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Famous Like Me > Actor > M > Dermot Morgan

Profile of Dermot Morgan on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Dermot Morgan  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 3rd March 1952
   
Place of Birth: Dublin, Ireland
   
Profession: Actor
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia

Dermot Morgan (3 March 1952 - 28 February 1998), an Irish school-teacher turned comedian and actor, achieved international renown as Father Ted Crilly in the Channel 4 television sitcom Father Ted.

Father Trendy and The Live Mike

image:Dermotmorgan.jpg
Dermot Morgan as Father Ted
His final and most acclaimed character.

The Dublin-born Morgan first came to prominence as part of the team of the highly successful RTÉ television show The Live Mike, presented by Mike Murphy. Between 1979 and 1984 Morgan, previously a full-time teacher at St. Michael's College, Ailesbury Road, played a range of comic characters, who would appear between segments, including Father Trendy, an unctious trying-to-be-cool Roman Catholic priest given to drawing ludicrous parallels with non-religious life in two minute 'chats' to camera, to the hilarity of the audience. He also played (among other characters) an intolerant GAA bigot, who would wave his hurley stick around aggressively while verbally attacking his pet hates. Morgan's success, which made him an instant hit with viewers, led him to quit teaching and become a full-time comedian.

Kenny Live

His relationship with RTÉ, however, became difficult, as the station tried without success to find some way of making use of what it saw as Morgan's incredible but undisciplined talent; a number of attempts in the form of 'pilot' shows never aired. (They alleged they lacked enough humour to air; he claimed that they feared the humour might offend some people.) Morgan saw RTÉ as a conservative organisation unable to cope with avant garde humour. Morgan returned to the screen in the late 1980s playing his past roles and new ones - initially on Kenny Live, a new Saturday chat show presented by Pat Kenny which launched to fill the gap in the schedules left by the moving of the famed Late Late Show to a new Friday slot. However show axed its comedy slot when it changed its format to cope with negative public responses to the show's structure.

Mr. Eastwood

Morgan moved into a new area when he released a single in 1986 called Thank you very very much, Mr. Eastwood, a comedy take on the fawning praise of his manager given after bouts by internationally successful Irish boxer Barry McGuigan, which 'featured' lines by McGuigan, Ronald Reagan, Bob Geldof, and Pope John Paul II, all performed by Morgan, in which they too thanked "Mr. Eastwood" over and over again.

Scrap Saturday Breaks The Mould

Morgan's biggest Irish broadcasting success occurred in the late 1980s in the Saturday morning radio comedy show, Scrap Saturday, in which Morgan, co-scriptwriter Gerard Stembridge, and Pauline McLynn mocked Ireland's political, business and media establishment. In particular the relationship between then Taoiseach (prime minister), the ever-controversial Charles J. Haughey and his press secretary, P.J. Mara became legendary, with Haughey's dismissive attitude towards the latter, whom in the sketches he would summon with a guttural "Maaaara" and Mara's adoring and grovelling attitude towards the "Boss . . . the greatest Leader, Man of Destiny, Statesman, Titan, a Collossus", becoming a broadcasting legend and winning critical praise. Morgan pilloried Haughey's propensity for claiming a family connection to almost every part of Ireland he visited through the mocking use of a famous drinks advertisement for an Irish beer called Harp, which had played on the image of someone returning home and seeking friends, especially "Sally O'Brien, and the way she might look at you".

In the Morgan skit version, Haughey's visits to somewhere in the world, from Dublin to Dubai and elsewhere, would invariably cue after a few seconds the traditional music of the real advertisement, at which Haughey would begin "did I tell you, PJ, about my cousins in . . . " And he would begin discussing "my cousin François Haughey" (France), "Helmut Haughey" (Germany), "Yassar Haughey" (Palestine), "Yitzak Haughey" (Israel) or wherever, to the increasingly despairing Mara, who would groan "Ah now Jaysus, Boss. Come on now, Ah Jaysus (sigh)!" The Haughey/Mara "double act" became the star turn in a series that mocked all sides, from Haughey and his advisors to opposition Fine Gael TD Michael Noonan as a Limerick disk jockey called "Morning Noon'an Night" and a host of other characters. When RTÉ axed the show in the early 1990s a national outcry ensued. Morgan lashed the decision, calling it "a shameless act of broadcasting cowardice and political subservience".

Father Ted

Morgan's "big break", although it came late in life, undoubtedly came in the shape of the title-role in the Channel 4 sitcom Father Ted, which ran for three series from 1995. Writers Arthur Mathews and Graham Linehan developed the series from a character featured in the former's stand-up comedy act. The writers apparently specified Morgan as their first and only choice for the casting of the Father Ted character.

