PLAUDITS over for another year. Along with priceless global advertising for Achill Island and Inis Mór, the stunning backdrops to The Banshees of Inisherin, Irish wit sparkled during the awards season.
Colin Farrell was the undoubted star with his delight at seeing Oscar host Jimmy Kimmel lead ‘Jenny’s stand-in on stage. Of course the original donkey diva continues her best ‘Greta Garbo’ act. She’s somewhere in that midlands sanctuary that Banshees director Martin McDonagh arranged her retirement to after what Farrell described as Jenny’s #oneanddone role during his Best Actor acceptance speech at the Golden Globes awards.
Farrell isn’t the only Irish star to give a shoutout to his four-legged co-stars. Thurles-born Kerry Condon thanked her rescue horses and dogs, after her BAFTA win for her role in The Banshees of Inisherin.
The BBC and Apple won an Oscar in the best animated short film category for The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse, based on writer and artist Charlie Mackesy’s popular book.
‘Horse films’ are not that plentiful in Hollywood anymore - Spielberg’s War Horse (2011) was the most recent box office hit but there have certainly been some horse lovers classics in the past. And sometimes life imitates the movies as seen by Rachel Blackmore’s Aintree Grand National win.
Not to mention the Irish four-legged stars of Irish and Hollywood blockbusters.
Casting call
Back in January at Holiday World, Anna Connor, who works with Mayo County Council’s Tourism, Recreation and Amenity Department, predicted the publicity windfall heading in Achill Island’s direction.
Quick off the mark, a map with The Banshees of Inisherin locations around Achill Island was produced as soon as the movie hit the big screens.
And then there’s the Mayo horsemen involved in supplying four-legged stars to film sets.
Charles Hanley worked on the set of Jim Sheridan’s 1992 hit Into The West.
“We supplied most of the horses and riders for the film. Trendy Bobby, our grey Connemara show jumper, was the double for the French stunt horse going out in the Atlantic Ocean.”
One of the stallions to have stood at the Hanley’s Claremorris Equestrian Centre was the aptly-named Into The West.
Foaled in 1990, the Dutch-bred was by Ramiro Z out of the Jasper-Almé dam Francaise.
“Into The West came to us from Holland around the same time so yes, it influenced the choice of name!”
“We continue to supply horses, donkeys and props for film and we just did a small film before Christmas at Cabinteely House,” Charles added.
One of the most iconic Irish films, which many Irish-American families continue to watch each St Patrick’s Day, is John Ford’s epic The Quiet Man.
Another Mayo-based stallion, whose name was inspired by the big screen, was Martha Du Pont’s Irish Draught champion stallion Its The Quiet Man that stood with Anthony Gordon.
Both this Clonfert son (2005) and the similarly-named The Quiet Man, on Italy’s victorious Aga Khan 50 years earlier, were Dublin winners.
Filming started on The Quiet Man in 1951 and like the later Ryan’s Daughter,shot further south around the Dingle Peninsula, was a godsend to the local economy.
Leading lady
The late John Daly of Lough Mask House and his father Paddy supplied horses for The Quiet Man, filmed around Connemara and Cong.
One of the most famous scenes was the horse race with the runners provided by John, who even rode one in the race along Lettergesh beach.
There’s another Lough Mask House link to Ryan’s Daughter. John Joyce from Garryduff, near Claremorris, relates the background story of the eye-catching dun mare that appeared in the film with lead actress Sarah Miles.
“It all started back in 1964 when I had a quality, light draught mare who I wanted to put in foal. I was very interested in the breeding of a thoroughbred stallion belonging to John Daly in Lough Mask.”
“In particular, I thought his fillies offspring made wonderful broodmares. This stallion was called Final Problem.”
Final Problem was a household name for many breeders then, producing three stallion sons - El Teide, Marians Problem and Western Problem - plus several international show jumpers including Trevor Coyle’s Bank Strike. And the Ryan’s Daughter dun.
“Eleven months later she foaled a beautiful dun filly foal called Problem Queen. I kept her and bred her in 1967 to a Draught stallion called Dickie, belonging to Tom Niland in Balla.”
“By 1968, she was a three-year-old dun filly grown to 15.2hh with her foal at foot. My friend John Daly heard the film producers of Ryan’s Daughter were looking for a 15.2 dun mare to cast in the film in Dingle, Co. Kerry.”
“John thought of me and sent the producers my way. The producers asked me could I have the mare broken and riding, despite her being a three-year-old with a foal at foot, before she went on set. I agreed and sent the mare and foal down to the producers in Kerry that June.”
Problem Queen later returned to Mayo, however her foal found a customer.
“While on set filming, the stuntman fell in love with the mare’s foal and asked me if I would sell it to him. I did, so they weaned the foal down there in Kerry and I collected the mare again that December. When she came home I gave her some time off.”
Jar of Hearts
“She didn’t foal again until 1971 when I put her in foal to a stallion called Primarily. This stallion belonged to James O’Donnell in Cooneal, Ballina. She bred a lovely colt foal who I ended up selling in Ballinasloe for £300. That man, who I sold the foal to, sold him on again for £650 to Johnny McEvoy in Katesbridge, Co Down.”
“Johnny McEvoy kept this horse for years and got Leo Young to ride it. They won the Guinness Championship at Dublin Horse Show and the horse was then sold to Royne Zetterman for £26,000. He won numerous Grand Prix competitions around the country at just 16hh.”
“Years later, I met Royne and told him the story about my mare and the horse. Ryan told me he never had a fence down with him and that he hadn’t a lot of change out of £100,000 when he sold him to America.”
There’s a carefully-kept newspaper cutting about the story of Problem Queen that John’s son James obligingly emails a copy of. In the background of the photo of his father holding the cutting is a treasured photograph of another son, the late Michael, who passed away in a tragic road accident on St Stephen’s Day in 1998, “at the young age of 26.”
“The photograph in the background is Michael riding a horse called Master Nativeo, a six-year-old stallion in the Hickstead Derby. As far as I know, he is the youngest horse to have ever jumped in the Hickstead Derby,” said James, Michael’s brother.
James continues the family tradition by standing the Zandeur-Furisto stallion Garryduff Jar Of Hearts that has competed in the Connaught Grand Prix league and up to 1.45m with Sven Hadley at Lier and Sentower.
Coincidentally, the stallion’s dam line features Boleybawn Ace, the five-star event horse bred by Ronan Rothwell and a host of other international eventers from Ronan Tynan’s mare herd, including China Doll, Fernhill Revelation and Balham Houdini.
All subplots of an equine script that started with John Joyce breeding Problem Queen, the mare that starred in yet another Hollywood blockbuster.
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