Mary O'Malley (director) explained

Mary O'Malley
Birth Date:28 July 1918
Birth Place:Mallow, County Cork, Ireland
Death Place:Booterstown, County Dublin, Ireland
Nationality:Irish
Occupation:Theatre director

Mary O'Malley (née Hickey 28 July 1918 Mallow, County Cork – 22 April 2006 Booterstown, County Dublin) was an Irish theatre director and, with her husband Pearse, co-founder of Belfast's Lyric Players Theatre, now more usually known as the Lyric Theatre, Belfast.[1]

Life

On 14 September 1947, Mary married Armagh-born doctor Pearse O’Malley in University Church, Dublin and soon afterwards moved to Belfast.[2]

She was elected to Belfast Corporation in May 1952, as an Irish Labour Party councillor for the Smithfield ward.

O'Malley was appointed as an honorary member of the Ulster Society of Women Artists in 1958.[3] In 1959, she founded Threshold literary magazine.[1] [4] [5]

In March 1951, she started Belfast’s Lyric Players Theatre, initially at Ulsterville House[6] and, the following year, in the former stables at the back of her home in Derryvolgie Avenue, off the Malone Road.[1]

In October 1968 a new, purpose-built Lyric Theatre opened on Ridgeway Street.[7] [8] The date of the official opening was chosen by O'Malley as an homage to US President John F. Kennedy's Amherst address, 26 October 1963, in which he affirmed the role of the artist in society.[9]

In 1976, she retired to Wicklow.[2] Her autobiography, Never Shake Hands with the Devil, was published in 1990.

The Lyric Players Theatre archives are held at NUI Galway.[10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Adams . Bernard . 29 April 2006 . Mary O'Malley . . 3 May 2020.
  2. Web site: Mary O'Malley Changed the NI Stage. Henry, Lee. Culture Northern Ireland. 6 February 2008. 3 May 2020.
  3. News: 10 December 1958. Women artists to show own works. 8. Belfast Telegraph. 4 August 2021.
  4. Book: The Irish literary periodical, 1923–1958. Frank Shovlin . 978-0-19-926739-2 . 2003 . Oxford University Press.
  5. Web site: The Lyric Lives Heritage Project - Help us with our collection . 2009-05-23 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090220141711/http://www.lyrictheatre.co.uk/lyriclives/help_us_with_our_collection.php . 20 February 2009 .
  6. Book: Grene, Nicholas . Morash, Chris . The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish Theatre . . 2016.
  7. Book: Twentieth-century Irish drama . Christopher Murray . 978-0-7190-4157-0 . 1997 . Manchester University Press ND.
  8. Web site: The Lyric Lives Heritage Project - Quotes . 2009-05-23 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090220014322/http://www.lyrictheatre.co.uk/lyriclives/banked_memories.php . 2009-02-20 .
  9. News: The Lyric Theatre at 50: a cultural bridge in a divided city . Coyle . Jane . 29 October 2018 . . 3 May 2020.
  10. Web site: Finding Aid : Lyric Players Theatre collection, 1944-2001 : Irish Literary Collections . 2009-05-23 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100619235319/http://irishliterature.library.emory.edu/content.php?id=lyrictheatre_10198 . 2010-06-19 .