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Draft:Honor Molloy

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Honor Molloy
Honor Molloy in Tribeca, c. 2015
Honor Molloy in Tribeca, c. 2015
BornDublin, Ireland
OccupationPlaywright, novelist
NationalityIrish, American
Alma materBrown University,
New York University
Notable worksCrackskull Row,
Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage
Notable awards

Honor Molloy (born May 22, 1961) also known as Honour Kane,[1] is an Irish-American playwright and novelist. Her plays include The New York Times Critic’s Pick, Crackskull Row (Irish Repertory Theatre), In Pigeon House (Irish Theatre of Chicago), Madame Killer (Clubbed Thumb Summerworks), Monument (Actors Theatre of Louisville, Humana Festival), Rehearsing the Granda (The Public Theater), Sticky n Juicy on da Senate Floor (The Public Theater), and Maiden Voyages (New Georges).[2][3]

A novel by Molloy, Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage, was published by Simon & Schuster Audio in 2012.[4] Throughout her career, she has been in receipt of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage,[5] and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.[6]

Biography

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Early life

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Molloy was born in Dublin, Ireland, where she developed an early love for theatre.[5] Her father, John Molloy, was an actor and playwright at the Abbey Theatre,[7] and her mother Yvonne Molloy was a writer and director for RTÉ and BBC Radio.[8] In a 2017 interview with the Irish Repertory Theatre, Molloy recalled that,

"In the 1950s and 60s, my mother and father worked together in Dublin theaters – from Madame Cogley's Pocket Theatre to The Pike, to The Gaiety, to The Gate. I was in and out of those theaters since I could walk – backstage, in the dressing rooms, waggling my shoes while waiting in the velvet seats for the play to begin. Actors and producers, writers and musicians dropped by our house when they were in the neighborhood. There was no separation between theatre and life. My big sister Siobhán told me stories – many of them Irish myths. So when I come up with the notion for a new play that's set in Ireland – immediately there are ghosts, and mystery, and shifting theatrical worlds."[9]

As a child Molloy appeared as Noeleen Feeney, the daughter of her father's character Oliver Feeney, on the RTÉ drama serial Tolka Row. Set in a fictional housing estate on the northside of Dublin, the drama ran for five series from 1964-1968.[10]

Molloy later immigrated to Pennsylvania with her mother.[11]

Education

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Molloy attended NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, where she obtained a BFA in Drama. She later attended Brown University, where she studied under the playwright Paula Vogel and received an MFA in Creative Writing.[11]

Career

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Susan Hefner & Company

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From 1990 to 1994, Molloy authored original text for experimental dance pieces by Susan Hefner & Company, including "Attempted Flight" at Judson Memorial Church,[12] "Marrow Clamor" at One Dream Theater TriBeCa,[13] "Eve of Consumption" at Theatre Row,[14] and "Unruly Graces" at Dia Chelsea.[15] In reviewing the latter piece for The New York Times, Jennifer Dunning noted

""Unruly Graces" consisted of 11 scenes that flowed together to make a single, eveninglong piece. Honor Molloy, who wrote the text, touched on such topics as imperialism, the smugness of the ruling class, 19th-century women's emancipation and the 1963 Birmingham, Ala., church bombing in which four children were killed... Dance and verse came together in one searing moment in "Lifting as She Climb" that communicated the force of the church explosion and of the flight of one girl's body upward. The simplicity and plain-spokenness of Ms. Molloy's dialogue made a touching portrait of a fierce yet timid Angelina Grimké, a 19th-century abolitionist who was the first woman to address the Massachusetts State Legislature."[15]

Susan Hefner & Company have continued to perform versions of these pieces and others around the world.[16]

Maiden Voyages

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Maiden Voyages was first developed at London's Royal Court Theatre in 1990 via a New York Foundation for the Arts Playwriting Fellowship.[5] Subsequently, the play was selected for further development by the Boston Women in Theatre Festival. Maiden Voyages was later produced by New Georges at Theatre Row in 1993. The production, which was initially directed by Jessica Bauman, depicts an Irish midwife working in a Dublin maternity ward.[17] In a 2011 interview with The New York Foundation for the Arts, Molloy said

"Maiden Voyages, my first full-length play, starts with a woman arriving at a maternity hospital with a dead fetus inside her. She's been badly beaten by her husband. Many of my plays repeat some version of this scene".[5]

Maiden Voyages was subsequently staged at the Liberty Hall Theatre in Dublin, Ireland.[18]

