Druid was founded in
Galway in 1975, its foundation marking the establishment of the first
professional theatre company in Ireland outside Dublin. Since then it has been
at the forefront of the development of Irish theatre: its regional touring
pioneered the Irish touring network and its international success has been
unparalleled by any other Irish arts organisation. Recent international touring
includes visits to London, Edinburgh, Sydney, Perth, Washington, D.C., New York
and Tokyo. The company has had two artistic directors: Garry Hynes (1975–91 and
1995 to date) and Maeliosa Stafford (1991–94).
Druid consistently
brings groundbreaking productions of classic and new dramatic works to the world
stage and, as such, has drawn extensively from the Irish dramatic repertoire and
has worked with celebrated Irish and international playwrights. Productions that
have gone on to gain international recognition include The Playboy of the
Western World (1982), At the Black Pig’s Dyke (1992),
Conversations on a Homecoming (1985), and Bailegangaire (1985)
featuring Siobhán McKenna in one of her finest dramatic performances. The latter
two productions formed part of a major association between Druid and Tom Murphy
who was Writer-in-Association with the company and had four of his major works
première in Galway.
In 1996 Druid premièred
Martin McDonagh’s debut work The Beauty Queen of Leenane, in a
co-production with the Royal Court Theatre. The Beauty Queen of Leenane
opened in Galway and subsequently played in London, Sydney, Dublin, and on
Broadway, where the production won four Tony Awards, including Best Director for
Garry Hynes, the first woman to win the award. In The Leenane Trilogy
(also with the Royal Court), The Beauty Queen of Leenane was joined by
premières of McDonagh’s A Skull in Connemara and The Lonesome
West. Other recent successes include three works by John B. Keane, Sive
(2002), Sharon’s Grave (2003) and The Year of the Hiker (2006).
DruidSynge, the company’s
critically acclaimed production of all six of John Millington Synge’s plays
on the same day, premièred at the Galway Arts Festival in 2005 and has since
toured to Dublin, Edinburgh, Inis Meáin, Minneapolis and New York.
DruidSynge has been described by The Irish Times as ‘one of the
greatest achievements in the history of Irish theatre’ and by Charles Isherwood
of The New York Times as ‘the highlight not just of my theatregoing year but of
my theatregoing life’.
Through its new writing
programme, DruidNew, Druid includes among its recent successes the premières in
2006 of The Walworth Farce by Enda Walsh (Fringe First, Edinburgh 2007),
Empress of India by Stuart Carolan and in 2007, Leaves by Lucy
Caldwell (George Devine Award 2006 and 29th Susan Smith Blackburn
Award).
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