Now an ambitious five-year project is bringing the works to "the terroir, the communities and the landscapes" that inspired them, culminating in all 29 running across County Donegal, County Derry and County Tyrone - places where Friel lived - for the centenary of his 1929 birth.
The playwright, who died in 2015, was notable in the pantheon of 20th-century Irish writers in that he lived in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland all his life, rooting his works in both.
FrielDays - a Homecoming will feature readings of his notable works, including Dancing at Lughnasa and Philadelphia Here I Come!, as well as those rarely staged, according to Seán Doran, the artistic director of Arts Over Borders, the organiser.
Community halls, churches, schools - "the landscape covered or uncovered" - will be stage and set.
"It's using landscape in a sort of psychogeography that helps trigger the plays in a more heightened way," said Doran.
A different village or town will be used for each "so it's county-wide, cross-border wide".
Each site "has to have the memories and the layering of past and connectivity to the texts".
Denne historien er fra January 02, 2025-utgaven av The Guardian.
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Denne historien er fra January 02, 2025-utgaven av The Guardian.
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