Rehearsing the Granda

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Rehearsing the Granda premiered at The Public Theater as part of JoAnne Akalaitis' "Special Projects Series," running February 4th-19th, 1992. The production was directed by Julie Nichols. Rehearsing the Granda was subsequently included in The Best Plays Theater Yearbook of 1991-1992.[19]

Sticky and Juicy on da Senate Floor

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Sticky and Juicy on da Senate Floor premiered at The Public Theater as part of JoAnne Akalaitis' "Special Projects Series," running June 2nd - 17th, 1992. The production was directed by Jimbo Flynn, and featured Molloy and Donna Villella in the titular roles. Sticky and Juicy on da Senate Floor was subsequently included in The Best Plays Theater Yearbook of 1991-1992.[20]

Monument

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Monument premiered at the Actors Theatre of Louisville as part of the 26th annual Humana Festival of New American Plays, which ran from March 3rd - April 13th, 2002. The one-act tells the story of two emergency telephone operators as they navigate a terrifying series of calls on Tuesday morning, September 11, 2001. In a review from Booklist, Jack Helbig noted

"Louisville's annual Humana Festival is famous as a showcase for new plays and playwrights. The 2002 festival included new works by such big guns as Anne Bogart, Tina Howe, Julia Jordan, Charles L. Mee, and Adam Rapp, while emerging playwrights were relegated to Humana's National One-Act Play Contest. Of these, Honor Molloy's moving meditation on 9/11 is the most haunting."[21]

Monument was subsequently published by PlayScripts, Inc. and has been performed regionally across the United States.[22]

Madame Killer

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Madame Killer was first developed in 2002 by Lincoln Center Theatre and The Royal Court Theatre as part of the Audrey Skirball-Kenis Playwright Exchange.[23] Subsequently, the play was selected for further development by The American Place Theatre, New Dramatists, and the 92nd Street Y's Makor Theater Project, featuring Marsha Mason in the titular role.[24] Madame Killer later had its world premiere at Clubbed Thumbs' Summerworks, in 2005. The production was directed by Wier Harman, and featured an ensemble of Marsha Stephanie Blake, Aedin Moloney, Maria Porter, Jonathan Rose, Mark Shanahan, and Melinda Wade. The play is a "gothic noir" about Ann Lohman, a British-born American abortion provider and midwife who practiced in New York City. For Molloy,

"Lohman was a paradigm of capitalism, worth millions ... but she had secrets. This fair doctor owned a black book filled with incriminating evidence about all the women she serviced over the years, striking fear in both rich and poor if this information ever got out!"[25]

Madame Killer was included in The Best Plays Theater Yearbook of 2004-2005, and was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts Playwright Award.[4] The play had it's international premiere at the Belvoir Street Theatre in Sydney, Australia as part of the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Festival.[23]

In Pigeon House

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In Pigeon House was first developed at The Irish Repertory Theatre in 2002, via a New York State Council on the Arts Fellowship. The play later premiered at The Irish Theatre of Chicago in 2012. The production was directed by Brian Shaw, and featured an ensemble of Ira Amyx, Katherine Schwartz, Barbara Figgins, and John Mossman. According to a press release from BroadwayWorld,

In Pigeon House weaves together vaudeville, music hall, and cinema in a “love letter to traveling shows.” Moving between time and genres, “the itinerant players Basher, Masher, Rasher and Dolly rip up the stage with a furious tornado of language and moving pictures.” A startlingly theatrical and darkly comic oeuvre, In Pigeon House at once explodes and upholds the romantic myth of the wandering player. The play owes its inspiration to the "fit-ups," traveling shows that toured Ireland's countryside in the first half of the twentieth century. Farmers and villagers "starved for a bit of culture" prized the indigenous touring companies from whose talented and highly accomplished ranks emerged such actors as Cyril Cusack and Milo O'Shea. John Molloy, Molloy’s father, began his own career in the fit-ups before moving on to star in Ireland's first soap opera, Tolka Row.[26]

The production had a five week engagement, from October 14 - November 18th. In a review from The Chicago Reader, Tony Adler noted:

"In Pigeon House is ultimately a tribute to the spirit of stage play through the generations. I'm sure I'd have caught a lot more if I were Irish, but patience is rewarded here by Molloy's cunning and surreal sensibility—channeling a whole slew of Irish bards, from Beckett to Martin McDonagh and Enda Walsh—and by the fit-upish elan of The Irish Theatre of Chicago's own cast of artistes under the direction of Brian Shaw."[27]

