John Connors to host Craic Music Fest in New York this month

Actor John Connors has emerged as one of the most vital – and sometimes controversial – voices in Irish cinema. Agree or disagree with him, there’s no doubting his gift as a screen star.

Connors is back in New York next month at the 25 Craic Fest with his new film “The Black Guelph,” about how Ireland deals – and fails to deal – with its past.

But Connors will also be on site this month to MC the Craic Music Fest on February 24 at Rockwood Music Hall.

First, though, let’s start with his film: “The Black Guelph” is his hard-hitting drama about the way generations can unwittingly hand on trauma – and consequences – to the ones that follow them, but it is also a black mirror reflection of the kind of country that Ireland actually is. 

“The Black Guelph were a group of people in ancient Rome that wanted to uphold the power of the Pope, they were pope loyalists, and anybody went against them, The Black Guelph either massacred or banished them,” Connors tells IrishCentral, with the kind of follow the dots speaking style that can infuriate his critics.

“What we’re essentially saying,” he continues, “is that the Irish state and successive governments are The Black Guelph, because they protected the power of the church’s interests over time.” 

The film is set in the modern day, he continues. “We follow a young man called Carl who has drug addiction problems and who is selling drugs, and you see him as a bit of a thug, a bit of a gangster.”

Soon we settle into the assumption we watching a film about his struggles but then his father comes into the situation, the father who once abandoned him, and we get into his father’s story too. 

“Eventually audiences figure out that we’re actually watching a film about intergenerational trauma, but specifically about the effects of intergenerational clerical abuse, about how all that trauma gets passed on.”

It’s heavy subject matter, Connors is the first to admit. “But there has never been an Irish film that has carefully examined the intergenerational trauma arising from clerical abuse. It’s something we’ve avoided. Yet it’s such a massive problem in Ireland and I think it’s a big reason why we have so much drug addiction, alcohol addiction and so on. These are just the tools that people use to repress their emotions rather than to express themselves.” 

To be clear, did you say that the church colluded with the government to look after its interests, I ask? Is that what you believe?

“Absolutely and literally. Of course. That’s clearly what happened. And it was about protecting the institutions against the interests of the people. The Irish state has never acted in the interest of the people. Or at least not all the people. And I could still say that today,” he continues. 

“Instead it has always acted in the interests of the powerful elites, who are all attached to the big institutions. We are a small country. And the people who run the institutions are all friends that are all in the one club. And you know, we the ordinary people also definitely colluded with the church.”

Breakout Irish star Graham Early in The Black Guelph.

Recall that the last Magdalene Laundry in Sean McDermott Street was still open in Dublin until 1996, Connors reminds me. “And since then, there hasn’t been real justice. The redress system was set up in order to address the problems and grievances of abuse survivors, the physical abuse, the emotional abuse, and people were supposed to lodge a a claim and get money, but what would actually happen is that they’d have to go on the witness stand and be lambasted by the state’s solicitors and by Vatican employed barristers, or a combination of both.”

Lawyers would say the most unbelievably ugly things in the church’s defense, Connors said. “A disgusting thing is that they call the victims liars, and there are loads of public transcripts for this. A lot of people who went through that redress board system after taking the stand said they felt that they betrayed themselves and betrayed the rest of the survivors. And, you know, it was reliving the trauma for them all again and opening up all the wounds.” 

Connors’s new film goes into that system in what he calls “a very important and pivotal way” to show what it was all about “and how corrupt – and I would go as far as saying evil – that system was set up, and the redress board system, because it has to be been one of the worst things they did.”

It’s not all trauma and outrage onscreen, Connors adds. “There are so many beautiful things about being Irish. I think we’re great storytellers and great rogues. But that’s the veneer of Ireland, the storytelling and the charisma. Behind that that we repress so much, and there’s a real darkness to the place, and we all became experts in repression.”

He adds: “You know they say what isn’t said becomes a symptom. And that symptom can become a disease, and that disease can kill. I think what happened with the Catholic Church is a perfect example of that symptom. Some people didn’t want to talk and some people were silenced.”

