. He came and knelt right beside me to peer through the thorn, to thrill at the sight of the blaze taking hold. O and how we thrilled at our bonfire of the vanities. Our bonfire of arrogance, privilege, greed. How we thrilled to watch another colonial mansion burn. To hear the old house scream and crash and spit into the night sky. I remember I didnāt want to leave. I didnāt want to turn my back on that inferno⦠the glory of it, the justice.
Yes ā
ALICE. He was with you then.
NELL. He was with us then.
PJ. Finney.
NELL. Growing in confidence,
in violence.
He slipped his arm about my shoulder but I didnāt respond.
War makes heroes and demons, doesnāt it?
So how could war in Ireland be any different?
No matter what the priests say.
Or the Staters.
Or the books.
PJ/ALICE. Heroes and demons.
NELL. I was organising in County Cavan for Cumann na mBan when I got that chance to see Castle Saunderson burn. I was active throughout the Tan War. Active, if the truth be told, since first I got a job as a bakerās assistant on Talbot Street in 1902, when I came across the resplendent Maud Gonne and her womenās political movement. I was little more than a child at the time, thirteen, but joined up with Inghinidhe na hĆireann and that set me on my course through this world.
ALICE. Pat Finney.
NELL. Pat Finney.
ALICE. I had met him once in Dublin, Iām sure of it.
When I was delivering a despatch to a group of ministers. I can see still see him in my mindās eye, seated among them, all elbows and knees, sprung! I didnāt like the look of him, the way he ate me up entirely with his eyes but I could see that he was well thought of by the men, well respectedā¦
NELL. As one of our most efficient killers.
ALICE. At the heart of our war with Britain.
NELL. Finney.
PJ. I never knew him before that night.
Never met him in all my skirmishes, battles, ambushes, through the years. Not even when he was training recruits down home in Meath ā
ALICE. Finney.
PJ. ā though I had heard whispers of his⦠talents. His name was well known in the IRA even if he never courted the limelight.
And his name was feared.
NELL. One of them that had grand plans for himself for when the fight was over.
ALICE. The fight.
It was my sister Nell that first brought Irelandās fight into our home. Wrapped up carefully in her bakerās apron.
Hot on her floury hands.
And she found willing recruits in us siblings.
Much to our motherās bewilderment.
And much to our motherās cost.
My mother lost two of her sons to bullets on OāConnell Street.
Then there was Nell.
And then there was me.
PJ. Alice.
NELL. Alice.
ALICE. Drawn into the excitement of revolution like a moth to a flame.
PJ. Even though there were nearly ten years between them, Nell was more than a sister to Alice, she was her goddess, her compass. Not me. I think she would have followed Nell through to the gates of hell.
ALICE. I was writing for the Irish Bulletin in the department of Propaganda of Irelandās first DĆ”il when I met PJ.
PJ. The department being the illegal arm of our illegal government consisting of t...