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Polish Irishman - Life & Times of Count Casimar Markievicz

Availability: Out of Stock
ISBN: 9781908308238
AuthorQuigley, Pat
Pub Date01/09/2012
BindingTrade PB
Pages288
CountryIRL
Dewey941.508209
Publisher: The Liffey Press
Quick overview Casimir Markievicz was a Polish count who fell in love with Joan of Arc. His pictures hang in National Gallery in Ireland and in Poland, but despite his famous name, he has been overshadowed by his wife's reputation. This book offers a study of Casimir's work and shows that his relationship with Constance and Ireland was a major part of his life.
€21.83

Casimir Markievicz was a Polish count who fell in love with Ireland's Joan of Arc. His pictures hang in the National Gallery in Ireland and in Poland, but despite his famous name, he has been overshadowed by his wife's reputation. He was a Renaissance Man - artist, playwright, novelist, theatre director, and actor in silent films, but most of all, a man who loved to sing and dance. "The Polish Count and the Irish Rebel" depicts his unforgettable and life-enhancing story for the first time. The 'donkey on the stage' and 'the whiskey in the punch' are among many comical anecdotes from his career in the Irish theatre. The reader will also see the Rebel Countess in a different light - as an artist, lover and mother. Dublin in the early 1900s was the city of Joyce and Yeats, AE and Synge. Casimir knew them all and set Dublin's gossipers abuzz in the years from 1903 to 1913. "The Polish Count and the Irish Rebel" is the first study of Casimir's work and shows that his relationship with Constance and Ireland was a major part of his life. Their love changed with time but did not die.

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Product description

Casimir Markievicz was a Polish count who fell in love with Ireland's Joan of Arc. His pictures hang in the National Gallery in Ireland and in Poland, but despite his famous name, he has been overshadowed by his wife's reputation. He was a Renaissance Man - artist, playwright, novelist, theatre director, and actor in silent films, but most of all, a man who loved to sing and dance. "The Polish Count and the Irish Rebel" depicts his unforgettable and life-enhancing story for the first time. The 'donkey on the stage' and 'the whiskey in the punch' are among many comical anecdotes from his career in the Irish theatre. The reader will also see the Rebel Countess in a different light - as an artist, lover and mother. Dublin in the early 1900s was the city of Joyce and Yeats, AE and Synge. Casimir knew them all and set Dublin's gossipers abuzz in the years from 1903 to 1913. "The Polish Count and the Irish Rebel" is the first study of Casimir's work and shows that his relationship with Constance and Ireland was a major part of his life. Their love changed with time but did not die.

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