The Scandalous Parson

From the collection of

Northern Ireland Screen's Digital Film Archive
Launched in 2000, Northern Ireland Screen’s Digital Film Archive spans from 1897 to the present day and currently contains an ever-expanding catalogue of 13,000 items. It comprises material from a variety of depositors including feature films, sport, documentaries, animation, amateur footage, light entertainment, and a significant proportion of broadcast material from the UTV Archive.

The Scandalous Parson


Author of Gulliver's Travels faces trial by television

Quick of mind and provocative of opinion, Augustan satirist and cleric Jonathan Swift finds himself transported to a 20th century television studio. There he engages in a verbal battle of wits with UTV interviewer David Mahlowe. Questions of religion, identity and nationalism are to the fore in what is believed to be the earliest surviving Northern Irish television play.

This material is courtesy of the UTV archive. Considered by the Encyclopaedia Britannica as the foremost prose satirist in the English language, Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) is recognised for his characteristically deadpan and ironic brand of satire, not least in his notorious essay, A Modest Proposal (1729). The fictional Swift is here played by the celebrated charactor actor Neil McCarthy (1932-1985), whose film credits include memorable roles as a Welsh soldier in Zulu (1964), as Sergeant Jock McPherson in Where Eagles Dare (1968), as the villain Calibos in Clash of the Titans (1981) and as a robber in Time Bandits (1981).


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