CELEBRATING 50 YEARS OF DRAMA IN SLIGO

World of Drama Mourns Death of Pauline Flanagan
Article in The Sligo
Champion, July 2nd, 2003
The death occurred
at the weekend in the United States of well-known Sligo-born
actress Pauline Flanagan, a star of both stage and screen.
Seventy eight years old Mrs. Flanagan, who came from High Street
where her parents, P.J. and Elizabeth, ran a thriving wholesale
and retail business. The following is an extract from an
interview Mrs. Flanagan gave to Jim Gray in the Sligo Champion
in July 2002 when she was playing Mammo in Tom Murphy's "Bailegangaire"
at Dublin's Peacock Theatre:
At an age when most
people would be quite content to luxuriate in the haven of
retirement, Sligo born actress Pauline Flanagan simply can't get
enough of treading the boards. "I'm sixty years acting now. I've
loved and continue to love every minute of it. There isn't a
reason in the world to stop. I'll go on doing it as long as I'm
able and as long as there's a part to play", she cheerfully
declares. The extraordinary Sligo-born New Jersey based actress
is currently playing Mammo in Tom Murphy's "Bailegangaire" at
Dublin's Peacock Theatre, a role which not only enhances a
packed and glowing CV, but, equally important from her point of
view , affords her the opportunity to visit her native land.
Although based in
the US for most of her adult life, Pauline remains as Sligo as
the Garavogue. Both her parents, P.J. and Elizabeth, were mayors
of the town, as was her uncle Tom. The family ran a thriving
wholesale and retail business in High Street. The rots are
strong and durable. "I still love Sligo with all my heart", she
says, easily falling into fond reminiscence about growing up
here during the war years. "It was a great place to grow p. The
world was at war, and yet as children in Sligo, we were as free
as the birds. Walking down High Street now brings back many
memories, and although the town has changed so much from when I
knew it, it retains all its own charms", she says.
While being
nostalgic about the past, she offers a rich endorsement of the
cultural changes which characterise present-day Sligo. "My
niece, Mona Rooney, who lives at New Circular Road, brought me
to the Blue Raincoat Theatre's performance space where Dennys
used to be, and to the new Model and Niland on the Mall, and
they just took my breath away. The way the whole artistic
movement has taken off here is truly mind-boggling, and it's
wonderful to see", she enthuses. While facilities and
opportunities for artistic expression were not as plentiful in
the Sligo of her youth, there was always a strong tradition of
cultural activity, manifested most forcibly in the local
Feiseanna.
"As children, we
were always in plays and drama competitions in Feis Shligigh and
Feis Ceoil, and I remember in particular a teacher at the
Ursuline Convent, Jill Noone, who instilled in us a love of
words and plays", she recalls. Armed with that love of drama, it
was only natural that she would graduate to the Unknown Players,
then the region's foremost amateur drama group, and once bitten
by the bug, there was no turning back. She entered the
professional ranks through a somewhat unusual route, placing an
advertisement in "The Irish Press" along with her friend, Aileen
Harte. She can still vividly recall the wording: "Two young
ladies, with exceptional amateur dramatic experience, wish to
join exclusive repertory company for the summer season". They
were offered jobs by the Garryowen Players for the summer of
1949 in Bundoran's Hamilton Hall in "Peg O' My Heart", and a
career was born.
More than forty
years on, she has literally played everything, but she's still
as excited about her profession as she was the first day she
stepped onto the Sligo Town Hall stage in Feis Shligigh. "At my
age, you just wouldn't do it if you didn't love it. I still get
the same kick out of it as I always did", she explains. Pauline
values the opportunity she's had in the past ten years to return
to perform in Dublin on an annual basis. Not only has it given
her the chance to retrace her Sligo roots, but on a professional
level, her recent work has brought her a plethora of accolades
and awards. She won the Samuel Beckett Award and the Olivier
Award for Best Supporting Actress in "Dolly West's Kitchen" by
Frank Mc Guinness, while she was nominated as Best Supporting
Actress for her part in Marina Carr's "By the Bog of Cats".
She regards her
role as Mammo in "Bailegangaire" as the most challenging of her
career. "It is undoubtedly the most demanding role I've ever
done", she maintains. "I have to hold the audience with the
narrative line. The play is so brilliantly written that I have
to get every word he wrote, and the life behind those words, and
engage the audience so that they listen to them. It's a
difficult challenge, but so far the audience reaction has been
excellent, and it's going very well. I'm thoroughly enjoying
it".
Unfortunately,
Pauline will be unable to fit in another visit to Sligo before
returning next month to New Jersey, where she lives with her
husband of 44 years, George Vogel. They have two adult daughters
and a grandchild. But she definitely plans to come back to the
place she still calls home. "Hopefully, there will be other
opportunities to play in Dublin, and once that happens, you can
be sure Sligo will be on my itinerary. I've always loved going
back home", she says.
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