Cries from Casement as His Bones Are Brought to Dublin
Cries from Casement as His Bones are Brought to Dublin is a radio play written by David Rudkin that examines the life and controversial legacy of Irish nationalist and British diplomat Roger Casement. It was first broadcast on BBC Radio 3 on 4 February 1973 and has been hailed as a masterpiece of radio drama.[1]
Development
[edit]The project began in 1966, a year after Roger Casement's body was repatriated to Ireland, as a commission for Rudkin to contribute to a radio series on historical rebels. It morphed into a play about Casement when he realized that the social and political climate of the country at the time bore strong parallels to that of Casement's era.[2][3][4] Rudkin utilized Casement's own diaries in the course of his research.
Regarding the fragmentary, collage-like style of the piece, Rudkin later said, "To mediate such a quantity and complexity of material, I found myself logically evolving a variety of techniques, all of them thematic – and very much to do with radio broadcasting. (Looking at it now, I think it’s rather like a radio Citizen Kane.)"[5]
Broadcast
[edit]The BBC broadcast of the play, on 4 February 1973, was produced by John Tydeman and starred Norman Rodway as Roger Casement. Other members of the cast include: Joan Bakewell, Sean Barrett, Kate Binchy, Michael Deacon, William Eedle, Kevin Flood, Martin Friend, Heather Gibson, David Gooderson, Sheila Grant, Michael N. Harbour, John Hollis, Fraser Kerr, Rolf Lefebure, Peggy Marshall, Meryl O'Keefe, Irene Prador, David Rudkin, Henry Stamper, Eva Stuart, John Tusa, David Valla, Mary Wimbush, and Joy Worth.
Critical Reception
[edit]Rudkin's play drew parallels between the political context of Casement's life and times with contemporary issues in 1973, including themes exploring the legacies of nationalism and violence.[6] Radio critic Gillian Reynolds praised the broadcast as a major success, with an innovative style that matched the complexity of the subject matter. "Through Norman Rodway's magnificent central performance as Casement," wrote Reynolds, "both Mr Rudkin and his producer John Tydeman found the means of bringing the irony, the sensuality, the political passion together in a work of totally admirable richness and force."[7]
"One of the great masterpieces of radio drama writing and directing," according to radio drama producer Alan Beck, who also noted its daring subject matter for the time, including political violence and frank depictions of homosexuality.[8]
The Sunday Telegraph observed that, according to scholars, the play's content was not always historically accurate, but nonetheless praised the writing, direction and performances to conclude that the broadcast was "a tour de force."[9] Writer Brian Inglis criticized the work for a lack of accuracy, particularly with respect to Casement's homosexuality and intersection with his growing natioanlism. Biographer B. L. Reid was more sympathetic to Rudkin's postulate. Rudkin subsequently replied to Inglis with a lengthy rebuttal in Encounter, arguing that his work, albeit with poetic liberties, more accurately portrayed the inner life of the man and his motivations.[10] Richard Mayne expressed a similar sentiment, calling the play "near-fiction" but acknowledging it as compelling drama.[11] Poet Anthony Thwaite writing for The Listener praised it as "a rich, powerful, thickly plotted but always clear piece of writing...imaginative radio at its best," singling out Rodway's performance and the subtly of Tydeman's production aesthetic.[12] The Sunday Times described it as "monumental", pointing out that the intention of the piece was clearly impressionistic and not intended to be wrote history..."a long, moving radio poem."[13] Paul Ferris writing for The Observer, expressed skepticism at the connection drawn between Casement's sexual orientation and his nationalism, but nonetheless described it as "a powerful text".[14]
Professor David Ian Rabey has described the play as "astonishing" and "regrettably overlooked".[15]