Crackskull Row

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Crackskull Row was first developed at the Inishbofin Arts Festival in 2000.[28] More than a decade later, the play was included on the 2015 edition of The Kilroys' List, a gender parity initiative designed to end the "systematic underrepresentation of female and trans playwrights" in the American theater industry.[29] Crackskull Row premiered the following year at The Workshop Theatre, produced by Nancy Manocherian's the cell and directed by Kira Simring. Set in 1999, "Rasher Moorigan is finally released from prison after serving time for a monstrous crime he committed more than 30 years earlier. After reuniting with his mother, an old woman haunted by a vanished Dublin, they confront the ghosts of the past and an uncertain future."[30] The New York Times deemed the play a "Critic's Pick" writing,

"This is a piece of Irish gothic; other practitioners include Conor McPherson, a specialist in haunting conversations, and Martin McDonagh, the poet of dark comedy. Now Ms. Molloy enters the ring, exploring rage, dissolution, sexual perversity and family history with a bleak and penetrating acuity... The performers, are uniformly on point, Siena Zoë Allen's costumes, drab but with bursts of color and pattern, complement the glowing hues in Gertjan Houben's lighting. But it is Ms. Molloy's salty, slangy yet singsong dialogue that most resonates. Mr. McPherson and Mr. McDonagh might have to set another place at their table."[31]

Crackskull Row subsequently transferred to the Irish Repertory Theatre for an additional eight week engagement in 2017.[32]

Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage

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Molloy's novel and accompanying audiobook, Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage was published by Simon & Schuster Audio in 2012, and is distributed internationally through Audible. The voice cast includes Molloy, Kevin Holohan, Aedin Moloney, and Susan McKeown.[4] According to the books' press release, it is set in 1960s Ireland and "depicts the turbulent life of the O'Feeney family, seen through the eyes of youngest daughter, Noleen".[33]

In a review for The Irish Voice, Cahir O'Doherty said

Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage is a lighthouse intelligence that doesn't miss a stitch... The richness of the telling and the lessons of it can be weighed in every line. Many Irish books will be released this year, but few will be this candid or this complete.[34]

While on her book tour, Molloy performed excerpts of Smarty Girl at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, the New York Public Library, the Boston Public Library, the Dublin City Library & Archive, Barnes & Noble on the Upper East Side, and The Irish Arts Center.[35]

Personal life

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From 1983 to 1984, Molloy was married to House of Lies creator Matthew Carnahan.

Molloy publicly identifies as queer[36] and serves on the organizing committee of St. Pat's for All.[37]

In addition to her work as a writer, Molloy is also a prolific editor. She spent ten years as an Acquisitions Editor at Simon and Schuster. Currently she serves as Editorial Director of GeistM, an subsidiary of the international tech and media incubator Gramercy Labs, with offices in New York, London, and Dublin.[38]

She has taught courses in english and creative writing at Columbia University, the City University of New York, and Brown University.

Molloy lives in Jackson Heights, Queens.[39]

