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Prestige Drama by Séamas O’Reilly review – brilliant wry comedy of Derry and the shadow of the past | Fiction
The premise of Séamas O’Reilly’s brilliant debut novel is that a Hollywood actor has flown into Derry to star in a new TV series about the Troubles called Dead City, then mysteriously disappeared. But its real interest lies in what happens when a place becomes defined by a particular historical moment, to the extent that stories told about it lapse into formula. As one character says of the TV series: “A young lad coming of age in a time of violence, will he get caught up in everything or find another way through blah blah blah.”
O’Reilly is determined to show us that the people of Derry are not so easily stereotyped. He uses Dead City as a starting point to circle through different characters connected to the series, from a stressed scriptwriter to a local historian who wonders, “How do you talk about the past as a person still living it, in a place that barely survived it?” As we move through the novel, we discover the links between them, creating a patchwork portrait of the city, similar to the way Tommy Orange’s novel There, There used a chorus of voices to explore the lives of Native Americans.
Each character talks to us directly. “The whole place has gone mad with Hollywood arriving,” says Dympna: people hope it will boost the economy “like Thrones did for Belfast”. Dympna’s daughter wants to audition and is quizzing her about the 1970s, “like some fella from the UN on a fact-finding mission”, while Dympna remembers the things she’s hidden from her children. “I wondered there and then if awareness is all it’s cracked up to be if you can’t tell the whole story.”
Who tells the story and why they tell it is a central concern, though O’Reilly’s lightness of touch means it never seems overdone. He has a keen eye for absurdities, for the way tragedy becomes marketable: the artist who daubed murals on Bogside walls now doing lecture tours with a “wee moustache and crucifix earring like a plastic Provo”; the ex-IRA hitman offering his services as a “consultant”. Those once bound by a code of silence are happy to demonstrate how to make a bottle bomb. “Say Nothing my arse,” says one character.
Economic necessity means people take work that perpetuates the cliches. Local painters are hired to recreate an old mural for the film set. “I can do the gunman, you can start with the dove,” says one. “If I do another dove as long as I live, God help me.” Aspiring actor Turlough says: “This crock of shite is the only chance I have of getting out of here.”
The locals note it’s mainly Americans and Brits working on the series: Americans who sentimentalise their Irish links – one of the theories about the missing star is that she’s “gone native like a load of Yanks do” – and Brits who “treat their own violence like the hiccups, something mad and terrible that was happening for some mysterious reason”. But there’s also Eileen, who is hopeful her home will be used as a filming location so she can pay for a new extension, watching the production crew examine her ornaments like “artefacts they pulled from a bog”.
This recreation and commodification of the past is a kind of haunting. The novel is run through with the different ways in which the dead are inescapable. Ann-Marie’s son was shot by a British soldier, his image now endlessly reproduced on book covers and “bloody tea-towels”. With her cold rage and her clear articulation of the unfixable contradictions of grief – “My heart is small and hard, wind-bleached like seaside beach seats” – Ann-Marie is one of the novel’s most powerful voices. Reflecting on the lads who came home safely after her son was killed, she says: “It wasn’t their fault and I’ll never forgive them.”
O’Reilly’s first book, Did Ye Hear Mammy Died?, was a heartbreakingly funny memoir about his mother’s death, and he clearly has a rare gift for moving nimbly between oppositions. The humour of Prestige Drama is skilfully weaponised: it allows O’Reilly to go after subjects that we often tiptoe around. And his language is gloriously vivid: a hungover man wakes up “slowly, like a column of dog food muscling its way out of a tin”.
Some may feel the missing actor thread should have had more prominence, but Prestige Drama is more interested in the ordinary people behind the televised version of events. James Plunkett, author of the 1969 novel Strumpet City, another polyphonic book about an Irish city, explained his novel’s success by saying he “didn’t lift my eye away from people at any stage, didn’t lift my eye away from the parish … for the whole of life is in that parish, where else can it be”.
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PM warns Burnham against immediate leadership challenge if he wins by-election
Keir Starmer says Labour should focus on a subsequent Manchester mayoral race if Andy Burnham wins in Makerfield.
