
Cast: Van Michael Hughes, Joanna Canton, Gillette Elvgren, Mimi Eisman, Mary Christine Danner,.Editing: Dennis Courtney & Joseph Bierman.Production Designer: Charles Currier & William English.Adaptation: Dennis Courtney & Joseph Bierman.Seamaisin, a group of musicians from University of Notre Dame recorded traditional Irish music for the film and the Dublin-based traditional group Kila also provided two songs for the soundtrack. It was filmed in Richmond, Virginia, Portsmith, Virginia, New Hope, Pennsylvania and Asbury Park, New Jersey. The production was completed in 8 days with a cast and crew of 40 people and a budget of $30,000. Another significant change from the story in the handling of the Caroline Norton poem ‘‘The Arab's Farewell to His Steed.’’ Joyce merely alludes to the poem, but in the film, the uncle in voice-over recites lines from it, which indisputably link the verses with the young man as he races down Buckingham Street to the special train at Westland Row Station that will take him to Araby. Went to ‘‘The Sisters,’’ the first story in Dubliners, as well as utilizing narration from "Araby" itself. For this dialogue, missing from the "Araby" text, the filmmakers With the protagonist's aunt over the tea-table. Mercer, whom Joyce only mentioned in the story.

In fact, Tarsicius is not even named in the story when the narrator records: “I bore my chalice safely through a throng of foes." A second emendation is the expansion of the role of Mrs. The filmmakers makes several adroit additions to Joyce's text, including an episode in the schoolroom where a Christian Brother instructs the boys about the young martyr Tarsicius, whose exploit of carrying the Eucharist to Christian prisoners in Rome is only alluded to in Joyce's text. The boy's romantic quest through the streets of Dublin becomes a religious pilgrimage, merging the sensual and the sacred.

The boy nobly sets out to attain a gift for the girl, but instead meets with a harsh revelation. When she finally notices him, the girl expresses her sadness in not being able to attend the enchanting Araby bazaar. Taught by Jesuits in turn-of-the-century Dublin, and raised in a strict Catholic family, the boy worships her from afar. It was adapted from the short story " Araby" by James Joyce, which was included in his short works collection Dubliners.īased on the short story by Irish author James Joyce, Araby is the bittersweet tale of a young boy's confused affection for his friend's older sister. Araby is an independent short film directed by Dennis Courtney, starring Van Hughes.
