Silent Grace | |
---|---|
Directed by | Maeve Murphy |
Written by | Maeve Murphy |
Produced by | Gerry McColgan Deirdre McMahon |
Starring | Orla Brady Cathleen Bradley |
Cinematography | David Katznelson |
Edited by | Breege Rowley |
Release date |
|
Country | Ireland |
Language | English |
Silent Grace is a critically acclaimed feature film written and directed by Maeve Murphy and was made no. 38 in The Irish Times Best 50 Irish films ever made list on 2 May 2020. [1] It is about friendship and survival. A fictional story based on real events, covering the untold story of Republican women prisoners involvement in the 1980/81 Dirty Protest and first hunger strike. It is inspired by Nell McCafferty's The Armagh Women and based on the play/screenplay "Now and at the hour of our Death" that Murphy co-wrote with theatre company Trouble and Strife. Silent Grace stars Orla Brady, Cathleen Bradley, with Cara Seymour, Dawn Bradfield, Carol Scanlan, Conor Mullen, and Patrick Bergin. It received completion funds from The Irish Film Board.
Silent Grace was chosen as the UK entry for the Cannes Film Festival in 2002 but as it previously screened in the Cannes market in 2001, it could not be considered any further for competition. The film premiered at the Galway Film Fleadh 2001. It then was selected for the Taormina, Moscow, Foyle, Dinard and Hamptons International Film Festival USA (nominated for the Conflict and Resolution Award). A small cinema release followed in UK/Ireland via Guerilla Films in 2004. Silent Grace was critically acclaimed, and was awarded the Soka Art Award (Japan).
Silent Grace experienced a revival and wider audience in 2017 after 3 major articles in the Irish Times Culture section about the women and the film that had been written out of history. [2] On 24 June 2017, TV3 gave Silent Grace its nationwide broadcast premiere at primetime, in the Republic of Ireland, on Be3. TV3 said in IFTN "Silent Grace firmly puts women back in the 1980s narrative and makes compelling viewing". The Sunday Times made it one of the "Films of the Week" The Foyle Film Festival had a special 20th anniversary screening of the film with a Q&A with Maeve Murphy and Orla Brady chaired by James Flynn in November 2020. [3]
Aine a young tear away criminal is thrown into the same cell as Eileen, a high ranking Republican woman leader. At first at odds, Eileen helps save Aine's sanity. An unlikely friendship develops between them as Aine joins the protest and Eileen helps her to survive. In a remarkable turn around of events when Eileen embarks on a hunger strike, Aine risks all to help save her life...
Silent Grace was critically acclaimed. Michael Dwyer in the Irish Times [4] gave it 3 stars and said it was "unusually even-handed, well judged... rooted in its humanist agenda, surmounts the limits of its very low budget, to emerge as a work of sincerity and concern." Tara Brady wrote in Dublin's Hot Press, [5] where it was Critics Choice, "Maeve Murphy must be some kind of genius... brilliantly confounds expectations... compelling coming of age drama, wonderfully humane... Orla Brady is magnificent.... I urge you to seek it out". Larushka Ivan-Zadeh in the Metro in London gave it 4 stars "compelling." And it was in their Top Ten Films for 2 weeks. Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian [6] said it "bodes well for Murphy's future movies". Ronnie Schieb in Variety, [7] David Parkinson in The Radio Times , [8] The Evening Standard, Rich Cline in Shadows on the Wall, [9] Anton Bietel in Movie Gazette, Belfast Telegraph and The Huffington Post [10] reviewed it favourably.
However, as more films were made about the male hunger strikers, Silent Grace often ceased to be mentioned in the hunger strike film discourse. It wasn't until its 2017 revival when it was placed fully back on the map due to the promoting of the film from the Irish Times [11] [12] [13] and TV3. [14] Silent Grace was received very favourably, with a fresh review in The Irish Times Film Section and selected "Films of the Week" in The Sunday Times. Maeve Murphy and Patrick Bergin appeared on Breakfast TV on TV3 for the debut broadcast at prime time. [15]
Silent Grace was added to Hulu in 2015 [16]
In May 2020, The Irish Times listed Silent Grace as number 38 in their list of the 50 greatest Irish films of all time. [1] The IFI added Silent Grace to IFI International in perpetuity in June 2021. [17] The BFI added Silent Grace to their political film collection and Women with a Movie Camera Selection in 2022 [18]
Gabriel James Byrne is an Irish actor. He has received a Golden Globe Award as well as nominations for a Grammy Award, two Primetime Emmy Awards and two Tony Awards. Byrne was awarded the Irish Film and Television Academy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2018 and was listed at number 17 on The Irish Times list of Ireland's greatest film actors in 2020. The Guardian named him one of the best actors never to have received an Academy Award nomination.
Virgin Media One, also called Virgin One, is an Irish free-to-air television channel owned by Virgin Media Ireland, operated through its subsidiary Virgin Media Television. The channel launched on 20 September 1998, as TV Three, becoming Ireland's fourth television channel and the first commercial channel. It was known as TV3 from 2006, and then as Virgin Media One from 30 August 2018. The channel broadcasts a mix of Irish programming and acquired programming from ITV and others.