“We don’t want to talk about the trauma, we don’t want to talk about what happened, we want to act like this was all ancient history, in prehistoric times. Because we’re still we’re still seeing the ramifications of all this trauma, all this unresolved trauma, we continue to see it. It’s getting passed down every generation and if you don’t resolve it there will be generations ahead that don’t even know where it came from.”

John Connors takes on the legacy of trauma in The Black Guelph

John Connors takes on the legacy of trauma in The Black Guelph

You can tell he is only getting started with his desire to hold the mirror up to his country. You can tell his screening and talkback at the Craic Fest will be a sell-out on the night. 

Meanwhile, he is also going to host the Craic Fest concert, which this year will be an exciting blend of music and standup. Previously he has performed his one-man show “Ireland’s Call” here, but this night will see his unscripted but always engaging stage presence emerge.

“I’ve been over five or six times now and I suppose I’m a part of the Craic Fest history. Terence Mulligan, the festival director, and I are now friends and I believe he is concerned for survival of Irish culture in America, which I think is really important. 

“I think the festival has influenced American culture in a very positive way, and probably shows the best of Irish and maybe left behind some of the bad stuff. So yeah, it’s the festivals 25 year anniversary and he asked me to come over and emcee the event. Obviously, there’s a great lineup of spoken word, people in comedy and songs so I said, why not? It’s a going to be a great festival!”

Slated to appear at the Craic Fest concert are comedians Siobhan Fallon, Katie Boyle, and Craig Geraghty alongside musician Brendan O’Shea and surprise guests!

The Craic Music Fest concert will be held at Rockwood Music Hall on February 24 at 7:00 pm. You can book your tickets online here. For more information, visit TheCraicFest.com



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Irish culture is our superpower and we’re proving it

Irish culture is our superpower. It’s what most put us on the map worldwide and it’s time we fully understood and celebrated it.

It takes about 100 years for a colonized country to finally get its groove back. If that country is Ireland, that is.

The nation’s artists have never been more productive, various in their outlooks, or confident in their message and its global reach. 

It’s a profound change from the insular, uncertain, approval-seeking nation we were in the 1980s and before. Now, Irish artists have gained a new confidence about who they are, where they come from, and where they’re going, a confidence that marks a major departure from most of the last century. Is it a postcolonial benefit? Who knows, but it’s here.

Carrie Crowley and Catherine Clinch in The Quiet Girl (An Cailin Ciuin)

So let’s start with Irish films. My pick for Irish film of the year – and the decade, in fact – is “The Quiet Girl” (“An Cailín Ciúin.”) Adapted by director Colm Bairéad from the award-winning short story “Foster” by Claire Keegan, it’s one of the most simple and affecting films about Irish life that I have ever seen committed to film. 

If Irish filmmaking exists on a continuum with “Darby O’Gill and The Little People” on one end and “The Banshees of Inisherin” somewhere in the middle, then “The Quiet Girl” (“An Cailín Ciúin”) stands at the opposite end, in a place of stark realism and quiet poetry. In the place of art, in other words. 

Bairéad’s accomplishment is to introduce a much-needed realism to the screen depictions of how we actually live and love. With his deep background in documentary filmmaking, he has developed an aversion to any kind of cheap sentiment or theatrical flourish, meaning he instead delivers films where the smallest change can have the force of an avalanche. 

That’s certainly the case in “The Quiet Girl” (“An Cailín Ciúin”) which is my most enthusiastic Oscar pick for 2023. It simply stands head and shoulders above every other Irish or Irish adjacent film that I’ve seen this year, featuring flawless turns from newcomer Catherine Clinch and equally memorable performances from co-stars Carrie Crowley and Joan Sheehy.

Carrie Crowley and Catherine Clinch in The Quiet Girl (An Cailin Ciuin)

Carrie Crowley and Catherine Clinch in The Quiet Girl (An Cailin Ciuin)

Like the story of Cinderella, “The Quiet Girl” (“An Cailín Ciúin”) is about the devastation of lovelessness in childhood. It’s set in 1981 in rural Ireland and Cáit (gifted newcomer Catherine Clinch) is a neglected young girl who’s struggling amid her dysfunctional family, in a chaotic house that’s full of conflict. 

