The recent death of Seán Óg O
Ceallacháin sent me searching amongst my sports books and in particular amongst
the G.A.A. books on my shelves. Seán Óg’s
name appears as the author or co-author of several books on our national games
but it was ‘Seán Óg His Own Story’
published in 1988 which held most interest for me. His life story, which had another 25 years to
run when the book first appeared in print, detailed his involvement in amateur
dramatics and Gaelic sport before he became the world’s longest serving sports
reporter.
He recalled the Dublin Drama Group ‘Walkinstown Players’, of which he was a
member, visiting Athy on several occasions, the first time on 4th
March, 1954 when Walter Mackens play ‘Home
is the Hero’ was staged in the Town Hall.
Seán Óg remembered that occasion which was marked by exceptionally bad
weather and a good reaction from the local audience. ‘Despite
a terrific gale, snow, hail and sleet, theatre lovers in the town turned out in
force to see a play about which much had been written in the daily Press. The audience reaction to the play was
fantastic, and indeed pleasing from our view point.’ Seán Óg and his colleagues had travelled
to Athy to put on the performance in aid of the Churchtown and Kilberry School’s
improvement fund.
The following year the Walkinstown
Players again performed in Athy, this time in St. John’s Hall. T.C. Murray’s one act play ‘Spring’ was performed prior to being
put on in the All Ireland Drama Festival in Athlone, together with a repeat
performance of the three act play ‘Home
is the Hero’. The Dublin group was
being facilitated by Athy’s Social Club Players in their preparation for the
All Ireland Drama Festival. Seán Óg in
his memoirs referred to ‘our good friends
in Athy’ and went on to explain how the ‘reaction
of the audience helped immeasurably in polishing up the production.’
Athy was apparently a welcoming
venue for the Walkinstown Players for Seán Óg recalls another performance in
St. John’s Hall. This time ‘Bugle in the Blood’, a play by Listowel
national teacher and author Bryan McMahon was performed on the Thursday and
Sunday before Christmas to a packed hall.
Seán Óg, who won a Leinster Senior
Hurling Championship with Dublin, also played Gaelic football. He joined the Clanna Gael Football Club in
1945 and played on the club’s senior team with Athy man Tommy Mulhall. Tommy, regarded as one of the best, if not
the best footballer to have played with Athy, was a county and interprovincial
Gaelic football player. He transferred
from the Athy club to the Dublin based club Clanna Gael when he left his native
town to work in the city.
Seán Óg is best remembered during
the latter part of his career as the voice of the Sunday evening G.A.A. results
programme. His past connections with
Athy may not be so well known, but his book which he signed for me so many
years ago makes an interesting addition to any Athy man’s library.
In recent years there has been a
veritable avalanche of books published on G.A.A. matters, with players,
managers and clubs all committing their stories to print. Last week I purchased what at first sight
appears to be a wonderfully detailed book with an imaginative layout on the
history of the St. Stephen’s G.A.A. club in Kilkenny. Written by Tommy Lanigan, it is possibly one
of the most comprehensive club histories I have ever come across. Here in County Kildare a number of clubs
including St. Lawrences, Castledermot, Clane, Naas, Carbery and Kilcock have all
produced club histories, copies of which I have been lucky to acquire over the
years. Apart from booklets produced for
the Rheban and Castlemitchell clubs and the earlier mentioned books on St.
Lawrences and Castledermot, nothing has yet been published on the first G.A.A.
club established in South Kildare. The
Athy Club was of course that club. Can
we hope that someone will take on the task of committing to print the story of
the club which gave us such great players as Tommy Mulhall, George Comerford,
Danny Flood, Mick Carolan, Michael Foley and the young emerging stars of
today. I would like to think that the
Athy G.A.A. Club history is a book, which sometime in the future, I can add to
my collection of G.A.A. club histories.
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