Awards and residencies

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References

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  1. ^ "People". The Publishers Weekly. Vol. 252. 2005. p. 16. Honor Molloy [..] formerly Honour Kane and also formerly at S&S [..] has joined the lit firm E.J. McCarthy Agency
  2. ^ a b c "Honor Molloy", New Dramatists, retrieved October 29, 2024
  3. ^ "Honor Molloy, Theatre Credits and Profile". abouttheartists.com. Retrieved November 8, 2024.
  4. ^ a b c Molloy, Honor (March 20, 2012). "Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage". Simon & Schuster.
  5. ^ a b c d Aronoff, Amy (February 21, 2012). "Meet a NYFA Artist: Honor Molloy". New York Foundation for the Arts.
  6. ^ a b c "Radcliffe Fellow: Honour Kane". Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. January 1, 2003.
  7. ^ O'Connor, Kevin (September 16, 1999). "Obituary: John Molloy". The Guardian.
  8. ^ Molloy, Honor (October 23, 2022). "Obituary: Yvonne Molloy". The Morning Call.
  9. ^ Krombie, K. (February 21, 2017), "Interview: Playwright Honor Molloy on Irish Rep's 'Crackskull Row'", The Irish Repertory Theatre
  10. ^ "Molloy's 'Smarty Girl' Delves into Family's Past". Irish Echo Newspaper. April 4, 2012.
  11. ^ a b Dunsford, Claire (May 23, 2012). "The Voice of Ireland". Brown Alumni Magazine.
  12. ^ Fletcher, Florence (January 22, 1990), "Music & Dance", New York Magazine, vol. 23, no. 3
  13. ^ Anderson, Jack (December 14, 1992). "Dance in Review". The New York Times.
  14. ^ Anderson, Jack (December 19, 1994). "In Performance: Dance". The New York Times.
  15. ^ a b Dunning, Jennifer (October 18, 1993). "Dance in Review". The New York Times.
  16. ^ "Susan Hefner & Dancers: History". Susan Hefner & Dancers RSS. Retrieved October 31, 2024.
  17. ^ "The Record: New Georges (Maiden Voyages by Honor Molloy)", New Georges, 20 May 2022, retrieved October 29, 2024
  18. ^ a b Molloy, Honor (December 7, 2011). "Poetry in Pavements - Honor Molloy". Writing.ie.
  19. ^ Guernsey, Otis L. (1992), ""New York Shakespeare Festival, Public Theater". Essay. In The Applause Best Plays Yearbook", Applause, New York, NY, p. 378
  20. ^ Guernsey, Otis L. (1993), ""New York Shakespeare Festival, Public Theater". Essay. In The Applause Best Plays Yearbook", Applause, New York, NY, p. 379
  21. ^ Helbig, Jack (January 1, 2003), "Humana Festival 2002: The Complete Plays", Booklist, ISBN 1575253178
  22. ^ "'Monument' by Honour Kane", Playscripts Inc, retrieved October 29, 2024
  23. ^ a b "The Cell's Production of Crackskull Row Starts Tonight at Irish Rep". Broadway World. February 3, 2017.
  24. ^ "Marsha Mason Reads Madame Killer at Makor". TheaterMania. May 13, 2003.
  25. ^ "Clubbed Thumb: Madame Killer by Honor Molloy". Clubbed Thumb. May 15, 2005.
  26. ^ "In Pigeon House, Lay Me down Softly Set for Seanachai Theatre's 2012-13 Season". BroadwayWorld.com. September 17, 2012.
  27. ^ "In Pigeon House Reviews". Theatre In Chicago. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  28. ^ "An Irish Welcome for Theatre Outlet Actors Present 'Crackskull Row' and Are Made to Feel Right at Home on Inishbofin", The Morning Call, September 22, 2000
  29. ^ "About the Kilroys". The Kilroys. January 20, 2021.
  30. ^ "Crackskull Row". Theatre Reviews and Tickets: Best Theatre Shows. Retrieved November 2, 2024.
  31. ^ Webster, Andy (September 16, 2016). "Review: 'Crackskull Row,' an Irish Gothic with Masher, Basher and Rasher". The New York Times.
  32. ^ Kort, Alicia (March 18, 2017). "Playwright Honor Molloy on Penning Crackskull Row". Paste Magazine.
  33. ^ "Smarty Girl: Dublin Savage", Barnes & Noble, retrieved October 31, 2024
  34. ^ O'Doherty, Cahir (April 4, 2012). "Savage Dublin - Honor Molloy's 'Smarty Girl' Memoir". The Irish Voice.
  35. ^ Molloy, Honor (October 4, 2012). "In Pigeon House (Seanachai)" – via Issuu.
  36. ^ Warnock, Kathleen (March 16, 2016), "St. Pat's for All Parade Steps off into a New Era", Gay City News
  37. ^ "About & History". ST. PAT'S FOR ALL. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  38. ^ "About Us". GeistM. July 15, 2024.
  39. ^ Leland, John (October 27, 2012). "Poets Gather in Exile, in Queens". The New York Times.
  40. ^ "Full List of Pew Fellows". The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  41. ^ a b c Aronoff, Amy (January 30, 2015), "Honor Molloy Archives", New York Foundation for the Arts
  42. ^ "Taking Audience on Ride through Time". Irish Echo Newspaper. October 26, 2021.
  43. ^ "Honor Molloy - Artist". MacDowell. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  44. ^ "Our Artists". Yaddo. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
  45. ^ a b c d Boyne, Breege (November 13, 2023). "Seeking Quiet, Finding Bliss". Irish Echo Newspaper.
  46. ^ Miller, Howard (September 5, 2016). "Off Broadway Reviews: Crackskull Row". Talkin' Broadway.
  47. ^ "Awards & Prizes", American Theatre, vol. 21, no. 7, September 2004
  48. ^ Clement, Olivia (February 4, 2020). "Irish Rep's London Assurance, Seanie Sugrue's The 8th, and More Among Origin 1st Irish Theatre Festival Award Winners". Playbill.