Pregnant again and unable to face a house full of young mouths to feed, her exhausted mother hits on the idea of sending Cáit, the least important one, away for the summer to stay with her sister and her husband in a house that’s many miles away from all Cáit has ever known.

But here’s where the story takes an unexpected turn. In the care of her aunt Eibhlin she slowly comes to life and this Cinderella-like transformation from kitchen drudge to confident young girl is a joy to watch.

“All you needed was a little minding,” her aunt tells her, pleased with her progress, as “The Quiet Girl” (“An Cailín Ciúin”) reminds us that love is all she – or any of us – have ever needed.

Meanwhile, 2022 was actor Paul Mescal’s breakthrough year as a screen actor of international stature in two perfectly made, but wildly different vehicles. First came “God’s Creatures,” with the 26-year-old playing a prodigal son who dramatically returns to his village after years abroad just as once dramatically vanished. 

Set in a coastal town in Co Sligo, the film is a pitch-perfect portrait of a haunted Irish rural community and a mother (Emily Watson) who spends far too much of her time trying to persuade herself she can’t see what’s in front of her face.

Watson is captivating as Aileen O’Hara, the hard-working wife and mother who is so glad her prodigal son Brian (Mescal) has come back from a sojourn in Australia that she’s determined to ask no hard questions like where he was, why he left, how he supported himself or why he has suddenly returned?

Paul Mescal and Emily Watson in God's Creatures

Paul Mescal and Emily Watson in God’s Creatures

As Brian, the confident but strangely distant son whose sudden presence after years away is a puzzle to many, Mescal’s character is increasingly unsettling, hinting at violence just beneath the surface. 

I found “God’s Creatures” had the slow burn of a good horror film, where nothing is ever quite what it seems and people’s wishful thinking – Watson’s in particular – is rarely rewarded. 

Men are everywhere in this perfectly realized film but the story really belongs to women, who are usually the last to realize they don’t really own anything in the town, including their homes, their independence, or their own destinies.

Paul Mescal and Frankie Corio in Aftersun

Paul Mescal and Frankie Corio in Aftersun

Mescal’s other big turn this year was in “Aftersun,” a dazzling, moving, and unforgettable picture of a moment in time in the early 2000s that has haunted the memory of his now grown-up daughter.

A film that reminds you of the power and possibility of the medium itself, the unforgettable new film has Mescal as a haunted young father in what may well – and in my opinion are – his final days on earth.

Mescal plays Calum, a 31-year-old Scottish father who has broken up with his former partner but still takes his daughter Sophie on a short summer holiday to Turkey to prove to her – and probably himself – that he’s still a good man, not a deadbeat dad.

We see him tool about the downmarket tourist resort, participate in some holiday activities with Sophie, and interestingly we also see him flirt with a young male diving instructor (is he bisexual, is that why the relationship with his partner ended?)

There is a rich darkness haunting the edge of the screen in this powerful new film, just as there is in life, and that unsettling awareness makes “Aftersun” a particularly satisfying journey. 

In theatre, newcomer Asher Muldoon, son of the poet Paul Muldoon, had a palpable hit with his musical version of “The Butcher Boy” (based on the Pat McCabe classic). What made Muldoon’s musical so interesting is that it put the most marginal person in an Irish town center stage, giving him a spotlight, a song, and a point of view and then letting him quite literally rip and good lord was it thrilling. 

People talk about the surreal qualities of McCabe’s original story, often missing the heartache at its core. But McCabe and Muldoon keep a gimlet eye on the hard truths that propel the story and when they were revealed they were shattering, making this a particularly satisfying night at the theatre.

Finally, as the testament of a spirit, they don’t come much purer than Gabrial Byrne’s impressively accomplished turn on Broadway in his superb show “Walking With Ghosts.

The most private of men, who knew that he could Brian Freil a run for his money in this by turns hilarious and harrowing performance based on his own bestselling memoir.

Byrne’s show offered one of the richest meditations on Irish life I have seen on a stage in years, surpassing many of our own current crop of playwrights whose job he successfully gunned for here, in a story I carried with me long after the lights came up.



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