Molly Keane (20 July 1904 – 22 April 1996),[1]néeMary Nesta Skrine, and who also wrote asM. J. Farrell, was anIrish novelist and playwright.
Keane was born Mary Nesta Skrine in Ryston Cottage,Newbridge, County Kildare.[2] Her father, Walter Clarmont Skrine (died 1930), was from aSomerset family and owned land inAlberta, Canada, and was a fanatic for horses and hunting; her mother, Agnes Shakespeare Higginson (1864–1955), a poet who wrote under the pseudonymMoira O'Neill, was daughter of Charles Henry Higginson (son ofJames Macaulay Higginson,Governor of British Mauritius from 1851 to 1857), a colonial administrator inMauritius.[3][4][2]
Keane grew up at Ballyrankin House beside theRiver Slaney, a few miles south east ofBunclody,County Wexford[5] and refused to go to boarding school in England as her siblings had done. She was educated by her mother, governesses,[2] and at a boarding school inBray,County Wicklow.[6] Relations between Keane and her parents were cold and she states that she had no fun in her life as a child. Her own passion for hunting and horses was born out of her need for fun and enjoyment.[2] Reading did not feature much in her family, and, although her mother wrote poetry, it was of a sentimental nature, "suitable to a woman of her class". Keane claimed she had never set out to be a writer, but at seventeen she was bedbound due to suspectedtuberculosis, and turned to writing out of sheer boredom. It was then she wrote her first book,The Knight of Cheerful Countenance, which was published byMills & Boon. She wrote under the pseudonym "M. J. Farrell", a name over a pub that she had seen on her return from hunting. She explained writing anonymously because "for a woman to read a book, let alone write one was viewed with alarm: I would have been banned from every respectable house in Co. Carlow."[2]
In her teenage years, she spent much of her time in the Perry household in Woodruff,County Tipperary. Here she befriended the two children of the house, Sylvia and John Perry. She later collaborated with John in writing a number of plays. Among them wasSpring Meeting, directed byJohn Gielgud in 1938, and one of the hits of theWest End that year. She and Gielgud became lifelong friends.[2]
Keane lovedJane Austen, and like Austen's, her ability lay in her talent for creating characters. This, with her wit and astute sense of what lay beneath the surface of people's actions, enabled her to depict the world of the big houses of Ireland in the 1920s and 1930s. She "captured her class in all its vicious snobbery and genteel racism".[2] She used her married name for her later novels, several of which (includingGood Behaviour andTime After Time) have been adapted for television. Between 1928 and 1956, she wrote 11 novels, and some of her earlier plays, under the pseudonym "M. J. Farrell".[7] She was a member ofAosdána.[8] Her husband died suddenly in 1946, and, following the failure of a play, she published nothing for twenty years. In 1981Good Behaviour came out under her own name; the manuscript, which had languished in a drawer for many years, was lent to a visitor, the actressPeggy Ashcroft, who encouraged Keane to publish it. The novel was warmly received and was short-listed for theBooker Prize.[9]
It was through the Perry family that Molly met Bobby Keane, whom she married in 1938.[2] He belonged to a Waterfordlanded gentry family, theKeane baronets.[1] The couple went on to have two daughters, Sally and Virginia.[2] After the death of her husband in 1946, Molly moved toArdmore, County Waterford, a place she knew well, and lived there with her two daughters. She died on 22 April 1996 in her Cliffside home in Ardmore. She was 91. She is buried beside theChurch of Ireland church, near the centre of the village.[10]
Reviewers were generally appreciative of Keane's novels. Her mix of comic wit and poetic sensibility was called delightful. Some reviewers recoiled at the "indecent" subject ofDevoted Ladies, which was a lesbian relationship between Jessica and Jane. Homosexuality was also a topic in Good Behaviour.
A reviewer inThe New York Times book review in August 1991 stated thatGood Behaviour may well become "a classic among English Novels". It connected her in a personal way with the famous London editor,Diana Athill, who identified strongly with Keane after reading it, insisted on editing it herself, later calling the book "mindblowingly clever."[11]
Although the real identity of M. J. Farrell had long since become known in Irish and English literary circles, it was not untilGood Behaviour that Keane felt secure in publishing under her own name. After the publication ofGood Behaviour, her earlier works, includingConversation Piece andRising Tide, were re-issued.