Frank O'Donovan

Frank O'Donovan (10 October 1900 – 28 June 1974) was an Irish actor, singer and songwriter. He is best remembered for playing the character of Batty Brennan for 10 years in Ireland's first TV soap, The Riordans.[1]

Frank O'Donovan
Born(1900-10-10)10 October 1900
Died28 June 1974(1974-06-28) (aged 73)
OccupationActor, singer-songwriter
TelevisionThe Riordans
Children

Personal life

He was born in Dublin, Ireland to a family interested in amateur dramatics, which included his brother Harry O'Donovan. In the 1940s he set up his own acting company and for years toured Ireland and England with the "Frank O'Donovan Show" or the "Dublin Follies".

While on the road he composed and sang songs. In 1940 he recorded "The Road by the River" which was later covered by many singers in Ireland, including Margo O'Donnell who had a hit with it in 1968, and T.R. Dallas.[2] His song "On the One Road" was adopted by the Irish Army as its official song in 1943.[3] Other popular evergreens composed by him were "Sitting on the bridge below the town" and "Little White Cross".

He appeared in the films Murder in Eden (1961), Johnny Nobody (1961), The Quare Fellow (adaptation of Brendan Behan's play, 1962) and Flight of the Doves (1971).

Family

He married the actress Kitty McMahon. They had two daughters together, Deirdre (b. 1928) and Máirín (b. 1936). Máirín O'Donovan became a singer, dancer and actress.

He had 5 grandchildren and 9 great-grandchildren.[3]

Songs

  • "The Road by the River"
  • "On the One Road"
  • "Sitting on the Bridge Below the Town"
  • "Little White Cross"
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gollark: It doesn't. It obeys the same rules as humans.
gollark: Humans are better at this, with a little practice.
gollark: v1 literally had to have a hardcoded patch to stop it not noticing instant loss/win situations.
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References

  1. Burrowes, Wesley (1977). The Riordans: A Personal History. Gilbert Dalton.
  2. An Ireland of Treasures, The Voices and the Melodies of Ireland, 1913–1948
  3. Walsh, Belinda (18 August 2010). "Part of an Irish acting dynasty". Dublin. Irish Independent. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
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