Last night I saw Ciara Elizabeth Smyth's play Irishtown at Irish Repertory Theatre. As you might guess, the play was trying to be a little... well... Irish.
But what does it mean to be an Irish play? If a play is Irish, is it not taken for granted that the play is depressing, deals with the legacy of colonialism, involves alcoholism, and ends unhappily?
It is precisely these types of stereotypes that Smyth's play seeks to interrogate. Like Alice Childress's Trouble in Mind, it does so by presenting a backstage look at the rehearsals of an "important" Broadway-bound new play. As with Trouble in Mind, we don't see much of the play they are rehearsing, but from what we do see, it looks pretty dreadful.
Place to the side for a moment the fact that no play in 2025 is going to be rehearsed by a small, Dublin-based theatre company with plans to immediately transfer it to Broadway based on nothing other than the strength of a single other work by the playwright. The purpose here is not believability, but rather to use as many cliches as possible to keep the audience laughing.
Brenda Meaney plays Aisling, the Irish dramatist whose new play is curiously set in England with no explicitly Irish characters. The work is to star Siofra, played by Saoirse-Monica Jones of Derry Girls fame. Siofra has won the Dublin theatre's "Best Newcomer" award twice--ten years apart. Yes, this is a depiction of the drama world that is all-too-familiar, as is the fact that Aisling has to claim the play is autobiographical, since otherwise she will be denied the chance to depict a situation in which she has no lived experience.
Or does she? The play involves sexual harassment and assault, and soon the play's English director Poppy, played by Angela Reed, is crossing lines right and left, particularly regarding Siofra, who probably slept with Aisling just to get the part. The two other cast members, Constance and Quin (played by Kate Burton and Kevin Oliver Lynch), stay out of this sexualized mess, but certainly aren't above gossiping about it.
When Aisling decides to pull the rights to her show, the cast tries to devise an Irish play, leading to spoofs of Samuel Beckett, Sean O'Casey, John Millington Synge, and pretty much the entire Irish dramatic canon.
If you're interested in seeing the show, it's playing now until May 25.