| Fest spotlights Irish Women filmmakers |
| Written by C. O'Shaughnessy | |
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A key player in the festival will be Pat Murphy, the director of Anne Devlin (1984), who will be showcasing one of her most recent films about the wife of James Joyce. In "Nora" (2000), an all-star cast (featuring Ewan McGregor as James Joyce and Susan Lynch as Nora Barnacle) comes together to tell the story of a charming hotel maid from Galway who is captivated by a young Joyce and ends up joining him in Trieste. The film documents their stormy relationship, including the trials of Joyce's drinking bouts and jealous rages. An intriguing film adapted from the 1988 biography by Brenda Maddox, Susan Lynch won the Irish Film and Television Academy Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Nora.
Geraldine Creed will also be on hand, screening her 2006 documentary "Exile Files," which "...traces the trade and migration between Ireland and France from 1600 to 1815. The story is told through original journals and letters from soldiers, beggars, princes and gentlewomen." Finally, the festival will also be screening "Hush-a-Bye Baby" by Margo Harkin and "Disco Pigs" by Kirsten Sheridan as well as a selection of shorts. Harkin's film "Hush-a-Bye Baby" tells the heart-wrenching story of a pregnant Irish girl who attempts to contact her boyfriend in a British prison, but her letters aren't allowed through to him because she writes in Irish. Kirsten Sheridan's film "Disco Pigs" revolves around the intense connection between two teenagers, nicknamed Pig and Runt. Starring Elaine Cassidy and Cillian Murphy, it's a disturbing story of what happens when obsession and jealousy begin to overrule passion. The festival will take place at the Centre Culturel Irlandais, 5 rue des Irlandais in the 5ème arrondisement. Tickets for the entire day are 15 Euros.
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