June 15, 2011
Bloomsday, celebrated annually on June 16th, is a huge act of devotion to James Joyce’s novel, Ulysses, and the Dublin peregrinations of its main character, Leopold Bloom. The date corresponds with the events in that most classic of modern novels while also commemorating Joyce’s first date with his future wife.
Originating in Dublin, 1954 (the 50th anniversary of the books’ internal calendar), as a pilgrimage by local literati who took on character roles from the novel and followed Leopold’s route around the city. It resulted in a suitably Epic Fail of excellent proportions as they stumbled under the weight of inebriation halfway through, holing up at the Bailey Pub where they devoted the rest of the day to doing such things as are done in pubs.
Since then Bloomsday has spread dramatically, capturing the hearts of Ulysses devotees everywhere. Iterations of the journey have sprouted in towns and cities around the world, and though their form varies from scattered urban readings, re-creations of Ulyssian events, or just day long pub crawls punctuated with quotations and bad accents, all happenstance are infused with a sense of merriment and pluck that unites the high and low in a natural and easy way.
The celebration has gone online as well: a twitter group (@11ysses) who will attempt to recast the novel in 24 hours of literary re-imagining, through the fragmentary prose of tweets. You can see their blog, here – it’s pretty cool. You can also follow the Ulyssian twittersphere with #bloomsday. Go ahead, geek out.
As well as events in Genoa, Trieste, Baltimore, London, Sydney, Lisbon and Brazil (there are legions more) There are NZ options. There’s a relaxed event at Auckland Central Library (they have light refreshments), or a more raucous offering at the Thirsty Dog on Karangahape Rd, where there’ll be readings, alcohol, music and Irish people. Unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be an event in Wellington – nothing at the Irish (themed) pubs, and the Irish Embassy isn’t aware of anything (I actually did research), which is a great shame. But don’t let that stop you joining with friends, putting on an Irish brogue, necking some Guinness and reciting quotes from Ulysses.
Recommended quotes:
“Me. And me now.”
“Love loves to love love.”
“The sea, the snotgreen sea, the scrotumtightening sea.”
Originating in Dublin, 1954 (the 50th anniversary of the books’ internal calendar), as a pilgrimage by local literati who took on character roles from the novel and followed Leopold’s route around the city. It resulted in a suitably Epic Fail of excellent proportions as they stumbled under the weight of inebriation halfway through, holing up at the Bailey Pub where they devoted the rest of the day to doing such things as are done in pubs.
Since then Bloomsday has spread dramatically, capturing the hearts of Ulysses devotees everywhere. Iterations of the journey have sprouted in towns and cities around the world, and though their form varies from scattered urban readings, re-creations of Ulyssian events, or just day long pub crawls punctuated with quotations and bad accents, all happenstance are infused with a sense of merriment and pluck that unites the high and low in a natural and easy way.
The celebration has gone online as well: a twitter group (@11ysses) who will attempt to recast the novel in 24 hours of literary re-imagining, through the fragmentary prose of tweets. You can see their blog, here – it’s pretty cool. You can also follow the Ulyssian twittersphere with #bloomsday. Go ahead, geek out.
As well as events in Genoa, Trieste, Baltimore, London, Sydney, Lisbon and Brazil (there are legions more) There are NZ options. There’s a relaxed event at Auckland Central Library (they have light refreshments), or a more raucous offering at the Thirsty Dog on Karangahape Rd, where there’ll be readings, alcohol, music and Irish people. Unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be an event in Wellington – nothing at the Irish (themed) pubs, and the Irish Embassy isn’t aware of anything (I actually did research), which is a great shame. But don’t let that stop you joining with friends, putting on an Irish brogue, necking some Guinness and reciting quotes from Ulysses.
Recommended quotes:
“Me. And me now.”
“Love loves to love love.”
“The sea, the snotgreen sea, the scrotumtightening sea.”
2 comments:
The show features Linn Lorkin and the Jews Brothers Band, Robyn Malcolm, Hershal Herscher, "Irish Joe" Carolan, Chris Trotter, Farrell Cleary, Yuko Takahashi, Bruce Hopkins, "Irish Brian" Keegan, and the Danny Bhoy Barbershop Quartet.
In three-hours (including drinking-time) you get taken judiciously and sensationally through ULYSSES by way of readings, music, staged scenes and anything else.
The copy of ULYSSES being used for the readings is a leather-bound 1927 copy, 9th impression of the first edition, published by Shakespeare & Coy, Paris.
Dublin actor Brian Keegan will be reading from it. “I’ll try to keep the Guinness off it,” he’s said. The script for the show is by James Joyce, the music by W Mozart, H Herscher, L Lorkin, T Moore, E Piaf, T Aquinas, M Jagger / K Richard
Thirsty Dog, K' Rd, corner of Howe St, Thursday June 16, 7.30pm.
The Auckland Bloomsday show at the Thirsty Dog features Linn Lorkin and the Jews Brothers Band, Robyn Malcolm, Hershal Herscher, "Irish Joe" Carolan, Chris Trotter, Farrell Cleary, Yuko Takahashi, Bruce Hopkins, "Irish Brian" Keegan, and the Danny Bhoy Barbershop Quartet.
In three-hours (including drinking-time) you get taken judiciously and sensationally through ULYSSES by way of readings, music, staged scenes and anything else.
The copy of ULYSSES being used for the readings is a leather-bound 1927 copy, 9th impression of the first edition, published by Shakespeare & Coy, Paris.
Dublin actor Brian Keegan will be reading from it. “I’ll try to keep the Guinness off it,” he’s said. The script for the show is by James Joyce, the music by W Mozart, H Herscher, L Lorkin, T Moore, E Piaf, T Aquinas, M Jagger / K Richard
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