I Could Read the Sky
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Nichola Bruce
Dermot Healy
Stephen Rea
Brendan Coyle
Maria Doyle Kennedy
Jake Williams
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
An old man living in a London bachelor apartment recalls growing up on the west coast of Ireland, his move to England, and the events that have shaped his life.
Cast
Dermot Healy
Stephen Rea
Brendan Coyle
Maria Doyle Kennedy
Jake Williams
Roy Larkin
Lisa O'reilly
Rachael Pilkington
Aiden O'toole
Colm O'maonlai
Jimmy Mcgreevy
Pat Mcgrath
Liam O'maonlai
Noel O'donovan
Francis Burke

Geraldine Fitzgerald
Iarla O'lionaird
Bobby Casey
Dermot Grogan
Noel Hill
Jim Philbin
Mick Lally
Paddy Breathnach
Frank Murray
Gerry O'boyle
Pat Mccabe
Danny Morrison
Timothy O'grady
Steve Pyke
Joanne Burton
Kerry Burton
Albert Griffin
Eamonn Atkinson
Emma Lowe
Claire Walsh
Sinead Murphy
Richard Holbrood
Donnchadha O'fatharta
Peadar O'fatharta

Jack Kelly
Patrick Tucker
Domnik Band
Denis Deasy
Frank Ward
Steve Mccabe
Phil Fitzpatrick
Martin Ellis
Joe Duffy
Liz Finch
Orla Mcelroy
Saran Mcelroy
Maggie Chambers
Maria Ruiz
Beatriz O'grady
Tristram Wymark
Patrick Mccabe
Crew
Tim Barker
Dan Birch
Paulo Branco
Jane Bruce
Nichola Bruce
Denis Cahill
Chris Collins
Christopher Collins
Jessica Coyle
Janna Craze
Catherine Creed
Caroline Dale
Emma Fowler
Ben Gibson
Ben Gill
Melanie Gore-grimes
Martin Hayes
Noel Hill
Cameron Hills
Toby Hosking
Amanda Jones
Helen Kane
Leslie Kelly
Rowena Ladbury
Mike Large
Janine Marmot
Seamus Mcgarvey
Ciara Mcgowan
Tommy Mcmanamon
James E. Mcnally
Owen Mcpolin
Casper Mill
Jules Yorke Moore
Louise Myler
Mairin Ni Riordain
Sinead O'connor
Timothy O'grady
Iarla O'lionaird
Iarla O'lionaird
Liam O'maonlai
Nicholas O'neill
Rashad Omar
Chris Phinikas
Steve Pyke
Roger Shannon
Michael Prestwood Smith
Jack Stew
Rod Stoneman
Graeme Stoten
Joakim Sundstrom
Angela Topping
Jacquie Turner
Karen Z M Turner
Diane Wood
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Geraldine Fitzgerald (1913-2005)
Born in Dublin on November 24, 1913, Fitzgerald was educated for a time in a convent school in London. Back in her native Dublin, she happily accompanied her aunt, the Irish actress Shelah Richards, to a theater one afternoon when the director mistook her for an actress, and instructed her "to go backstage and change." An inauspicious start, but it gave her the acting bug. She made her stage debut in 1932 in Dublin's Gate Theater and later appeared in a few forgettable British films: Open All Night (1934), The Ace of Spades, Three Witnesses (both 1935). She made the trip across the Atlantic in 1938 to act with Orson Welles and his Mercury Theater, but agents from Warner Bros. quickly signed her and she was soon off to Hollywood.
She made her film debut in 1939 supporting Bette Davis in Dark Victory, but it was her performance in a second film later in the year that proved to be the most memorable of her career - the role of Isabella Linton in Wuthering Heights. She earned an Oscar® nomination for her turn and stardom should have been around the corner, but Fitzgerald's feuding with studio head Jack Warner (he refused to let her return to the New York stage and she would refuse parts that she thought were inferior) led to some lengthy suspensions of unemployment. Irregardless, Fitzgerald still had some shining moments at Warner Bros. the heady melodrama The Gay Sisters (1942); the superb espionage thriller Watch on the Rhine (1943); Robert Siodmak's terrific, noirish thriller The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry (1945); and a tough crime drama where she played opposite John Garfield Nobody Lives Forever (1946).
Fitzgerald returned to New York by the '50s, and found much work in many of the live television dramas that were so popular in the day: Goodyear Television Playhouse, Lux Video Theatre, Studio One, Schlitz Playhouse of Stars; and even some taped television shows: Naked City, Alfred Hitchcock Presents in between her stage demands.
She did return to the screen by the mid-'60s and proved herself a fine character actress in films like The Pawnbroker (1965); Rachel, Rachel (1968); Harry and Tonto (1974); a wonderfully memorable comic turn as Dudley Moore's feisty grandmother in Arthur (1981); and yet another noteworthy performance as Rose Kennedy in the acclaimed mini-series Kennedy (1983). She also appeared in a few television programs: St. Elswhere, Cagney & Lacey, and The Golden Girls before ill-health forced her to retire by the early '90s. Among the relatives that survive her are her son, director Michael Lindsay-Hogg (Brideshead Revisited; a daughter, Susan Scheftel; and her great-niece, the English actress Tara Fitzgerald.
by Michael "Mitch" Toole

Geraldine Fitzgerald (1913-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States August 1999
Shown at Edinburgh International Film Festival August 15-29, 1999.
Feature directorial debut for short filmmaker and storyboard artist Nichola Bruce.
Released in United States August 1999 (Shown at Edinburgh International Film Festival August 15-29, 1999.)