Mial Pagan Explained

Michael Gerard Pagan (born 28 May 1956, Belfast), who writes under the names Mial Pagan and Michael McDonnell, is a British author and playwright.[1]

Early life and education

Michael Gerard Pagan was born 28 May 1956 in Belfast.

He graduated from St. MacNissi's College, Garron Tower in 1974. He then moved to England and studied for a degree in drama, English Literature, and French at Manchester University, graduating in 1980. In 1997, he studied for an Master of Business Administration in management and technology at the Open University.

Career

Theatre

After graduating from university in 1980, he moved to London where he appeared in a number of productions, including in Eugène Ionesco's Rhinoceros' at the Croydon Warehouse Theatre. He was a member of the Company of Ten theatrical group and appeared with them in Translations by Brian Friel, A Streetcar Named Desire, and God Only Knows by Hugh Whitemore.[1] He worked as a drama therapist in hospitals and day centres around London.

Pagan later began writing plays. He wrote the screenplay for the film Paradise Place (2013), a comedy about a soldier returning from duty in Afghanistan who finds that the street where he lived no longer exists.[2] [3] His play The Old Fighting Cocks was recorded by The Company of Ten in association with Radio Verulam in 2018. It tells the story of local soldiers joining up to fight in the First World War.[4]

Pagan's plays have been produced at the Abbey Theatre, St Albans:[1] Other People's Lives (2010),[5] Dancehall Sweethearts (2017),[6] and National Trust (2021).[7]

Information technology

In 1988, Pagan started working in information technology (IT) for KPOS Computer Systems in Brentford. From 1990, he worked in IT management for various companies: over three years at Zenith Media and over five years at Carat UK. He worked for advertising agencies writing articles for business magazines. In 2002, he set up The Pagan Consultancy. He wrote business books in the Teach Yourself series for Hodder Education.

Novelist

Pagan's novel The Agency, formerly called Eat More Bloody Meat Y'Bastards!, is a satire based on his experience of office life in the advertising industry.

Using the pen name Michael McDonnell, Pagan wrote the Dermot O'Hara Mysteries, detective stories set in Kenmare, County Kerry.

Since 2008 he has worked as a freelance writer at the publisher Hodder and Stoughton.

Personal life

In 1987, Pagan married English author and human rights activist Siobhan Dowd (1960–2007) in Lambeth;[8] they separated in the early 1990s. In 1996, he married Alison McNaught (born 1961, Wirral) at Aylesbury Vale. He has lived in St Albans, Hertfordshire since 1997.

Publications

As Mial Pagan

As Michael McDonnell

The Dermot O'Hara Mysteries

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2017 . Mial Pagan . https://web.archive.org/web/20221208115851/https://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsP/pagan-mial.php . 8 December 2022 . Doollee.com.
  2. Web site: Moorhead . Rosy . 6 February 2013 . St Albans writer Mial Pagan needs your help to make his movie, Paradise Place . 23 December 2023 . St Albans & Harpenden Review.
  3. News: September 2013 . Paradise found as St Albans film gets green light . St Albans & Harpenden Review.
  4. Web site: Pagan . Mial . 14 April 2018 . The Old Fighting Cocks . 22 December 2023 . Abbey Theatre.
  5. Web site: 2010 . Festival of New Playwriting . https://web.archive.org/web/20110903031829/http://www.abbeytheatre2.org.uk/2010-11/recent_productions.php . 3 September 2011 . Abbey Theatre.
  6. Web site: Lacey-Davidson . Mattie . 20 July 2017 . New play Dancehall Sweethearts by Mial Pagan inspired by memories of The Troubles in Northern Ireland at The Abbey Theatre in Holywell Hill in St Albans . St Albans & Harpenden Review.
  7. Web site: 2021 . National Trust . 22 December 2023 . Abbey Theatre.
  8. News: Fryer . Jonathan . 24 August 2007 . Obituary Siobhan Dowd . . 21 December 2023.