A persistent urban myth suggests that RTÉ, initially offered Father Ted, turned it down either because of timidity in dealing with religious themes in a comedy series, or because of an ongoing feud with Morgan. In fact, the independent production company Hat Trick always intended the show for Channel 4. Apart from the fact that they never pitched the show to RTÉ, no evidence suggests that the religious theme would have scared the broadcaster off. It had already produced Leave it to Mrs. O'Brien, a similarly-themed sitcom which hardly rivalled Father Ted in quality (it has never repeated the series on television, given its perceived poor quality) but the fact that it made it at all showed that RTÉ did not regard religion as a 'comedic no go area' as some have claimed. RTÉ had launched Dermot Morgan's Father Trendy and had kept him on the air for four years; and on the Late Late Show had constantly enraged the Catholic Church with discussions on lesbian nuns, contraception, homosexuality and abortion. The station had a general reputation as liberal and left-of-centre, with conservative Catholics accusing it of long anti-Catholic bias. According to its critics, RTÉ's problem wasn't that it was afraid of the Catholic Church, but that it was afraid of offending anyone, its fear of offending politicians being the reason for the axing of Scrap Saturday. (No evidence has ever been produced that it had been complained to over Scrap Saturday; most politicians were as flabbergasted as the rest of the listening public when it was axed, many missing the way in which their opponents would be slagged off, in particularly its "wickedly funny" treatment of Haughey, in the words of one of Haughey's own ministers.)

Father Ted centred on three disparate characters, Father Ted Crilly, a financially dubious character living a frustrated life trapped on the island, by Morgan. Famed Irish TV comedy actor Frank Kelly played Father Jack Hackett, a foul-mouthed smelly alcoholic whose catchphrase "drink, feck, arse, girls" became one of the most famous phrases ever to come from a comedy show (when he could not get his favourite drink, Hackett would drink anything, including brake fluid and Toilet Duck - a toilet cleaner -) and the dim-witted Father Dougal McGuire, played by new Irish comedian Ardal O'Hanlon (in real life the son of one of Charles J. Haughey's ministers). In addition, and catching the public interest, was the priests' housekeeper, Mrs Doyle, played by Pauline McLynn, whom Morgan had worked with on Scrap Saturday. Though the actress was only in her mid 30s, she was deliberately made to look like a fifty-five year old spinster who had devoted her life to being a housekeeper and whose role was to be tea-maker in chief, produce sandwiches by the ton, and do such 'unimportant' tasks as repair the roof, clean the chimney and be at the beck and call of her clerical bosses at all times of the day and night. Her method of encouraging a reluctant person to take a cup of tea whether they wanted to or not, "you will, you will, you will, you will, go on, you will, you will . . . ", or alternatively "Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on, go on, go on . . . " became another of the show's most famous catchphrases.

BAFTA award

The show's surrealist image of Catholicism earned it wide popularity and critical acclaim. In 1996 the show won a BAFTA award for Best Comedy, while Morgan won a BAFTA for Best Actor, and McLynn the Best Actress award. Apart from the main characters, many other successful side characters featured, most famously the camp hyperactive Father Noel Furlong, played by Irish comedian and British talk show host Graham Norton. After the recording of the third series had been completed, Morgan announced that there was to be no more series of Father Ted. He was instead working on a new comedy series, based around two retired soccer players living in a small flat together. However 24 hours after finishing the recording of the last episode of Father Ted, while hosting a dinner party at his home, Morgan collapsed and died of a massive heart-attack. He was 46.

Sudden death & legacy

Frank Kelly said of his acting colleague "Dermot's mind was mercurial. I think he was a kind of comedic meteor. He burned himself out." The irony of Morgan's death, at a time when after twenty years of struggle, he had finally achieved financial and artistic freedom, was not lost on his family and friends and commented on by his colleagues in the media. Ironically, for a station that has such a tempestuous relationship with him, repeats of Morgan's Father Ted on TV and Scrap Saturday on radio are now in constant demand, while in 2002 RTÉ finally broke its notorious record in comedy by producing a successful sit-com Bachelor's Walk.

Morgan is generally perceived to have been Ireland's finest satirist in the last decades of the twentieth century. He gave to RTÉ a particular blend of successful satire, through Father Trendy and Scrap Saturday. Tragically for Morgan, as RTÉ itself admitted, the station he worked with was illsuited to his comedic talent and failed to make full use of it. It was in a British-made TV show about Irish Catholic priests that Morgan finally achieved international acclaim and the sort of steady income and support he had sought from RTÉ and believed he had not received. Father Ted showed the world that Ireland could do comedy, albeit on a British, not Irish TV station. The irony is that his sudden death denied Morgan the chance to show the full repetoire of his comedic and satirical skills, leaving him remembered internationally for just one, fondly remembered sit-com, Father Ted.

Morgan was survived by his partner and young son, and by two sons by his earlier marriage. His Requiem Mass in a church in Dublin was attended by among others, the President of Ireland Mary McAleese and her predecessor, Mary Robinson and by the leaders of Ireland's church and state, many of whom had been the victims (often to their own amusement, sometimes to their anger) of Morgan's humour in Scrap Saturday.

Dermot Morgan was buried in Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin.

In 2002 his three sons produced a book about Morgan, named in honour of his association through Father Ted and Father Trendy with Catholicism Our Father (ISBN 1874597960).

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Dermot Morgan