Book description
Using a play by Karl and Josef Capek as source, Flann O'Brien
locates his insect drama in Dublin, his most familiar stalking-
territory. His adaptation is a vehicle for ridicule and invective,
targeting race, religion, greed, identity and purpose. With his
extraordinary ear for dialogue, O'Brien creates his own fantastical
world, and the outcome is a hilarious satire of Irish stereotypes - as
Orangemen, Dubliners, Corkagians and culchies become warring ants,
bees, crickets, dung-beetles, and other small-minded invertebrae. The
lost text of this play, Hilton Edwards' prompt copy from the 1943 Gate
Theatre performance, was discovered in the archives at Northwestern
University, Illinois. 'A play by Ireland's most celebrated comic
writer, Flann O'Brien, lost for fifty years, has been discovered in
the archives of Northwestern University, Illinois, by an American
academic. The O'Brien play, Rhapsody in Stephen's Green, was put on in
Dublin by the Edwards-MacLiammoir company at the Gaiety Theatre during
Lent in 1943 with a cast of 150 - representing millions, as is
obligatory with an insect play. But, presumably because of the offence
it gave to Catholics, Ulster Protestants, Irish civil servants,
Corkmen, and the aspersions it seemed to cast on married life and the
superpatriotic Fianna Fail party, it only ran six days and was never
again performed ... However it and the context in which it was born -
and rapidly snuffed out - gives intriguing insights into neutral
Ireland of the 1940s, suffocating in puritanism and insular politics.'
Peter Lennon, The Guardian, 17th of November 1994