Eamon Kelly was born in Glenfesk, Co Kerry, in 1914. He joined the RTE players in 1952 but is best remembered for bringing the art of storytelling to the masses through RTE radio and TV in the 1950s and ’60s.
He was nominated for a Tony award on Broadway for his starring role in the Brian Friel play, Philadelphia, Here I Come.
A former carpenter and vocational teacher, he was also a member of the Listowel Drama Group where he won widespread praise for playing Christy Mahon in The Playboy of the Western World and Morgan Quill in the Magic Glasses.
In 1952 he joined the RTE Players and while there became known as the “Seanchai” for his regular appearances on Fleadh Cheoil an Radio and Rambling House.
Eamonn left the RTE Rep in 1964 for a freelance writing career. He also began playing a variety of roles at The Gate and two years later played in the year-long Broadway run of Philadelphia Here I Come.
In 1967, he became a member of the Abbey Theatre, starting with Lady Gregory’s Spreading the News. He toured on the Abbey’s first visit to the Edinburgh Festival and it was the same period that the first Seanchai came to life in Eric Cross’s The Tailor and Ansty.
He played in the Abbey’s Waiting for Godot with Peter O’Toole and in London’s Old Vic with the Abbey production of Well of the Saints.
He was co-writer with Tomas Mac Anna of the story of theatre in Irish called Sceal Scealai at the Peacock Theatre.
Later he toured Canada and the US, under the auspices of the Irish American Cultural Institute. He continued to work extensively in the theatre and television and wrote In My Father’s Time, a night of storytelling with Eamon Kelly. The playwright John B Keane once said of him: “He can take a word or phrase and swing it in front of you like a hypnotist’s pendulum so that he captivates you … It’s a magician’s art.”
Eamon Kelly died after a short illness on October 24, 2001. He was survived by his wife Maura, sons Eoin and Brian and daughter Sinead.