Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1991-1992, 1996-2000 (Creation)
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Extent and medium
20 items
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Gerard Patrick Gallivan was born in Limerick on 29 July 1920 and grew up on Henry Street. A contemporary of Frank McCourt, Gallivan’s recollections of his home city differed considerably from those described in Angela’s Ashes, although the two men lived in very similar spheres. Gallivan was educated at Crescent College and graduated in 1939. He began his working career in England, where he emigrated in 1940. Here he also met his wife, whom he married in 1945. A year later, they returned to Ireland and settled in Limerick, where Gallivan established a career in the airline industry. In 1952, he was transferred to Dublin, where he was to live for the rest of his life.
Gallivan’s writing career commenced at the age of 18, when he wrote his first novel, The Hawk, but failed to get it published. He later found his feet as a playwright and over his long career wrote more than 40 plays, many of which were produced at the Gate Theatre, Abbey Theatre, Elbana Theatre and Olympia Theatre in Dublin, and the Lyric Theatre in Belfast. He also did a lot of journeyman work, contributing several episodes to the popular radio series Harbour Hotel and The Kennedys of Castleross, and for the television drama Kilmore House. Many of his stage scripts, such as Parnell, The Final Mission and The Lamb and the Fox, were also produced as radio plays.
Gerard Gallivan's works focus predominantly on Irish political history (particularly the foundation of the Irish State) and major Irish and English political and social figures such as Bernard Shaw, James Joyce, Oscar Wilde, Maude Gonne, W. B. Yeats, Noel Chamberlain, Eamonn De Valera, Michael Collins and Cardinal Newman. His published plays include Decision at Easter (1960); And a Yellow Singing Bird (1963); Mourn the Ivy Leaf (1965); Dev (1978); Watershed (1981), Lovesong (1984), and three volumes of Selected Plays (1999-2008). Among his best-known stage plays is The Stepping Stone, which was originally performed in 1963 and enjoyed a popular revival in Cork in 1997. Gallivan continued to write until the last months of his life. His later works included The Indomitable Lamb (1997), The Prudent Paramour (1997) and The Rusted Dagger (1998), all of which were broadcast as radio plays. His other late works included a family history The Gallivans of Limerick (1995), and a commissioned account of his working life, My Time in Irish Travel, published posthumously in 2004 as Ireland Enters the Air Age. He died on Christmas Day 2003.
Archival history
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Content and structure area
Scope and content
Correspondence with Edward Francis Gormley, author and publisher. The letters contain in the main reviews of recent plays in Ireland and America and other news relating to the theatre. Gallivan also provides editorial advice on Gormley’s plays The Maud & Con Show with Willie (25 October 1991; for a script of the play see P30/1/2/6/2) and On the Trail of Don Quixote (October 1998). Regarding his own work, Gallivan discusses the Parnell series which has just been broadcast on radio (25 October 1991); his radio show on Shaw and the rewriting of ‘an old play of mine on Wilde’ (7 March 1992); the musical Oscar (28 March, 16 May and 16 June 1996; 10 June 2000); rejection of Doolittle’s Daughter (16 June 1996); the staging of The Stepping Stone (22 July and 3 September 1997); proposed publication of The Stepping Stone ( 20 October 1997 and 18 September 1998); difficulties in finishing a new play owing to illness (22 April 1998); uncertainty of My Time in Irish Travel (22 April and 9 December 1998); work on The Gallivans of Limerick (18 September 1998); and his radio play Beggar & Bloom (10 June 2000). There are also frequent references to Tim Pat Coogan and his literary activities, and to the political turmoil in Ireland in the 1990s: ‘What a bloody country. Between Celtic Tigers, Abject Poverty, tribunals, murder, drugs, tax evasion by the Banks and our magnificent Golden Circle I only wish I was forty years younger with the energy to do a play on it.’ (10 June 2000). Also see P30/1/2/6/3 and P30/5/1/5.
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Accruals
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The material is arranged chronologically by date.
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Language of material
- English