The Ballroom of Romance explained

The Ballroom of Romance
Director:Pat O'Connor
Cinematography:Nat Crosby
Editing:Maurice Healy
Producer:Kenith Trodd
Runtime:52 minutes
Country:Ireland
Language:English

The Ballroom of Romance is a British-Irish 1982 television film directed by Pat O'Connor based on a short story by William Trevor.[1] [2] It won the British Academy Television Award for Best Single Drama.

Plot

In County Leitrim in the 1950s, Bridie has been attending the local dance hall for years in the hope of finding a good husband who can help work her family's farm. Now surrounded by younger, prettier women at the dances, she comes to the realisation that all the good men of her generation have emigrated or have been spoken for, and her only remaining hope for marriage is with the alcoholic and unreliable Bowser Egan.

Cast

Actor Role
Bridie
Bowser Egan
Dano Ryan
Eyes Horgan
Tim Daly
Patty Byrne
Eenie Mackie
Mr. Dwyer

Background and production

The Ballroom of Romance was based on a short story by William Trevor set in County Leitrim, Ireland. The film was shot on location in Ballycroy, County Mayo as by 1982 the ballroom which William Trevor had originally written about had been modernized and no longer resembled a dance hall typical of 1950s Ireland.[3]

Almost all of the production personnel involved in the BBC/RTÉ co-production ‘Ballroom of Romance’ came from the BBC, along with Producer Kenith Trodd.

The banner seen at the dance, "Happy Homes for Ireland and for God," was taken from a real banner that O'Connor remembered from his youth.[4]

The RTÉ participation in the production consisted of Director Pat O’Connor and Editor Maurice Healy. The post-production (Editing) was carried out at RTÉ in Dublin, in early 1982.

Sound mixing was done at BBC Lime Grove Studios in Shepherd’s Bush, London. Rank Film Laboratories in Denham supplied the film prints for the television broadcasts.

Extras were from the locals from within the Ballycroy area.

Reception

The film is considered a classic. Bob Geldof described The Ballroom of Romance as his favourite Irish film, "full of that empty, sad despair and hopelessness that is in the character, as evidenced in drink, music, Catholicism, desperate pursuit of ‘the craic’ and dangerously overwrought politics."[5]

In 2012, it was the subject of a documentary on RTÉ Radio 1, A Backwards Glance At The Ballroom of Romance.[6]

In 2019, it was shown at the Irish Film Institute, Sunniva O’Flynn calling it "a perfectly observed evocation of the desolation and despair of Irish country life in the 1950s."[7]

In 2022, an exhibition of behind-the-scenes images from the film went on show at Linenhall Arts Centre, Castlebar.[8]

Scholarly analysis has noted that the film was produced at a time when Ireland was beginning to become a wealthy, industrialised nation, as European Economic Community membership brought factories and development. Luke Gibbons wrote that it "provided a focus for the reassuring belief that the fifties were no longer with us... Viewers could confront the harsh realities of poverty, emigration, sexual repression and the enforced domestication of women, secure in the knowledge that ‘The factory was coming to town.’"[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dancing back in time to the Ballroom of Romance. independent.
  2. Book: An Irish Literature Reader: Poetry, Prose, Drama, Second Edition . 9780815630463 . Murphy . Maureen O'Rourke . MacKillop . James . 10 July 2006 .
  3. Web site: Site of Ballroom of Romance up for sale in Mayo. BreakingNews.ie.
  4. Book: Dancing at Lughnasa . 9781859183618 . Dean . Joan Fitzpatrick . 2003 .
  5. Web site: Oscars 2023: What's the best Irish movie of all time? Bob Geldof, Joe Duffy, the Taoiseach, Pat Shortt and other famous faces tell us theirs. independent.
  6. Web site: A Backwards Glance At The Ballroom of Romance. RTE Radio. 14 September 2012 .
  7. Web site: THE BALLROOM OF ROMANCE (FROM THE VAULTS).
  8. Web site: Ballroom of Romance exhibition open at Mayo's Linenhall. Connaught Telegraph.