- Bang Bang (Dublin)
"Bang Bang" (real name is believed to be Thomas Dudley) was an eccentric elderly gentleman in
Dublin in the 1950s and 1960s who achieved fame as a "character" in the city. A fan ofcowboy film s, "Bang Bang" used to travel thebus es andtram s of the city staging mock shoot-outs with passing people (hence his nickname). He carried a large church key in his pocket which he used as a 'gun'. Dubliners, who enjoyed his good natured antics, used to participate in his games, sometimes "returning fire" by pretending they had a gun in their hands and shouting "bang bang" back at him, or by falling down "dead" on the city streets when he suddenly appeared at the back of a bus or tram and "shot" them. On occasion "Bang Bang" even interrupted plays on stage by "shooting" the actors, generally to the amusement of actors and audiences alike. "Bang Bang" died in 1981 [cite book | last = Wallis | first = Geoff| coauthors = Margaret Greenwood, Mark Connolly | title = The Rough Guide to Dublin | publisher = Rough Guides | date = 2002] but is widely remembered by some of the older Dubliners.Little is known about the actual man in question. It is suspected that he may have had some form of mental illness. Comparisons have been drawn between him and
San Francisco 's "EmperorNorton I of the United States", who was so revered in his eccentricity that the police used to salute the "Emperor" as he walked the streets in full imperial uniform.Bang Bang was said to be heartbroken at the death of John Wayne. 'Me pal is dead', he is reported to have said.
In later life he was taken in and cared for by the Rosminian Fathers in Drumcondra. He died in their care and was buried in their cemetery.
"Bang Bang" has entered the
folklore of Dublin as an eccentric but harmless individual who amused the city's citizens with his games. He still is mentioned in books and broadcast programmes. In the 1970s the Abbey Theatre performed a play about the history of Dublin entitled "From the Vikings to Bang Bang". [ [http://www.irishplayography.com/search/play.asp?play_id=916 Irish playography.] ]He is mentioned in the lyrics of a children's "skipping song" "We all went up to the Mero" published by
Pete St. John . One verse reads::"And we all went up to the Mero, hey there, who's your man":"It's only Johnny Forty Coats, sure he's desperate man":"Bang Bang shoots the buses with his golden key":"Hey hi diddley I and out goes she"References
* Jim Brady, "The Irish Navy: A Full Life"
* A character called 'Bang Bang' appears in a short film 'Jack's Hat' by Stephen Byrne (Mad Dog Productions) about the 1916 Rising in Dublin. Although this is an anachronism, as 'Bang Bang' was probably born around 1906.External links
* [http://www.kildare-nationalist.ie/community/story.asp?j=18656 Mention of Bang Bang in the Carlow Nationalist newspaper.]
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