Monday, May 6, 2013

ALFRED HITCHCOCK: Juno and the Paycock (1930)

Alfred Hitchcock's screen adaptation of Sean O'Casey's play, Juno and the Paycock is about Irish tenement dwellers in the twenties, namely Juno the matriarch who tries to keep her family together when things start to fall apart. The role of Juno is a strong part for an actress and is played with much gusto and passion by Irish stage actress Sara Allgood. She had appeared in the stage version of Juno and also in Hitchcock's Blackmail as Anny Ondra's mother. The movie is a bit stage-y and Hitchcock remarked years later Juno and the Paycock was just a filmed stage play. He told Truffaut: "It was an entity of its own, written by Sean O'Casey, and all I could do about it was cast it and direct the players."

Sean O'Casey was a distinguished Irish dramatist. O'Casey spent most of his years living in exile in England, however. I'm not sure if he's as well remembered today, but his plays, which all deal with Irish identity and politics but can be viewed across nationalities, are relevant today as they were in the 1920's, especially in these sour economic times. At an opening performance of one play in Dublin at famed Abbey Theatre during the twenties, a riot broke out.

Hitchcock claimed he based the bum in The Birds declaring the end of the world on O'Casey!


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