Mary Manning (writer)
Mary Manning Howe Adams was an Irish novelist, playwright and film critic.
Biography
Born and raised in Dublin Ireland, Mary Manning got her theatre training in Sara Allgood's teaching class in the Abbey Theatre. She had gone to school in Morehampton House and Alexandra College, Dublin. She also worked as a writer for the Gate Theatre. She adapted the novel Guests of the Nation for a film directed by Denis Johnston. Manning also helped found the Dublin Film Society in 1930. She worked as a film critic and co-founded the Gate Theatre arts magazine Motley in 1932.In 1935 Manning moved to Boston where she married Harvard Law School professor Mark De Wolfe Howe. They had three daughters Fanny, Susan and Helen. When her husband died Manning returned to Dublin in 1967 and lived in Monkstown, County Dublin for another ten years. During this time Manning wrote for various publications such as Hibernia, The Irish Times. She later returned to live in Cambridge.
Manning was a founder of the Poets' Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts and worked as drama director at Radcliffe College during World War II.
After Manning returned to the US she married Faneuil Adams of Boston, Massachusetts in 1980
Mary's death occurred on 27 June in the year of 1999; at the age of 93 years old. Her death place was at the Mt Auburn hospital located in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Irelands Two Waves of Silent Film
From 1914 to 1926, Ireland experienced a surge of new film styles being produced, consisting of historical melodramas and romantic comedies. Following this, 1930 to 1935 birthed a second wave of industry produced silent films that were intended to be less cliche compared to the first wave. The films produced under the second wave were much more experimental and dealt less with the commercial appeals of the first wave. There's minimal information on how Manning specifically contributed to the second wave, however, it is stated that she played an important role producing five out of the six films to come out of that wave.Prior to her career as a writer and filmmaker, Mary Manning worked as a film critic throughout the 1920s and 30s. She worked as a film critic for the Irish Statesmen for a year during that time until it went out of business. She was known to disapprove of Hollywood's "unimaginable stories and its stereotypical portrayal of Ireland and the Irish".
Writings
- Adams, Bernard. Denis Johnston: A Life. Dublin: Lilliput, 2002.
- Advertisement. Irish Times : 6.
- Irish Times : 6.
- Irish Times : 6.
- Irish Independent : 8.
- Irish Independent : 6.
- Barton, Ruth. Irish National Cinema. New York: Routledge, 2004.
- Casella, Donna R. “Women and Nationalism in Indigenous Irish Filmmaking of the Silent Period.” In Researching Women in Silent Cinema: New Findings and Perspectives. Eds. Monica Dall’Asta, Victoria Duckett, and Lucia Tralli. Bologna: University of Bologna, 2013. 53-80.
- “From Lantern to Slide Show.” Memories in Focus. Raidió Teilifís Éireann, Dublin. 27 April 1995. Television. IED, RTÉ.
- Howe, Fanny. Personal Interview. 10 July 2015.
- Howe, Susan. Personal Interview. 11 June 2015.
- "Irish Amateur Films." Irish Times. : 6.
- “Irish Amateur Film Society.” Dublin Evening Mail : 2.
- “Irish Productions Find Their Feet.” Memories in Focus. Raidió Teilifís Éireann, Dublin. 4 May 1995. Television. IED, RTÉ.
- "Irish Girl Makes Film Name.” The Sunday Chronicle : n.p. Norris Davidson file, Liam O’Laoghaire Archives. NLI
- “Irish Playwright – Critic – Novelist Mary Manning Adams is Dead at 93. Obit. Playbill. 1 July 1999.
http://www.playbill.com/news/article/irish-playwright-critic-novelist-mary-manning-adams-is-dead-at-93-82864 - Johnston, Denis. “3rd Omnibus X Book.” Denis Johnston Papers. TC
- Manning, Mary. "Dublin-Cum-Elstree." Irish Statesman : 254-56.
- "The Fairchild Family at the Films.” Motley : 12-14.
- "Hail Veidt!" Motley : 10-12.
- “Mary Manning.” In Enter Certain Players: Edwards-MacLiammóir and the Gate 1928-1978. Ed. Peter Luke. Dublin: Dolmen Press 1978. 35-39.
- "A Silent Interlude." Irish Statesman : 72-73.
- "The Voice of Ireland." Motley : 14-15.
- "What is the Wild West Saying?” Irish Statesman : 496-98.
- "Why Not a Repertory Cinema?" Motley : 14-15.
- “Mark de Wolfe Howe Dies; Lawyer, Historian Was 60.” Obit. The Harvard Crimson.
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1967/3/1/mark-de-wolfe-howe-dies-lawyer/ - “Mary M. Adams, 93; Irish Novelist and Playwright.” Obit. The Boston Globe : 7.
- “Mary Manning Howe Adams.” Obit. Irish Times : 19.
- “Producing Films in Ireland.” Irish Independent : 10.
- Programme, Guests of the Nation. 16 March 1960. Guests of the Nation clippings file. IED-TML
- Rockett, Kevin. “Part One: History, Politics and Irish Cinema.” In Kevin Rockett, Luke Gibbons and John Hill, Cinema and Ireland. London: Croom Helm, 1988. 1-126.
- Rockett, Kevin and Emir Rockett. Irish Film and Television Research Online. 15 March 2012.
http://www.tcd.ie/irishfilm/ - Trotter, Mary. Ireland’s National Theaters: Political Performance and the Origins of the Irish Dramatic Movement. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2001.
Filmography
- A. Archival Filmography: Extant Film Titles:
- 1. Mary Manning as Actress, Adapter, Company Co-Founder, and Miscellaneous Crew By Accident. Dir.: J. N. G. Davidson, asst. dir./casting: Mary Manning, sc.: Norris Davidson cas.: C. Clarke-Clifford, Olive Purcell, Mary Manning, Paul Farrell, si, b&w, 16mm. Archive: IED, RTÉ.
- 2. Mary Manning as Adapter, Company Co-Founder and Miscellaneous Crew Guests of the Nation. Dir.: Denis Johnston, adp./props: Mary Manning cas.: Barry Fitzgerald, Frank Toolin, Cyril Jackson, Charles Maher, Georgina Roper, Fred Johnson, Shelah Richards, Cyril Cusack, Hilton Edwards, si, b&w, 35mm. Archive: IED, GBB.
- 3. Mary Manning as Company Co-Founder and Miscellaneous Crew Screening in the Rain. Cam.: J. N. G. Davidson, misc. crew: Mary Manning cas.: Mary O’Moore, Grace McLoughlin, Judge Johnston, Lord Longford, Hilton Edwards, Micheál MacLiamóir, si, b&w, 16mm. Archive: IED, RTÉ.
- B. Filmography: Not Extant Film Titles:
- 1. Mary Manning as Director and Company Co-Founder Bank Holiday, 1930.
- 2. Mary Manning as Company Co-Founder and Miscellaneous Crew Pathetic Gazette, 1930.
Plays
- Go, Lovely Rose
- Youth's The Season...?
- Storm over Wicklow
- Happy Family
- The Voice of Shem
Books
- Mount Venus
- Lovely People
- The Last Chronicles of Ballyfungus