JAMES X by Gerard Mannix Flynn
Gerard Mannix Flynn
Gabriel Byrne, Liam Neeson, Culture Project and Farcry Productions
Culture Project is dedicated to addressing critical human rights issues by creating and supporting artistic work that amplifies marginalized voices. Founded by Allan Buchman in 1996, Culture Project has premiered celebrated shows including The Exonerated, Sarah Jones’ Bridge & Tunnel, Guantanamo: Honor Bound to Defend Freedom, Lawrence Wright’s My Trip To Al-Qaeda, Tings Dey Happen, the Lucille Lortel Award-winning world premiere of George Packer’s Betrayed and Temple University’s acclaimed production of In Conflict. Culture Project also produced Breaking the Silence, Beating the Drum, a groundbreaking concert at the United Nations to commemorate the abolition of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade. Most recently, Culture Project presented its month-long Women Center Stage Festival at The Living Theatre and MoLoRa at the Ailey Citigroup Theater.
JAMES X by Gerard Mannix Flynn
Gabriel Byrne, Liam Neeson and Culture Project present the United States premiere of JAMES X, written and performed by Gerard Mannix Flynn, and directed by Gabriel Byrne.
“I cannot recount a time when a critic decided that seeing a play was ‘a necessity of life’,” said Culture Project’s Allan Buchman, but that is exactly what Finton O’Toole suggested in The Irish Times regarding James X. Gerard Mannix Flynn’s play is a searing indictment of neglect; both of the individual and of the institutions whose responsibility is to protect and inspire its citizens. Directed by Gabriel Byrne, James X begins performances on December 6th, and opens on Friday, December 9th at 7:30pm at 45 Bleecker Street.
Produced by Gabriel Byrne, Liam Neeson and Culture Project, James X, a Farcry Production, features Gerard Mannix Flynn, who also starred in the production when it premiered in Dublin in 2009.
An Irish government tribunal of inquiry into the institutions responsible for the cruel and inhumane treatment of children is in session. In the foyer, James X, one of those children, now a man, anxiously prepares to offer the testimony which he hopes will unshackle him from the past. As he waits, James is confronted with the fact that the tribunal he is about to go before is part of the very same system that made prisoners of children like him. Sighting this truth prompts him to tell the story which will really, finally, set him free.
In the last decade, the Catholic Church and State institutions in Ireland and throughout the world have been in the center of an emerging secret history. This history involves the sexual abuse and torment of tens of thousands of vulnerable children. This is the human story of one of those children who is trying to emerge from a place of darkness into the light.
Gerard Mannix Flynn, born in Dublin in 1957, has carved out a multi-faceted artistic career as a writer, actor, playwright, politician, political activist, and visual artist and in 2009 he was elected an independent councilor for the South East Inner City area in Dublin. His experience in Irish institutions, including an 18 month stint in St Joseph ‘s Industrial School, where he was sent at age 11, has informed much of his work, including the autobiographical novel, Nothing to Say, in 1983 and James X. He is currently elected as the New Independent Dublin City Councillor. He has written extensively for various newspapers, magazines and periodicals and is a well-known contemporary commentator and artist.




