Search Results - Fay, William
William Fay

Fay was born in Dublin, where he attended Belvedere College. He worked for a time in the 1890s with a touring theatre company in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. When he returned to Dublin, he worked with his older brother Frank, staging productions in halls around the city. Finally, they formed W. G. Fay's Irish National Dramatic Company, focused on the development of Irish acting talent. The brothers participated in founding the Abbey Theatre and were largely responsible for evolving the Abbey style of acting. After a falling-out with the Abbey directors in 1908, the brothers emigrated to the United States to work in theatre there.
He moved to London in 1914, working as an actor on stage and in films.
He played Johnnie, in the film, Spellbound (1941 film). One of his most notable film roles was as Father Tom in Carol Reed's Belfast-set ''Odd Man Out'' (1947), whose cast was dense with actors from the Abbey Theatre. His memoir, ''The Fays of the Abbey Theatre'', appeared in 1935. Willie Fay died in London in 1947, aged 74. Provided by Wikipedia
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1The Fays of the Abbey TheatrePublished 1971Call Number: Loading…Order via interlibrary loan
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2The philosophical role of the world in Husserl's phenomenologyPublished 1987Call Number: Loading…Order via interlibrary loan
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3The Fays of the Abbey Theatre: an autobiographical recordPublished 1971Call Number: Loading…Order via interlibrary loan
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4The Avon emeralds: = Der Schmuck der Lady Avon
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