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World Cup 2026: England kick off in Dallas after big-hitting trio make mark – live | World Cup 2026
Key events
Max Rushden and friends are coming in your ears with all the latest from the tournament.
Thomas Partey will not be part of the Ghana team that faces Panama, after he was denied access to Canada.
What Ghana do have is the likes of Antoine Semenyo after putting greater emphasis of attracting players from the diaspora.
Some lad called Messi is top of the Golden Boot list already. Who will hunt him down? Check out the top scorers, thus far.
Portugal open up against DR Congo as the Hors d’oeuvre for England v Croatia, not that anyone in those two countries will see it like that.
It is the sixth time Cristiano Ronaldo has been at a World Cup, which is a rather silly statistics. At 41, does he still have the powers to make a difference?
Ronaldo could wield a huge influence over the trophy’s ultimate destination. It remains to be seen whether that is channelled positively. Portugal can field arguably the best first-choice midfield in this summer’s competition, an experienced defence and an admirable array of wide forwards. At the heart of their attack stands, depending on your perspective, either a free-scoring icon primed to fire them all the way or a 41-year-old passenger whose presence sucks an otherwise fluent team into an inescapable void.
Nick Ames takes a look at the legend.
That is more than enough England material for the timing being, but do not fear, there will plenty throughout the day.
Opponents Croatia have impressed in recent times at the World Cup, reaching a final and semi-final in their past two outings. A key reason for their successes come in the form of 40-year-old Luka Modric, who is still going in the middle of the park and will be plotting England’s downfall.
Aleksandar Holiga on the the great man’s last dance.
There is plenty to get your teeth and eyes into as we prepare for England’s entrance in Dallas.
David Hytner has been listening to Harry Kane’s thoughts on the Three Lions’ chances and his own form.
I’m coming into this tournament in the best way possible; the best place physically and mentally. Throughout a career, there aren’t loads of times when all the pieces of the puzzle will come together at the right moment. Talking now, I feel like I’m in that place.
Thomas Tuchel is about to learn what managing at a major tournament is all about, writes Jacob Steinberg.
After an impressive qualifying campaign, Tuchel is backing England to thrive under the microscope in the US.
Barney Ronay on England shifting the focus from fun to business.
You can sit there playing with your silly little machines as much as you like. I’ll show you a World Cup. Close to a week in, with almost an entire round of cloudless group games in the bag, the coffin lid is starting to creak. By late Monday morning the first little knots of Three Lions shirts could be seen wandering the blank, baking streets of Dallas, blinking in the light. England are at the door. And it’s time for a vibe shift.
We should start with the latest set of results on what was a fascinating day.
Paul MacInnes was in New York/Jersey to see Mbappe lay down the first marker of the day. The Frenchman’s goals mean we will not have to spend our time discussing VAR too much but we certainly will.
The Ewan Murray witnessed Erling Haaland doing what he does best as Norway returned to the biggest stage by pummelling Iraq into submission.
Pablo Iglesias Maurer was on hand to see Lionel Messi’s 200th Argentina appearance, which he celebrated with a hat-trick against Algeria. He will be 39 next week but no one seems to have told him.
Austria required an own goal and late penalty against newcomers Jordan to get their competition up and running.
Preamble
After the tedium of four draws the day before, Tuesday felt like a moment within the context of this World Cup. Kylian Mbappe, Erling Haaland and Lionel Messi all made their marks with goals in big win for their respective countries. Tournaments need their stars to step up, often it is individuals rather than teams that are remembered for their successes in the history books and three of the globe’s best are threatening to do that again.
The hotly-anticipated England opener comes our way later, as Thomas Tuchel et al aim to end *checks notes* 70 years of hurt. Croatia provide the opponents, having previously caused plenty of harm to wallies with brollies and inflicting a semi-final defeat in Russia eight years ago. Will Harry Kane join his fellow figure heads by proving his class on the biggest stage? One nation certainly hope so.
We will be bringing you all the latest from the World Cup with plenty to look back on but even more to look forward to.
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'It's very Bond': Fashion experts on the England squad's off-pitch look
What experts make of the men’s team’s official off-duty fashion as they prepare for their first World Cup match.
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