James Joyce's Finnegans Wake  By  cover art

James Joyce's Finnegans Wake

By: One Little Goat Theatre Company
  • Summary

  • Join us for James Joyce's divine and delirious comedy, Finnegans Wake, read by Irish-Canadian actor Richard Harte, with introductions by director Adam Seelig. From 2024 to 2029, One Little Goat Theatre Company will film and record all 17 chapters (~30 Hours) of Finnegans Wake before live audiences in various locations, screening/releasing them along along the way and completing the entire book by its 90th birthday, May 4, 2029. “Harte has found a way to crack the private code and maintain the original voltage… of one of the most funny and challenging novels of the 20th century.” —Irish Voice
    One Little Goat Theatre Company
    Show more Show less
activate_primeday_promo_in_buybox_DT
Episodes
  • Ep.006: Tim Finnegan’s wake (p. 24:16-29:36, End of Ch01)
    Jul 11 2024

    https://www.onelittlegoat.org/finneganswake

    Welcome to James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. In this episode we’ll hear Irish-Canadian actor Richard Harte reading pages 24 to 29 of Joyce’s last novel to conclude Chapter 1, with an introduction by director Adam Seelig.

    Richard’s reading (pages 24:16-29:36) was recorded with a live audience in Toronto on 31 August 2022.

    For a transcript of this episode, please visit https://www.onelittlegoat.org/podcast.

    “James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake” is produced by One Little Goat Theatre Company, an official charity in Canada and USA. If you’d like to support our work, please visit us online to make a charitable donation.

    To get in touch, email us at onelittlegoattc@gmail.com — we’d love to hear from you.

    This podcast is made possible by Friends of One Little Goat Theatre Company and the Emigrant Support Programme of the Government of Ireland. Thank you for your support!

    Thank you to the artists for this episode: Kevin Kennedy, Sound by William Bembridge, Podcast production by Sean Rasmussen, Stage Management by Laura Lakatosh, Rehearsal Stage Management by Sandi Becker, Directed by Adam Seelig.

    Thanks to our live audience of Pip Dwyer, Cathy Murphy, Nomi Rotbard, Arlo Rotbard-Seelig; and thanks to our rehearsal audience of Jackie Chau, Jordy Koffman, Andrew Moodie & Shai Rotbard-Seelig.

    Thank you to the Embassy of Ireland in Ottawa and the Irish Consulate in Toronto and to Production Consultants Cathy Murphy and Andrew Moodie.

    Thank you to Darina Gallagher and the James Joyce Centre in Dublin for your partnership.

    Thank you for listening!

    Mentioned: Tim Finnegan, “Finnegan’s Wake” Irish American folk song, the title of Finnegans Wake, FIN FINNE & FINE as ‘the end’, EGAN as ‘again’, literary device of ‘it and its opposite’, at Tim’s wake, “Finn no more!”, better off dead?, Dublin (and Toronto) traffic, Aunt Florenza & Timmy the Tosser, “queenoveire”, neighbourhood news, Edenborough as Eden & Burg Quays in Dublin, synopsis.

    Resources:
    Transcript for this episode, including the text of Finnegans Wake pages 24-29.
    Finnegans Wake (1939) by James Joyce: there are many free copies of FW to read online or download, e.g. finwake.comJames Joyce Digital Archive, “Chicken Guide” to Finnegans Wake provides a ‘plain English’ paraphrase of each chapter by Danis Rose.

    Edmund Epstein, A Guide through Finnegans Wake. University Press of Florida, 2009. William York Tindall, A Reader’s Guide to Finnegans Wake. Syracuse University Press, 1996. Roland McHugh, Annotations to Finnegans Wake (4th edition). Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2016.
    John Gordon’s annotations on his Finnegans Wake blog.
    Richard Ellmann’s biography of James Joyce. Oxford University Press, 1982.

    Show more Show less
    27 mins
  • Ep.005: the prankquean (p. 19:20-24:15)
    Jun 27 2024

    https://www.onelittlegoat.org/finneganswake

    Welcome to James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. In this episode we’ll hear Irish-Canadian actor Richard Harte reading pages 19 to 24 of Joyce’s last novel, which will include the famous “prankquean” fable, with an introduction by director Adam Seelig.

    Richard’s reading (pages 19:20-24:15) was recorded with a live audience in Toronto on 31 August 2022.

    For a transcript of this episode, please visit https://www.onelittlegoat.org/podcast.

    “James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake” is produced by One Little Goat Theatre Company, an official charity in Canada and USA. If you’d like to support our work, please visit us online to make a charitable donation.

    To get in touch, email us at onelittlegoattc@gmail.com — we’d love to hear from you.

    This podcast is made possible by Friends of One Little Goat Theatre Company and the Emigrant Support Programme of the Government of Ireland. Thank you for your support!

    Thank you to Darina Gallagher and the James Joyce Centre in Dublin for your partnership.

    Thank you to the artists for this episode: Kevin Kennedy, Sound by William Bembridge, Podcast production by Sean Rasmussen, Stage Management by Laura Lakatosh, Rehearsal Stage Management by Sandi Becker, Directed by Adam Seelig.

    Thanks to our live audience of Pip Dwyer, Cathy Murphy, Nomi Rotbard, Arlo Rotbard-Seelig; and thanks to our rehearsal audience of Jackie Chau, Jordy Koffman, Andrew Moodie & Shai Rotbard-Seelig.

