How the Big Yin made Ireland laugh during The Troubles

Alan Corr Alan Corr | 05-03 08:15

Of course it's popcorn snortingly funny but this re-discovered film of Billy Connolly's 1975 Irish tour is also a fascinating time capsule of Ireland north and south

Originally released in 1976 but rarely seen since, director Murray Grigor's document of Billy Connolly’s first ever gigs in Dublin and Belfast is as funny as you might expect but it’s also a fascinating look back on a very different Ireland.

Now re-discovered and restored by the British Film Institute, it captures the Glasgow livewire as he debuts his outsized banana boots, made especially for Connolly by Scottish pop artist Edmund Smith, at a one-off show at Dublin’s Carlton Cinema and two nights at the ABC Cinema in Belfast at the height of The Troubles.

Shot in the same rough and ready style as D.A. Pennebaker's 1967 Bob Dylan documentary Don't Look Back, the camera is never off Connolly. There he is dying of a hangover and nursing a glass of Smithwicks in a pub off O’Connell Street, joshing with the tea ladies at the Carlton, joking about with Scottish members of the 15th Parachute Battalion at Aldergrove Airport, effortlessly batting off hecklers, and swapping banjo tips with his Dublin support act Spud, the Irish band managed by Paul McGuinness before he alighted on U2.

Then 33, Connolly still seemed unaware of just how raw and hilarious his anarchic, freewheeling stand-up style really was. In Grigor’s film we can almost see a comic genius being born on stage, in between skit songs on banjo and guitar (he topped the UK Singles Chart with his song D.I.V.O.R.C.E. the same year).

Of course, it's popcorn snortingly funny but it’s also a fascinating time capsule of Ireland north and south. Having been warned not to play Belfast, he is noticeably nervous before he takes to the ABC stage - as he remarks ruefully, "I’ve never been in a city where they warn you so much before you go on stage. Even Edinburgh didn’t do that."

Connolly on a flight from Dublin to Belfast in October 1975

Gazing out the window on the flight from Dublin to Belfast, he muses, "You wouldn’t think such a violent place to be kind of pretty" but this former shipyard worker of Irish extraction doesn’t shy away from engaging side-on with the sectarian violence out on the streets.

On stage, he wonders why young men join the army before performing Sergeant, Where’s Mine?, his own song about The Troubles. The funniest scene in the whole film arrives when he bends down to accept a bushel of roses from a well-wisher front of stage . . .

From the scatological (you want jokes about musical farts, he’s got 'em) to the political, this is a compelling and hilarious snapshot of a man on the verge of comedy superstardom.

Alan Corr @CorrAlan

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

Banks' balance sheet swells on hefty lending to govt

KARACHI: The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has said that the balance sheet of the banking sector expa...

USD drops as Federal Reserve cuts interest rates by 0.5%

NEW YORK: The dollar dropped after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday cut interest rates by half a per...

Telecom tax dispute lands in SIFC

KARACHI: The ongoing tax dispute between provincial governments and Long Distance and International ...

PAKSAT-MM1 to expand internet access: IT minister

ISLAMABAD: Minister of State for Information Technology and Telecommunication, Shaza Fatima Khawaja,...

Industries violate emissions rules

LAHORE: As the threat of smog looms ahead of the arrival of winter, the Punjab government is facing ...

Stakeholders decry 18% GST on EVs against EDB policy

KARACHI: To promote the Electric Vehicle (EV) revolution in Pakistan, the Ministry of Industries and...