The Plough and the Stars, tragicomedy in four acts by Irish playwright Sean O’Casey, performed and published in 1926. The play is set in Dublin during the Easter Rising of 1916, and its premiere at the Abbey Theatre sparked rioting by nationalists who felt that it defamed Irish patriots.
Among the characters who fight to keep their lives intact despite the war’s destruction are Nora and Jack Clitheroe. Although Nora is pregnant with their first child, Jack ignores her pleas, goes into the streets to fight for the cause, and is killed. When their baby is stillborn, Nora loses her mind. Her condition prompts Bessie Burgess, an embittered Irish Protestant whose son is fighting with the British army in World War I, to become Nora’s caretaker. At the play’s end Bessie herself is killed by a British sniper’s bullet.
The play has been staged many times at the Abbey Theatre since its original production. In 1936 it was adapted into a film directed by John Ford and starring Barbara Stanwyck, Preston Foster, Barry Fitzgerald, Denis O’Dea, Eileen Crowe, Arthur Shields, and Una O’Connor. Despite the use of several Abbey players (including Shields, who had participated in the Easter Rising and plays nationalist leader Patrick Pearse in the film), the movie suffered from the casting of Hollywood star Stanwyck as Nora and from liberties taken with O’Casey’s script.