Cra’ze Ireland, it’s called. A new group of YouTubers headed by Seán Creagh, touring the country on the trail of some of the biggest names in film history ever to come to Ireland. First stop, Youghal!

Moby Dick Youghal

Cork Filmmaker Sean Creagh and head of Craze Productions with actors Raymond Brothers as Captain Ahab, Tanya-Michelle Olivia Adamson, Deirdre Ryder, Tess Healy Maguire, Ronan and Cathal O'Donovan. Pic: YOL

Last Sunday (4th Sept. 2011) saw the start of this groups new “road-trip” film campaign. A group of seven actors, artists and film enthusiasts arrived in Youghal in search of the site where John Huston directed the 1956 classic, Moby Dick.

Moby Dick

Gregory Peck and director John Huston on set during the making of Moby Dick - Photo: Courtesy www.gonemovies.com

The film was, naturally enough, quite an attraction at the time it was filmed. People came from Cork City and all around to witness the event. But it’s wonderful to see that, over fifty years later, it is still bringing curious visitors to the town! Starring Oscar Award winner Gregory Peck as the fearsome but intriguing Captain Ahab, Moby Dick was the ideal film for emerging film-maker Seán Creagh to begin with. He and his team aimed to retell some of the important historical facts surrounding the film and also to put their own spin on the classic with a short re-enactment.

Gregory Peck was, of course, the star of the film. However, it should not be forgotten that Youghal itself took on an important role in the film: it played the part of the American shipping town New Bedford. Cra’ze Ireland began their day by capturing some of the more scenic elements of the town by itself. Elements like the iconic clock tower emphasise just how historic and important the location is even without the influence of Hollywood. After all, Edmund Spenser wrote part of The Fairie Queene during his visit; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle named a character from one of his later Holmes stories Inspector Youghal as a tribute to the town, and Sir Walter Raleigh left behind a fine legacy, having been its mayor for two years and (more crucially, from an Irish perspective) having chosen it as the planting ground for Europe’s very first potato.

After taking advantage of the area’s rich heritage, the troop of film-makers began to look at landmarks like Moby Dick’s. The aptly named pub is a lasting beacon of the influence that John Huston’s visit had on Youghal. He would sit in the pub every morning and devise his day’s filming plans. His actors we, by all accounts very friendly with the locals. Spectators came from all over Ireland and Britain to see the shoot. The inspiration that Huston brought has left a visible mark on the town in places such as the pub, and has added greatly to its charm.
Click on the video clip below to see an excerpt from the 1954  film Moby Dick. This is the complete part that was filmed in Youghal


History lesson complete, it was time for Cra’ze Ireland to make some history of its own. Never modest in his ambitions, director Seán Creagh has been making his name in the theatre world for the last three years and now he is setting his sights on the film industry. His theatrical debut was a gutsy performance of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, no less. While a risky move, the play’s outstanding success won him a lot of interest and praise. Still a believer in taking the bull by the horns, he is tackling the Shakespeares of the film world: John Huston, John Ford, Stephen Spielberg… Cra’ze Ireland plans to tour the country, re-staging and telling the history of such classics as The Quiet Man, Saving Private Ryan and Braveheart, and making them available on YouTube.

Moby Dick Youghal

Filmaker Sean Creagh re-enactment of one of the film's most memorable scenes with actor Raymond Brothers as Captain Ahab and cast at the quayside in Youghal. Pic: YOL

Their first “road-trip”, Moby Dick, is a prime example of this. While there have been plenty of documentaries over the years, showing us again and again in different ways the prosperity, the inspiration and the joy that John Huston and Gregory Peck brought, Seán believes that something is being lost. A historian can tell you it was exciting, but are you excited? A documentary can show you the past, but what does that have to do with me now? Gregory Peck was the name in 1956, but we all know that what exhilarates one generation can actually seem boring to the next. Cra’ze Ireland aims to revive some of the feelings attached to the films. Moby Dick happened in 1956, but it happened again last Sunday. The way to keep Ireland’s cinematic history alive, Seán says, is to update it, to relive it, to keep it relevant.
Click on the video below to see a short documentary on the making of Moby Dick in Youghal


Cra’ze Ireland were thrilled to meet the locals in Youghal, who provided insight into the John Huston classic and proved that Moby Dick is still very much alive in the hearts of the people. One young lad told tales of his grandfather who had a small part in the film. When the final product airs on YouTube shortly, the director hopes that Youghal will look proudly on his team’s humble contribution to the town’s proud and ongoing history.

