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The Last Days Of A Reluctant Tyrant

Showing on the Abbey Stage

An epic family drama, shot through with dark humour. 

Arina is an ambitious woman.

As a servant girl she marries into the degenerative family she works for, her peasant genes saving it from extinction. Her ruthless energy saves it from bankruptcy and she expands the family estate into an empire.

As matriarch she rules with an iron hand, her avarice insatiable – until she begins to wonder what is it all for?

She slackens her hold and loses her power to the hypocrisy and relentless grasping of her chosen son.

The Last Days of a Reluctant Tyrant is a haunting new work from leading Irish dramatist Tom Murphy, who has worked closely with the Abbey throughout his career. His plays include Alice Trilogy, The House, The Wake, A Crucial Week in the Life of a Grocer’s Assistant, The Morning After Optimism, Famine, The Sanctuary Lamp, Conversations on a Homecoming, A Whistle in the Dark, Bailegangaire and The Gigli Concert.

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REVIEWS: WHAT YOU SAID

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Thank you for a brillient afternoon, the cast were superb, Marie Mullen is my hero, Declan Conlon blew me away, beautiful lighting, fantastic set, great costumes, wonderful music, and a wonderful director, Conall Morrison,...as you can see I am still in love with the whole thing, thats theatre at its best.
congrats. to all. Please tell me it will return.

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REVIEWS: WHAT THE CRITICS SAID

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“Property, land, money. That’s all she ever thought of.” The dying words of a disaffected son provide a useful synopsis of Tom Murphy’s new play. While its source is a 19th-century Russian novel – The Golovlyov Family, by Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin – its contemporary Irish resonances are amplified to highlight greed and the hollowness of religious hypocrisy. The setting of Conall Morrison’s ambitious production is poised unspecifically between Russia and Ireland, but as a morality tale, this is thumping with home truths.

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Helen Meany, Guardian.co.uk

Murphy’s themes have cosmic relevance, his pen drawing them expertly into the strictures and forms of domestic tragedy. And in his new play he examines the blinding destruction of the human spirit when peace of mind is seen as a product to be bought with power, in this case the power of land.

Emer O'Kelly, Independent.ie

The Last Days of a Reluctant Tyrant is Tom Murphy’s 17th work to premiere at Ireland’s national theatre.

Lauded as he is as one of the country’s greatest living playwrights and – according to Colm Toibin – ‘‘the nearest thing we have to genius’’, the premiere of any work by Murphy generates much anticipation in the world of Irish theatre.

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Helen Boylan, ThePost.ie

Perhaps, in decades to come, it will be possible to separate Tom Murphy’s new play from the dominant news story of the week that preceded its premiere. Or perhaps the play will come to be seen as the first, great attempt to wrestle with the demons that produced the Irish children’s institutions.

Colin Murphy, Independent.ie

The Last Days of a Reluctant Tyrant – Abbey Theatre, Dublin: Why do great Irish writers resonate with great Russian writers? Brian Friel once expressed empathy with characters who “have no expectations whatever from love, but still invest everything in it”. But to judge from the Abbey’s new theatrical version of Shchedrin’s bleakly satirical 19th-century novel, The Golovlyov Family , Tom Murphy’s sympathies lie elsewhere.

Peter Crawley, IrishTimes.com

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