Borstal Boy (play)

Borstal Boy
Written by Brendan Behan (novel)
Frank McMahon (play)
Characters Young Behan
Charlie Millwall
Brendan Behan
Mr. Whitbread
Mrs. Gildea
Hartigan
Harty
I.R.A. Men
Date premiered 1967
Place premiered Abbey Theatre
Dublin, Ireland
Original language English
Subject  
Genre Drama, Romance
Setting Liverpool; Dublin, 1939

Borstal Boy is a play adapted by Frank McMahon from the 1958 autobiographical novel of Irish nationalist Brendan Behan of the same title. The play debuted in 1967 at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, with Frank Grimes as the young Behan. McMahon won a New York Drama Critics' Circle Award in 1970 and Tony Award in 1970 for his adaptation.

Plot synopsis

The title takes its name from the borstal, a British juvenile jail, at Hollesley Bay. The book was originally banned in the Republic of Ireland for obscenity.

The story is a recounting of Behan's imprisonment at Hollesley Bay for carrying explosives into the United Kingdom, with intent to cause explosions on a mission for the I.R.A.. A young, idealistic Behan, over the three years of his sentence, softening his radical stance and warming to the other prisoners.

Film adaptations

Main article: Borstal Boy (film)

The novel was adapted for film by Peter Sheridan and Nye Heron in 2000.

Further reading

External links

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