John Connors (actor)

John Connors (born 1990) is an Irish actor, screenwriter, and documentary filmmaker and playwright best known for his role as Patrick Ward in the Irish crime drama series Love/Hate, for which he was nominated for best-supporting actor at the 2016 Irish film and television awards, and for Cardboard Gangsters, for which he won Best Actor at the 2018 Irish film and television awards.[1]

John Connors
Born
John Francis Connors

1990
NationalityIrish
Other namesJohnny, John Francis.
OccupationActor, screenwriter, documentary filmmaker, playwright and activist
Years active2011–present
Known forLove/Hate

Early life

Connors was born in 1990 in London, United Kingdom to an Irish traveller family, but moved to Ireland with his family when he was 11 months old. His father suffered from depression and schizophrenia, and took his own life when Connors was eight years old.[2] Connors took up acting when he was 20 years old after being persuaded by his younger brother Joseph, in a bid to help him with his own battle with depression. Connors began boxing at a young age because he was experiencing bullying. He is a former three-time Irish boxing champion and a four nations boxing gold medalist and was picked by the Herald newspaper for their ‘Future Star’ segment at fifteen years old.

In 2017 he was named in the fifty incredible people who are shaping Ireland by the Irish Independent and he was also named as one of the "twenty twenty-somethings that could influence Ireland and the world" by The Irish Times.

He appeared on an episode of the series Livin' with Lucy (Virgin Media) with Lucy Kennedy, in 2019. Connors won the 2018 IFTA for best actor for his performance in the film Cardboard Gangsters, which Connors also wrote. In his victory speech, Connors criticised the Irish Film Board for not supporting the film, before he talked about his battle with mental health and how acting saved his life. He dedicated the award to his late father. The speech went viral, gaining millions of hits online. Three months later his documentary series, John Connors: The Travellers, won the 2018 IFTA for best documentary series. In the documentary Connors called on the Irish government to formally recognise Travellers as a distinct Irish indigenous ethnic minority, which happened later that year. In his speech, he criticised successive Irish governments for assimilation policies and institutionalised discrimination against Irish Travellers. He also accused the Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown County Council of murder through negligence of the eleven members of the Connors and Lynch Traveller families, eleven of whom died in the Carrickmines fire tragedy in October of 2015. Connors's directorial feature documentary debut, Endless Sunshine on a Cloudy Day, won the audience award at the 2020 Dublin International Film Festival.

Activism

Connors has spoken out about Travellers' rights and against racism and depression, appearing a number of times on The Late Late Show on RTÉ. His first appearance on the Late Late Show caused controversy. Connors was promoting his documentary "I am Traveller". When talking about the bigotry and hardship Travellers experience day to day in Ireland the host Ryan Turbidy asked "Do you not think you're sounding a bit like a victim" to which Connors replied "See Ryan you and me live in different worlds. My world has shaped me in such a way that I have the ability look past stereotypes, question popular opinion, think for myself and have empathy for people who have it hard or are experiencing injustice. You live in a comfortable bubble. Enjoy it." RTE were flooded with complaints as to how the host conducted the interview. The interview and the documentary created a national conversation about discrimination against Travellers.

Connors is anti-abortion and supported a 'No' vote in the 2018 Irish abortion referendum.[3] Following his call for a 'No' vote, he alleged that he was the target of anti-Traveller racism. In response to protests held in Dublin in June 2020 after the death of African American man George Floyd in Minneapolis, Connors questioned whether the same 'anti-racist solidarity' would be shown for Irish Travellers.[4]

In July 2020, Connors called for the resignation of the newly appointed Minister for Children, Roderic O'Gorman, after a photo taken at 2018 Dublin Pride of O'Gorman alongside British gay rights activist Peter Tatchell emerged, controversial for his advocacy of lowering the age of consent.[5] O'Gorman stated "I met Peter Tatchell once and took a photo. This was the only time I have met him. I knew of him as someone who stood up for LGBT people in countries where their rights were threatened. I was surprised to read some of his quotes from the 90s, which I had not read before. Any of those views would be completely abhorrent to me."[6] Connors accused Tatchell of being a paedophile apologist.[7] He again called for O'Gorman to resign during a speech at a protest held outside Leinster House on 11 July. On 19 July, John has published a full apology to Roderic O'Gorman, stating that John "allowed [him]self to lead and be part of an online frenzy that cast hurtful and false assertions on his [Roderic's] character and pursued him in the most unfair way".[8]

Filmography

Film

Year Film Role Notes
2012 Stalker Oliver
King of the Travellers John Paul Moorehouse
2014 Jack and Ralph Plan a Murder Frankie
Skunky Dog Shooter Short
2015 Breathe Patrick
Monged Bernard
Today Peter Short
Fingerprints Dad
2016 The Secret Scripture Joe Brady
Solid Pat
Wild Goose Lodge Ribbonman
The Legend of Harry and Ambrose The Shame
2017 Cardboard Gangsters Jason Connolly
Broken Law Wallace

Television

Title Year Role Network Notes Ref(s)
Love/Hate 2011–14 Patrick Ward RTÉ 10 episodes [9]
Charlie 2015 Jimmy 1 episode [10]
Barney Bunion Paidí TG4 Irish language
1 episode
[11]
Rebellion 2016 Michael Molloy RTÉ 2 episodes [12]

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Nominated work Result Ref.
2015 Irish Film and Television Awards Best Actor in a Supporting Role - Drama Love/Hate Nominated
2017 Manchester International Film Festival Best Actor Cardboard Gangsters Won
2017 Dublin Film Critics Circle Awards Best Actor Cardboard Gangsters Nominated
2018 Irish Film and Television Awards Best Actor in a Lead Role - Film Cardboard Gangsters Won
Best Documentary Series John Connors: The Travellers Won
gollark: It is kind of a shame that stuff didn't end up developing such that everything was carried over generic data traffic links, and instead we got dedicated cables and protocols and everything for video, general-purpose peripherals, and data networks.
gollark: Interesting idea.
gollark: Ideatic ideon: replace USB with HTTP/TCP/IP over Ethernet lines.
gollark: ... yes, why do you think they use HTTPish paths and are handled by HTTPish servers?
gollark: Websockets use HTTP.

References

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