REVIEWS FOR PADDY – THE LIFE AND TIMES OF PADDY ARMSTRONG
“Wycherley is superlative in this exquisitely tender portrayal of Paddy Armstrong”
– Emer O’Kelly, Sunday Independent.
“This is writing and acting at its most powerful… a totally engrossing experience. It truly is a show not to be missed”
– Michael Harnett, playwright.
“A redemption song… unputdownable”
- Irish Examiner
“If it were a work of fiction, it would be worthy of the Man Booker shortlist”
– Guardian
“Incredible… Don Wycherley in the performance of his life… Unforgettable”
– Joe Duffy.
“An absolute must-see. Incredible play that will make you laugh, cry, become enraged in equal measure. Don Wycherley is outstanding”
- audience member
“Stunning play and performance. Don’t miss it”
– Alastair Logan (Guildford Four solicitor)
“Hilarious, moving, infuriating. I was moved beyond words. I want to see it again”
- audience member
“Prepare to feel the weight of injustice, the resilience of the human spirit and the power of truth. All masterfully conveyed in this unforgettable production. Loved it!!”
- audience member
“On 5th October 1974 a bomb exploded in the Horse and Groom Pub in Guildford, Surrey which killed five people including four soldiers. On 11th December 1974, the police arrested four individuals (“the Guildford Four”) one of whom was Paddy Armstrong. In October 1975, they were convicted of the bombing and sentenced to life imprisonment. Almost fifteen years later on 19th October 1989, all four were released and their convictions were quashed as being unsafe. Tynan, Wycherley and Gleeson have created this 75-minute piece of theatre to describe the life of Paddy Armstrong in Belfast and London along with his arrest and interrogation, the trial, his years of incarceration and the ultimate quashing of the convictions. It is a solo performance by Wycherley who plays Paddy throughout.
The events described are mind-boggling as the police extracted confessions from each of the accused by unlawful means. The judiciary is also implicated by the testimony of the Balcombe Street bombers who during their trial in 1977 made known that they were responsible for the Horse and Groom Pub bombing; that the Guilford Four were innocent and therefore wrongfully imprisoned. Remarkably that evidence was not sufficient to set aside the convictions. Another twelve years would pass before the convictions were set aside as unsafe. Paddy, as a result, was incarcerated unlawfully for fifteen long years.
That is the background story. Now Paddy, in his seventies, is in a sitting room, with two armchairs, in Clontarf where he lives as he recalls the events of his life. Wycherley with impressive linguistic skills moves between Belfast accents, a variety of English regional accents and the lofty tones of the English judicial establishment as he tells the story. It is also a physically demanding performance because he is on his feet throughout as the two armchairs are but props to provide some awareness of the calmness of the life Paddy now lives. Wycherley brings a variety of colours to Paddy’s somewhat feckless youthful life in Belfast where he had employment, if you can call it that, in a bookmaker’s shop to the catastrophic events which would overwhelm him when he went to live in London in a squat. Wycherley makes all this vivid as well as the brutality and lawlessness of the police and prison officers. The English legal system failed at numerous levels. But Paddy has survived to tell his story with pride and little rancour.
This is a gripping piece of theatre. Wycherely reveals the Kafkaesque reality of it all. It is a shameful story for the English legal system but for Paddy Armstrong, it is a worthy acknowledgement of a man “failed and scarred by a flawed system yet refusing to be defined by it.” He now has a calm existence where his own routine defines his life. This is a play which shows the value of theatre in making accessible the human consequences of a miscarriage of justice. A miscarriage of justice is a serious failing in a society that claims to be civilised. Its corrosive ramifications reach far. In this instance, the miscarriage of justice took place at many different levels. It is a grim tale made into an absorbing piece of theatre. It is entirely appropriate that it is premiering in Clontarf’s own theatre “The Viking”. It is an important play and deserves to be widely seen in both Britain and Ireland.”
- Frank L. No More Workhorse
“The Guildford Four and the Birmingham Six are etched into our folk history. Two groups of people who, for several generations, have represented infamy and brutality in the Irish psyche. Fifteen hideous years in prison for ghastly inhuman crimes against innocent people. Except they too were innocent and the hatred their unjust treatment engendered has fed resentment and mistrust ever since 1974. Pubs in Guildford and Woolwich were ripped apart by no-warning IRA bombs. Paddy Armstrong, 24-years-old, was one of those picked up.
He was living in the UK at the instigation of the local priest in Ireland, who told his mother he'd be better off out of the cauldron of Northern Ireland's hatred. A confession had been fabricated and beaten out of them, and he got a life sentence. Fifteen years later, having served time in several prisons, all renowned for the brutality of their regimes - countless beatings and humiliations later, a regime that involved incessant insults and reminders of hopelessness-something happened. Thanks to his lawyer, who never gave up on him, Paddy found that public lauding of "British justice" might actually manifest itself, and the sentences were quashed.
In 2017, Paddy finally put his head above the parapet and wrote a memoir in cooperation with Mary-Elaine Tynan. And seven years later, that memoir has reached the stage - Paddy: The Life and Times of Paddy Armstrong, adapted and writ- ten with stellar simplicity and exquisite tenderness. Tynan is a co-author, as are Niamh Gleeson and, superlatively, the actor Don Wycherley.
Grubby and dressing-gowned, surrounded by his beloved family, a slightly confused 74-year old Paddy is looking for his pills. He's under instruction to take three at lunchtime. One wonders fleetingly how he would cope without the caring regime he lives under. But his sense of humour has never left him, as the memories trigger each other, flitting from boyhood days of poker-playing on the street, to the "glamour" of living in the freedom of a squat with his girlfriend and to the terrible, hate- filled days of being spat upon, literally and figuratively, the endless prison beatings and the hopelessness. He was befriended by one of the Kray brothers who tells himhe's issued orders Paddy is to be left alone. Wycherley is superb, flitting from pathos to sarcasm, from the depths of hell to hoping for a break in the black clouds of his destroyed life. Tynan directs with the kind of empathy born of the many years the two have cooperated in bringing the play to the stage. And there's a simple, effective set by Tina Kavanagh.
- Emer O’Kelly