    Thank you to the Embassy of Ireland in Ottawa and the Irish Consulate in Toronto and to Production Consultants Cathy Murphy and Andrew Moodie.

    Thank you for listening!

    Mentioned: Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams (1899), puns, Mother Goose, Hans Christian Andersen, the “prankquean”, linear/nonlinear narrative, fables, fairy tales, tripartite structure, Hope Beer in Howth, Grace O’Malley, Earl of Howth, Howth Castle, Baily Lighthouse, Jarl (Danish “chief”), Eden, Adam and Eve, quean and queen, ancient storytelling cadences, the word “And…”, Hebrew Bible, Genesis, second thunderword, wordplay with twins’ names, family unit, “meanderthalltale”, “writing its own wrunes”, ALP and HCE, felix culpa and happy fall, whiskey as water of life, synopsis.

    Resources:

    Transcript for this episode, including the text of Finnegans Wake pages 19-24.
    Finnegans Wake (1939) by James Joyce: there are many free copies of FW to read online or download, e.g. finwake.comJames Joyce Digital Archive, “Chicken Guide” to Finnegans Wake provides a ‘plain English’ paraphrase of each chapter by Danis Rose.
    Brendan Ward’s blog post on the “prankquean”.

    Edmund Epstein, A Guide through Finnegans Wake. University Press of Florida, 2009.

    William York Tindall, A Reader’s Guide to Finnegans Wake. Syracuse University Press, 1996.

    Roland McHugh, Annotations to Finnegans Wake (4th edition). Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2016.

    John Gordon’s annotations on his Finnegans Wake blog.

    Richard Ellmann’s biography of James Joyce. Oxford University Press, 1982.

    Cited:

    Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams (1899), trans. Joyce Crick. Oxford University Press, 1999.

    “Stories of Howth”, Hope Beer website.

    Show more Show less
    30 mins
  • Ep.004: Mutt and Jute, characterlessness (p. 13:20-19:19)
    Jun 13 2024

    https://www.onelittlegoat.org/finneganswake

    Welcome to James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. In this episode we’ll hear Irish-Canadian actor Richard Harte reading pages 13 to 19 of Joyce’s last novel, which will include the dialogue of Mutt and Jute, with an introduction by director Adam Seelig.

    Richard’s reading (pages 13:20-19:19) was recorded with a live audience in Toronto on 31 August 2022.

    For a transcript of this episode, please visit https://www.onelittlegoat.org/finneganswake.

    “James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake” is produced by One Little Goat Theatre Company, an official charity in Canada and the United States. If you’d like to support our work, please visit us online to make a charitable donation.

    To get in touch, email us at onelittlegoattc@gmail.com — we’d love to hear from you.

    This podcast is made possible by Friends of One Little Goat Theatre Company and the Emigrant Support Programme of the Government of Ireland. Thank you for your support!

    Thank you to Darina Gallagher and the James Joyce Centre in Dublin for your partnership.

    Thank you to the artists for this episode: Kevin Kennedy, Sound by William Bembridge, Podcast production by Sean Rasmussen, Stage Management by Laura Lakatosh, Rehearsal Stage Management by Sandi Becker, Directed by Adam Seelig.

    Thanks to our live audience of Pip Dwyer, Cathy Murphy, Nomi Rotbard, Arlo Rotbard-Seelig; and thanks to our rehearsal audience of Jackie Chau, Jordy Koffman, Andrew Moodie & Shai Rotbard-Seelig.

    Thank you to the Embassy of Ireland in Ottawa and the Irish Consulate in Toronto and to Production Consultants Cathy Murphy and Andrew Moodie.

    Special thanks to Øyvind and Susanna Haga for advising Richard and me on Scandinavian pronunciations for the dialogue of Mutt and Jute.

    Thank you for listening!

    Mentioned: Robert Houle, Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), dialogue, Mutt and Jute, Mutt and Jeff, Laurel and Hardy, Jutland, Denmark, Vikings, Battle of Clontarf (1014), Brian Boru, dismantling the norms of fiction and drama, four-dimensional characters, August Strindberg, characterless, characterlessness, pronouns ‘you’ and ‘me,’ Waiting for Godot, miscegenations, the Gospels, Mamalujo, Jewish calendar, 1132, Galileo on how things fall, Finn MacCool, Rush (Dublin County), “allaphbed”, synopsis.

    Resources:

    Transcript for this episode, including the text of Finnegans Wake pages 13-19.
    Finnegans Wake (1939) by James Joyce: there are many free copies of FW to read online or download, e.g. finwake.comJames Joyce Digital Archive, “Chicken Guide” to Finnegans Wake provides a ‘plain English’ paraphrase of each chapter by Danis Rose.

    Edmund Epstein, A Guide through Finnegans Wake. University Press of Florida, 2009.

    William York Tindall, A Reader’s Guide to Finnegans Wake. Syracuse University Press, 1996.

    Roland McHugh, Annotations to Finnegans Wake (4th edition). Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 2016.

    John Gordon’s annotations on his Finnegans Wake blog.

    Richard Ellmann’s biography of James Joyce. Oxford University Press, 1982.

    More on characterlessness: Adam Seelig, “EmergeNSee: Get Head Out of Ass: ‘Charactor’ and Poetic Theatre”. The Capilano Review, Vancouver, 2010, pp.32-52.

    Show more Show less
    36 mins

What listeners say about James Joyce's Finnegans Wake

Average customer ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.