Irish Film Institute -ARCHIVE AT LUNCHTIME: THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING DUBLIN (PROGRAMME 1)

ARCHIVE AT LUNCHTIME: THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING DUBLIN (PROGRAMME 1)

Director: Norman Cohen

25 mins, Ireland, 1974, Digital


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In tribute to Oscar Wilde, Micheál MacLiammóir presents a vibrant kaleidoscope of Dublin’s people and places. This film was made by Irish Jewish filmmaker Norman Cohen who found success in the UK with a series of comedies including Confessions of a Window Cleaner, Stand up Virgin Soldiers and Dad’s Army.

PART 1

The film captures a bustling clothes market, colourful characters on the streets of Dublin, Oscar Wilde’s House at Merrion Square, the Gate, The Rotunda, Handel’s Fishamble Street, gravediggers in Glasnevin, Guinness’s Brewery, and the Brazen Head pub.

Dir. Norman Cohen. 25 mins, Ireland, 1974, Digital

Notes by Sunniva O’Flynn.

See the full Archive at Lunchtime programme here.

Book Tickets

Monday 28th

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