Connacht Tribune
Forgotten women at heart of searing drama

Lifestyle – Patricia Burke Brogan’s play Eclipsed shone a light on the dark secrets of Ireland’s Magdalen Laundries and has been staged all over the world since it premiered in Galway in 1992. It’s now on the Leaving Cert curriculum. A 2020 production from the Mill Theatre is available online for audiences of all ages and its director Kate Canning tells JUDY MURPHY why Eclipsed is so important.
“I’d known this play since I was a teenager and couldn’t understand why it wasn’t done more,” says director Kate Canning about Patricia Burke Brogan’s groundbreaking play Eclipsed.
Eclipsed, which received its world premiere in the writer’s hometown of Galway in 1992, shone a light into the shameful story of Ireland’s Magdalen laundries, doing so in a humane, sometimes humorous, ultimately devastating way.
Patricia, a former novice in the Mercy Order, who had spent a brief period supervising young women in Galway City’s Magdalen Laundry on Forster Street in the late 1950s, had been horrified by what she’d witnessed. With this play, she gave a voice to women who had been locked up in these institutions and largely forgotten. Unlike the Mother and Baby Homes, the women in laundries were incarcerated long-term, but it was all part of the same repressive society, where women who were perceived to have ‘brought shame’ on families were hidden.
The debut production of Eclipsed by Punchbag Theatre (in a former garage close to the Spanish Arch), went on to win a Fringe First at the Edinburgh Festival in 1992 and was subsequently staged all over the world. More recently, it’s been added to the Leaving Cert curriculum, which is one reason why Kate Canning decided to stage it at Dundrum’s Mill Theatre in Dublin last February.
A year later, it’s now available online, both for general audiences and exam students, with a special focus on the students.
Kate, who is originally from East Cork, first encountered Eclipsed as a teenager. She played the vulnerable Mandy, one of the ‘penitent’ women incarcerated in the laundry, in a production of the play from local theatre group, Ballyduff, an outfit renowned on Ireland’s amateur drama scene. Its powerful story resonated with her.
Most of the action in Eclipsed takes place in 1963, with the first and final scenes being set in 1992, the year it premiered. Rosa, a young woman who’d been adopted by a well-off American couple, is visiting the former St Paul’s laundry at Killmacha, seeking information about her birth-mother Brigit. She’s met by a vulnerable, elderly woman, Nellie-Nora, who guides her to a basement where a basket of old photos and letters remains.
As Rosa browses through these, the audience is transported back in time to meet the young Brigit and the other women in St Paul’s.
To create a play for an all-woman cast was almost unheard of when Patricia wrote Eclipsed and Kate marvels at her foresightedness.
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
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Connacht Tribune
West has lower cancer survival rates than rest

Significant state investment is required to address ‘shocking’ inequalities that leave cancer patients in the West at greater risk of succumbing to the disease.
A meeting of Regional Health Forum West heard that survival rates for breast, lung and colorectal cancers than the national average, and with the most deprived quintile of the population, the West’s residents faced poorer outcomes from a cancer diagnosis.
For breast cancer patients, the five-year survival rate was 80% in the West versus 85% nationally; for lung cancer patients it was 16.7% in the west against a 19.5% national survival rate; and in the West’s colorectal cancer patients, there was a 62.6% survival rate where the national average was 63.1%.
These startling statistics were provided in answer to a question from Ballinasloe-based Cllr Evelyn Parsons (Ind) who said it was yet another reminder that cancer treatment infrastructure in the West was in dire need of improvement.
“The situation is pretty stark. In the Western Regional Health Forum area, we have the highest incidence of deprivation and the highest health inequalities because of that – we have the highest incidences of cancer nationally because of that,” said Cllr Parsons, who is also a general practitioner.
In details provided by CEO of Saolta Health Care Group, which operates Galway’s hospitals, it was stated that a number of factors were impacting on patient outcomes.
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Connacht Tribune
Galway minors continue to lay waste to all opponents

Galway 3-18
Cork 1-10
NEW setting; new opposition; new challenge. It made no difference to the Galway minor hurlers as they chalked up a remarkable sixth consecutive double digits championship victory at Semple Stadium on Saturday.
The final scoreline in Thurles may have been a little harsh on Cork, but there was no doubting Galway’s overall superiority in setting up only a second-ever All-Ireland showdown against Clare at the same venue on Sunday week.
Having claimed an historic Leinster title the previous weekend, Galway took a while to get going against the Rebels and also endured their first period in a match in which they were heavily outscored, but still the boys in maroon roll on.
Beating a decent Cork outfit by 14 points sums up how formidable Galway are. No team has managed to lay a glove on them so far, and though Clare might ask them questions other challengers haven’t, they are going to have to find significant improvement on their semi-final win over 14-man Kilkenny to pull off a final upset.
Galway just aren’t winning their matches; they are overpowering the teams which have stood in their way. Their level of consistency is admirable for young players starting off on the inter-county journey, while the team’s temperament appears to be bombproof, no matter what is thrown at them.
Having romped through Leinster, Galway should have been a bit rattled by being only level (0-4 each) after 20 minutes and being a little fortunate not to have been behind; or when Cork stormed out of the blocks at the start of the second half by hitting 1-4 to just a solitary point in reply, but there was never any trace of panic in their ranks.
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
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Connacht Tribune
Gardaí and IFA issue a joint appeal on summer road safety

GARDAÍ and the IFA have issued a joint appeal to all road users to take extra care as the silage season gets under way across the country.
Silage harvesting started in many parts of Galway last week – and over the coming month, the sight of tractors and trailers on rural roads will be getting far more frequent.
Inspector Conor Madden, who is in charge of Galway Roads Policing, told the Farming Tribune that a bit of extra care and common-sense from all road users would go a long way towards preventing serious collisions on roads this summer.
“One thing I would ask farmers and contractors to consider is to try and get more experienced drivers working for them.
“Tractors have got faster and bigger – and they are also towing heavy loads of silage – so care and experience are a great help in terms of accident prevention,” Inspector Madden told the Farming Tribune.
He said that tractor drivers should always be aware of traffic building up behind them and to pull in and let these vehicles pass, where it was safe to do so.
“By the same token, other road users should always exercise extra care; drive that bit slower; and ‘pull in’ that bit more, when meeting tractors and heavy machinery.
“We all want to see everyone enjoying a safe summer on our roads – that extra bit of care, and consideration for other roads users can make a huge difference,” said Conor Madden.
He also advised motorists and tractor drivers to be acutely aware of pedestrians and cyclists on the roads during the summer season when more people would be out walking and cycling on the roads.
The IFA has also joined in on the road safety appeal with Galway IFA Farm Family and Social Affairs Chair Teresa Roche asking all road users to exercise that extra bit of care and caution.
“We are renewing our annual appeal for motorists to be on the look out for tractors, trailers and other agricultural machinery exiting from fields and farmyards,” she said.
For more, read this week’s Connacht Tribune.
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