In Sight Unseen, a study of radio drama's medium specificity, Elissa S. Guralnick cites the play as a prime example of the medium's ability to use its adjacency to documentary and journalistic forms to achieve a dramatic intent. Radio also allowed Rudkin to maintain the "essential interiority" of Casement's diaries, bringing to life the character's internal thoughts and feelings and sharing them with the audience but not with other characters.[16]
Portions of the broadcast's sound design was incorporated into The Casement Project, a dance piece lead by Fearghus Ó Conchúir and inspired in part by the play. It was commissioned by the Arts Council of Ireland in 2016.[17][18]
Stage adaptation
[edit]A stage version of the play was performed by the Royal Shakespeare Company later that same year. It received negative reviews. "The potted history of Ireland for 3,000 years is pantomimed with custard-pie subtleties and clownish acrobatics that can raise no laughs," said writer Maeve Binchy.[19][20][21] Another stage production debuted at the Dublin Theatre Festival in 1975. It ran a year later at Project Arts Theatre, where Irish Times writer Kane Archer found it to be a powerful story undermined by its inherent radio-specific construction.[22][23]
In an interview in 2015, Rudkin distanced himself from attempts to produce it for the stage. He characterized the theatre production as "... misconceived, and does not merit discussion."[24]
References
[edit]- ^ "Cries from Casement". BBC. 18 September 2017. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
- ^ Rudkin, David (1973). Cries from Casement as His Bones are Brought to Dublin. London: BBC. ISBN 0-563-12644-2
- ^ Rudkin, David. "Cries from Casement as his Bones are Brought to Dublin". davidrudkin.com. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
- ^ Bolfarine, Mariana (1 April 2016). "From Fragments to a Whole: Homosexuality and Partition in Cries from Casement as his Bones are Brought to Dublin, by David Rudkin". University of North Dakota. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
- ^ Bolfarine, Mariana (November 2015). "Interview with David Rudkin". ABEI Journal. 17: 61.
- ^ Garden, Alison (2020). The literary afterlives of Roger Casement, 1899-2016. Liverpool: Liverpool university press. p. 115. ISBN 9781789621815. Retrieved 16 August 2024.
- ^ Reynolds, Gillian (6 February 1973). "Cries from Casement on Radio 3". The Guardian.
- ^ Beck, Alan (2006). "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away: Gay Radio, Past and Present". More Than a Music Box Radio Cultures and Communities in a Multi-media World: 139. ISBN 978-1-84545-046-5. Retrieved 16 August 2024.
- ^ Woodforde, John (11 February 1973). "Sound of history". Sunday Telegraph.
- ^ Rudkin, David (August 1973). "The Chameleon & the Kilt: The Complexities of Roger Casement". Encounter.
- ^ "Out of the Air: Craven A". The Listener. 6 September 1973.
- ^ Thwaite, Anthony (8 February 1973). "Radio: Casement's Ghost". The Listener.
- ^ Rundall, Jeremy (11 February 1973). "Casement's Case". The Sunday Times.
- ^ Ferris, Paul (11 February 1973). "Casement Reopened". The Observer.
- ^ Rabey, David Ian (29 January 1998). David Rudkin: Sacred Disobedience : an Expository Study of His Drama 1959-96. Routledge. pp. 49–53. ISBN 978-9057021268.
- ^ Guralnick, Elissa S. (1996). Sight Unseen: Beckett, Pinter, Stoppard, and Other Contemporary Dramatists on Radio. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
- ^ Ó Conchúir, Fearghus. "Coming Full Circle". The Casement Project. Retrieved 20 August 2024.
- ^ "The Casement Project". Irish Arts Council. Retrieved 20 August 2024.
- ^ Binchy, MaeveC (3 October 1973). "Casement play gradually turns into farce". The Irish Times.
- ^ Marcus, Frank (7 October 1973). "Being politick". Sunday Telegraph.
- ^ Barber, John (5 October 1973). "Macabre torrents of Irish history". Daily Telegraph.
- ^ Archer, Kane (5 October 1976). ""Cries from Casement" at the Project Arts Centre". The Irish Times.
- ^ "Record seat occupancy in 1975 theatre festival". The Irish Times. 17 July 1976.
- ^ Bolfarine, Mariana (November 2015). "Interview with David Rudkin". ABEI Journal. 17: 61.