Saluting a female theatrical legend - preview
Quakers once regarded the theatre as at best frivolous and at worst immoral. Yet it was a woman of Quaker stock who made an immense impact on both Irish and English theatre, writes Stephen Taylor
The fortune that Annie Horniman’s family made from tea enabled her to become a theatrical impresario when such a role for a woman was unheard of It was her funds that brought Dublin’s famous Abbey Theatre into being, working closely with the poet WB Yeats and another remarkable woman, known as Lady Gregory The Abbey’s opening in 1904 gave a platform for the emerging talents of Sean O’Casey, JM Synge, Padraic Colum and Lady Gregory herself A historian of the Irish theatre has pointed out that it was these two exceptional women who largely shaped its future
Stephen Taylor
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News round-up
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David Penn The long roots of Georgia’s conflict
Oliver Robertson Inside and out: putting faith into practice
John Nicholls Comment
Harry Albright & David Birmingham Letters
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Ruth Jesson-Smith and Will Rowland, clerks Convergent Friends: remixing tradition and imagination
C Wess Daniels Climate change, hope and the human condition
Greta McGough Saluting a female theatrical legend
Stephen Taylor Inner and world peace
Alex Melville-Mason Living adventurously – of no fixed abode
Jo Scott
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