Events from the year 1981 in Ireland.
Virgin Media Two, also called Virgin Two, is an Irish free-to-air television channel operated by Virgin Media Television.
Orla Brady is an Irish actress born in Dublin. She has been nominated for several awards at the Irish Film & Television Academy. for which she won the 1999 Golden Nymph Best Actress Award for her work in A Love Divided. Other credits include Words Upon the Window Pane (1994), Out of the Blue (1995–1996), Noah's Ark (1997), Wuthering Heights (1998), The Magical Legend of the Leprechauns (1999), The Luzhin Defence (2000), Family Law (2000–2002), 'Silent Grace (2001), Proof (2004–2005), Revelations (2005), How About You (2007), and 32A (2007), Mistresses (2008–2010), The Deep (2010), Fringe (2010–2012), Sinbad (2012), Eternal Law (2012), Jo (2013), The Price of Desire (2015), Banished (2015), American Odyssey (2015), Into the Badlands (2015–2019), The Foreigner (2017), A Girl from Mogadishu (2019), Star Trek: Picard (2020–2023), The Other Me (2022), and Freud's Last Session (2023).
The Camogie All Star Awards are awarded each November to 15 players who have made outstanding contributions to the Irish stick and ball team sport of camogie in the 15 traditional positions on the field: goalkeeper, three full backs, three half-backs, two midfields, three half-forwards and three full-forwards. They were awarded for the first time in 2003 as an independent initiative sponsored by a hotel group and accorded official status by the Camogie Association in 2004.
The 6th Irish Film & Television Awards took place on 14 February 2009 at the Burlington Hotel in Dublin, and was hosted by Ryan Tubridy. It honoured Irish film and television released in 2008.
32A is a 2007 Irish drama film directed and written by Marian Quinn. It was shot principally in Dublin, with additional footage in Roscommon and Sligo.
Love/Hate is an Irish dramatic television series broadcast on RTÉ Television. The show aired between 2010 and 2014 on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player. The show depicts fictional characters in Dublin's criminal underworld.
The 8th Irish Film & Television Awards were held on 12 February 2011 in the Convention Centre, Dublin.
Beyond the Fire, Northern Irish screenwriter and film director Maeve Murphy's second feature, was an award winning film about love in the wake of sexual assault starring Cara Seymour and Scot Williams. The film was first selected and screened at New British Cinema season at the ICA. Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian wrote "its unironic belief in the power of love is attractive". It was directed and written by Maeve Murphy. David Parkinson in Empire On Line Festivals and Seasons wrote, "Murphy confirms the good impression she made with Silent Grace... the performances of Williams and Seymour seep raw emotion."
Maeve Murphy is an Irish director-screenwriter. In 2011, as director for her short film Sushi, she won the Sub-ti short film competition, co-judged by Venice Days, Venice Film Festival. In 2020, the Irish Times listed Murphy's Silent Grace as no 38 in their 50 Best Irish Films Ever Made.
The 11th Irish Film & Television Awards took place on Saturday 5 April 2014 in Dublin, honouring Irish film and television released in 2013. The nominations were announced on 27 February 2014. The Awards Ceremony took place at the DoubleTree by Hilton Burlington Road Dublin, and was broadcast on RTÉ One at 9.45pm. The Annual Irish Film & Television Awards are the highlight of Ireland’s entertainment and cultural calendar celebrating the very best of Irish screen talent across film and television. Guests in attendance included Michael Fassbender, Colin Farrell, Jamie Dornan, Steve Coogan, Will Forte, Jeremy Irons, Fionnula Flanagan, Brendan Gleeson, Neil Jordan, Amy Huberman, Colm Meaney, Jack Reynor, Killian Scott, Eva Birthistle, Victoria Smurfit and Outstanding Contribution Honorary Award Winner President Michael D Higgins.
Virgin Media Three, also called Virgin Three, is an Irish free-to-air television channel owned by Virgin Media Television.
Anton is a 2008 Irish action thriller film directed by Graham Cantwell. It stars Anthony Fox as Anton, a man drawn into the troubles along the Northern Ireland Border in 1972. The film also features Gerard McSorley, Laura Way, Vincent Fegan, Andy Smith and Ronan Wilmot.
The Price of Desire is a 2015 Belgian-Irish biographical drama film directed by Mary McGuckian.
Julie Ryan is an Irish film and TV producer from Cork, Ireland, known for her work on The Young Offenders (2016), I Never Cry (2020), and Finding You (2020).
Ruth McCabe is an Irish stage, screen and voice actress known from Clones, County Monaghan. She is known for starring as Kay Curley in Stephen Frears'The Snapper, Christy Brown's paramour Mary in My Left Foot, and Wyn Ryan, sister of Dr. Sam Ryan, in three seasons of Silent Witness. She originated the role of Kay McCoy, proprietor of McCoy's bar in RTÉ's soap opera Fair City.