Main content

It Must Be Wonderful to Be Free

Megan Nolan marks the 60th anniversary of the death of playwright, novelist and political prisoner Brendan Behan.

Irish novelist Megan Nolan presents an intimate study of the late playwright, singer and novelist, Brendan Behan. She reveals a poetic socialist, a fiercely anti-establishment artist concerned with class solidarity, outcasts, liberation, self-revelation and empathy. And she trashes the trivial, stereotyped memory of Behan, as Ireland’s most famous drunk.

She tells his story through the lens of his most prolific years, 1954 - 1958. It was a time of explosive creativity for Behan, which saw the release of three of his most remarkable works - his plays The Quare Fellow and The Hostage, and his work of auto-fiction Borstal Boy. She hears about his determination in these years to recruit language rather than the militarised violence of his youth as a means to valorise life, dignity, humour and queer love, and to advance his vision for his country, forged in his working class roots.

His words paint a picture of a complex character. An intelligent, anti-establishment writer, an Irish beatnik whose talents β€œwould make Jack Kerouac weep with terror” and who even Bob Dylan couldn’t find the courage to β€œtouch the hem of his garment”. A man who met a tragic end, addicted to alcohol and wielding his fame and power in cruel ways.

Marking the 60th anniversary of his death, Megan hears from historians, writers and members of Behan’s family, as well as from the rich archive of the man himself.

Producer: Cat Gough
Executive Producer: Robert Nicholson

A Whistledown production for ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4

With thanks to Iris Klein and Semiotexte for providing archival interview recordings with Brendan Behan made by journalist Sylvere Lotringer in Paris in 1961

Available now

57 minutes

Last on

Sat 16 Mar 2024 20:00

Broadcast

  • Sat 16 Mar 2024 20:00