Richard Hayward (actor)

Richard Hayward (1892–1964) was a British film actor,[1] writer and musician.

Richard Hayward
Born1892
Southport, Lancashire, England
DiedOctober 1964
Ballymena, Northern Ireland
NationalityBritish
OccupationFilm actor, writer and musician

Life and career

Born in Southport, Lancashire, Richard Hayward was an enthusiast for all Ulster regional popular culture. He was a member of the Orange Order, to which he dedicated much time. After a period working at the Gaiety Theatre, Dublin he helped form the Belfast Repertory Theatre Company. He was a popular singer in the forties and fifties.[2] His career meant he lived a typical theatrical lifestyle being constantly on the move.

Death

He died due to a road accident outside Ballymena, in October 1964.

Selected filmography

Hayward also wrote the screenplay of the musical drama Devil's Rock.[3]

Selected books

He wrote a number of books, mostly topographical, about Ireland, including:

  • In praise of Ulster (Arthur Barker, 1938)
  • Where the Shannon flows (1940)
  • Corrib Country (Dundalgan Press, 1943)
  • In the Kingdom of Kerry (Dundalgan Press, 1946)
  • Leinster and the city of Dublin (Arthur Barker, 1949)
  • Ulster and the City of Belfast (Arthur Barker, 1950)
  • Belfast through the ages (Dundalgan Press, 1952)
  • Connacht and the city of Galway (Arthur Barker, 1952)
  • Story of the Irish Harp (Arthur Guinness, Son & Co., 1954)
  • Mayo, Sligo, Leitrim & Roscommon (Arthur Barker, 1955)
  • Munster and the city of Cork (Phoenix House, 1964)

References

Further reading

  • Paul Clements, Romancing Ireland: Richard Hayward, 1892-1964, Dublin: The Lilliput Press, 2014.
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