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Moby Dick

Following the Steps of Giants
by Tess Healy Maguire

ON SUNDAY LAST (4th Sept. 2011) Sean Creagh, Cork filmmaker and head of Craze Productions, asked me to join him in Youghal to kick off his new film series.  Starting with John Huston’s film Moby Dick, he plans to revisit places where cinematic classics have been shot in Ireland.

Moby Dick Youghal

Filmmaker Sean Creagh re-enactment of one of the film's most memorable scenes in John Houston's Moby Dick pictured at the quayside in Youghal. Pic: YOL

Combining clips from the original films, staged re-enactments, anecdotes and historical trivia, he offers a fresh perspective on both the films and the towns involved.  As I live only a few miles away, I couldn’t resist joining him.  Though the wind and rain tried to sweep us into the sea, we made our way to the Clock Gate for some background shots.  Looking at this beautiful old building, it’s easy to forget it was once used as a prison.

Moby Dick Youghal

Women waving goodbye to their men: Tanya-Michelle Olivia Adamson, Deirdre Ryder and Tess Healy Maguire staged re-enactment of the famous scene in John Houston's Moby Dick which was part filmed in Youghal. Pic: YOL

A carved stone slab reminds us that here the hangman plied his trade.  The nearby Paddy Linehan’s pub served as the base for John Huston, the cast and crew of Moby Dick when the film was shot in 1954.  Paintings on the walls and small plaques mark the event.  Gregory Peck played the iconic Captain Ahab.  Such was the popularity of this Oscar winning actor that people would take the train from Cork to Youghal in the hope of catching a glimpse of the man at work.  Hollywood royalty or not, if Mr Peck wanted to call home, he had to join the queue at the pub to take his turn on the one phone available.  Every morning director Huston would go to the pub and plan the day’s shooting.

Moby Dick scene

Scene from John Huston's film Moby Dick shot at the Pier Head in Youghal back in 1954

One of the film’s most memorable scenes, the women waving good bye to their men, was shot just a few feet away in Youghal harbour.  Audiences viewing the finished product cannot imagine how long it can take to capture the few minutes or seconds that appear on the screen.  Our re-enactments were pared down to a handful of actors simply dressed, placed in the spots where cinema legends had used crowds, cameras and cranes to create the illusion of New Bedford whalers.  For this type of “guerrilla filmmaking”, the huge multiple cameras and boom microphones are replaced by a pair of handheld digital cameras and a tiny sound recorder.  Lighting is whatever nature provides so the changeable seaside weather provides an extra challenge.

 Captain Ahab

Filmmaker Sean Creagh with actor Raymond Brothers as Captain Ahab filming at the quayside in Youghal. Pic: YOL

Despite the sunshine, the cutting wind gave our performances the shivers Herman Melville’s New England coast demanded.  We held our positions and shot the scene.  Our Captain Ahab, Cork actor Raymond Brothers, balanced carefully on his fake peg leg on the edge of the pier.  The gusting wind fought hard to take our captain off to sea.  There were no screens, green or blue, to keep us from the bracing breeze or provide a way to drop in the computer wizardry now standard in feature films.  Of course with films of any size, you shoot the scene from as many angles as you can with and without the actors.  Shots and recordings must be taken of backgrounds and any natural sounds needed.

After all that, you re-shoot because the car horn drowned out the dialogue, the rain returned, an inquisitive dog visited or any of the varied, unpredictable little incidents that turn a minutes work into an hour.  Passersby paused to watch, take photos and share stories.  When told what we were filming, a young boy informed us that his grandad worked on the original.  Despite the hurry-up-and-wait of filming, we managed to get all the outdoor shots done before losing the light.  All the varies pieces will be whittled and woven together during the editing process to create the final short film.

Moby Dick Youghal

Cork Filmmaker Sean Creagh and head of Craze Productions with actors Raymond Brothers as Captain Ahab, Deirdre Ryder, Tanya Adamson, Tess Healy Maguire, Ronan and Cathal O'Donovan. Mind that dog Captain Ahab! Pic: YOL

Chilled and tired, Sean and the rest of the cast retired to the pub to try to capture a last bit of the legend before catching a Cork-bound bus.  I crept home to wrap myself around a large mug of tea.  Moby Dick will be followed by a trip to Cong to find The Quiet Man.  Hopefully I’ll defrost before the film debuts on YouTube.

Moby Dick shot at the Pier Head in Youghal

Scene from John Huston's film Moby Dick shot at the Pier Head in Youghal back in 1954

Click on image to enlarge -Pictures: Youghalonline

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