Mark O'Rowe
Mark O'Rowe is an Irish playwright and screenwriter.
Life[edit]
Mark O'Rowe was born in 1970 in Dublin, Ireland, to parents Hugh and Patricia O'Rowe (to whom he dedicated his 1999 play, Howie the Rookie). He grew up in Tallaght, a working-class suburb in the west of Dublin, and he claims that much of the violence in his work stems from watching and rewatching a tremendous amount of violent, bloody movies when he was in his teens.[1]
List of plays[edit]
- The Approach (2018)
- Our Few and Evil Days (2014)
- Terminus (2007)
- Howie the Rookie (1999)
- The Aspidistra Code (1995)
- Anna's Ankle
- From Both Hips
- Crestfall
- Made in China
Credits as a screenwriter[edit]
Awards and nominations[edit]
As a playwright[edit]
- Irish Times/ESB Theatre Award for Best New Play for Howie the Rookie.
- George Devine Award for Best New Play for Howie The Rookie.
- Rooney Prize for Irish Literature for Howie the Rookie in 1999.
As a screenwriter[edit]
- He won the IFTA Award for the Best Screenplay in 2003 for Intermission
References[edit]
- ^ Gibbons, Fiachra (24 November 2003). "Fiachra Gibbons meets Intermission writer Mark O'Rowe". The Guardian.
External links[edit]