Get Movie Showtimes & Tickets

Go
Go
Celebs
Photos
Fan Sites
Apply
Directory
Support
MyHollywood
Sign In
Sign Up
Forums
Hot List

Home Celebs Shane Connaughton
Bullet Arrow Photos
Bullet Arrow News
Bullet Arrow Interviews
Bullet Arrow Premieres
Bullet Arrow Forums
Bullet Arrow Meet Fans
Bullet Arrow Fan Sites
Bullet Arrow Get a Poster at AllPosters.com
Advertisement
A successful Irish stage and TV writer, Connaughton hit his country's best-seller lists with the novel, "A Border Station". What Damon Runyon did for New York, Connaughton might well be said to have done for Redhills, Ireland, as many of his stories are set there, where Connaughton spent his childhood. He entered films with the script to the Oscar-winning short "The Dollar Bottom" (1980) and went on to collaborate with Mike Leigh on the TV-movie "Four Days in July" (1984), about couples in Northern Ireland affected by the Troubles....

Filmography

Guests of the Nation - ( Director / / Announced / )
Guests of the Nation - ( Screenplay / / Announced / )
Tara Road - ( Screenplay / 2005 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
River Queen - ( Writer(- Additional Material) / 2005 / Released / )
The Run of the Country - ( Screenplay / 1995 / Released / )
The Run of the Country - ( Book as Source Material / 1995 / Released / )
O Mary This London - ( Screenplay / 1994 / Released / Malofilms Distribution )
The Playboys - ( Screenplay / 1992 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
The Playboys - ( Customs Officer / 1992 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
The Miracle - ( Rose's Father / 1990 / Released / Cineplex Odeon )
My Left Foot - ( Screenplay / 1989 / Released / Ferndale Productions )
Every Picture Tells a Story - ( Screenplay / 1984 / Released / )
Four Days in July - ( Screenplay / 1984 / Released / )
Four Days in July - ( Brendan / 1984 / Released / )
The Dollar Bottom - ( Screenplay / 1981 / Released / )
TV Credits
The Blackwater Lightship ( 2004 / Released ): Writer
Uprising ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Pleading Guilty ( Announced ): Writer
Full Biography (Back to top)

A successful Irish stage and TV writer, Connaughton hit his country's best-seller lists with the novel, "A Border Station". What Damon Runyon did for New York, Connaughton might well be said to have done for Redhills, Ireland, as many of his stories are set there, where Connaughton spent his childhood. He entered films with the script to the Oscar-winning short "The Dollar Bottom" (1980) and went on to collaborate with Mike Leigh on the TV-movie "Four Days in July" (1984), about couples in Northern Ireland affected by the Troubles. (The screenwriter also made his acting debut in the telefilm.) Connaughton, though, first won international attention as the co-scenarist on "My Left Foot" (1989), based on the life of writer-painter Christy Brown. While he and director Jim Sheridan only shared an Academy Award nomination for their script, actors Daniel Day-Lewis (as the adult Christy) and Brenda Fricker (as his mother) took home Oscars.

Connaughton played the disinterested father of a imaginative young woman in Neil Jordan's "The Miracle" (1991). He followed by co-writing the intriguing "The Playboys" (1992), about an unwed woman in the 1950s who refuses to name the father of her child. More recently, Connaughton adapted to the screen his second novel, "The Run of the Country" (1995), about the relationship between a son and his widower father.


Profession(s):
screenwriter, novelist
Sometimes Credited As:

Horizontal Line
Education
Bristol Old Vic Theatre School London, England acting
Awards (Back to top)
George Devine Award "Jenny" 0

Milestones (Back to top)
1995 Adapted own novel for the screen, "The Run of the Country"
1992 Wrote "The Playboys"; also appeared in film
1991 Acted in Neil Jordan's "The Miracle"
1989 Breakthrough screenplay, "My Left Foot", co-written with director Jim Sheridan; earned Oscar nomination
1984 Scripted and acted in Mike Leigh's "Four Days in July"
1980 First produced screenplay, the Oscar-winning short "The Dollar Bottom"
First produced play "Jenny" (Roundhouse, London)


Advertisement