Death Of The Tradesman

The Lir, Dublin Feb 12-16 7.30pm (Fri mat 1pm) €15/€10 thelir.ie


The Lir, Dublin Feb 12-16 7.30pm (Fri mat 1pm) €15/€10 thelir.ie

In a few short years, Talking Shop Ensemble has become something more than a conversation piece. The group began by creating a hum on the wires with their 2009 Dublin Fringe show Ann and Barry: What Kind of Time Do You Call This?, which deposited school book characters into a nastier contemporary Ireland. They’ve been taking similarly playful approaches to social topics ever since: eating and feminism in Fat, superstition and religion in Do You Read Me?.

Their two standout works so far have been created from the stories on everybody’s lips. I Am a Homebird (It’s Very Hard), a documentary piece by the company and the writer/ performer Shaun Dunne, was a grab bag of ideas about Generation Emigration, pleading with their peers to stay and rebuild a damaged nation.

For Death of a Tradesman, however, director Oonagh Murphy has reached for a sturdier structure to bear its poignancy without losing the company’s authentic heart, invoking Arthur Miller’s lament for door-to-door salesmen (Dunne and Lauren Larkin play characters named Willie and Linda) while absorbing the stories of the actors’ parents.

READ MORE

For all its tenderness and humour, some will find a home crumbling under the pressure of unemployment and recession tough to bear. But, restaged as winner of The Lir’s Revival Award, it’s a show we need to talk about.

Can’t See That? Catch This

Fred and Alice Bewley’s Café Theatre, Dublin