O'Malley's life has inspired many musicians, novelists, and playwrights to create works based on her life and adventures and she has been used as a
personification of Ireland:
Music • The
Irish language poet and
Easter Rising leader
Patrick Pearse used Gráinne O'Malley as a symbol of
Irish republicanism in his lyrics to
Óró sé do bheatha abhaile. • In 1985, the Irish composer and singer
Shaun Davey composed a suite of music based on the life and times of O'Malley,
Granuaile, published in 1986. • The Indulgers' 2000 album
In Like Flynn includes a song entitled "Granuaile", which is centred on the legend of O'Malley. •
Dead Can Dance's 2012 album
Anastasis features a song titled "Return of the She-King", which was inspired by O'Malley. • The Irish musician Gavin Dunne (
Miracle of Sound) released a song entitled "Gráinne Mhaol, Queen of Pirates" on his 2015 album
Metal Up. • The Canadian folk punk band
The Dreadnoughts released a song entitled "Grace O'Malley" on their 2009
Victory Square album. • The Swedish
melodic death metal band Frantic Amber released a song entitled "Graínne Mhaol" on their 2017 digital re-release of the originally 2015 released album "Burning Insight". • The 2019 album
Talk Like a Pirate by Rockin' Ron the Friendly Pirate "Ron Carter" features the song "Pirate Grace O'Malley", based on the life of Grace O'Malley • The 2022 song "Rule 23 – Birds of a Feather" by Fish in a Birdcage was inspired by Grace O'Malley
Theatre • The play
Short-Haired Grace by Bill Breuhl depicting the meeting between O'Malley and Queen Elizabeth debuted at the
Merrimack Repertory Theatre Lowell, Massachusetts, 2002 • The play
Bald Grace by Marki Shalloe debuted at Chicago's Stockyards Theatre in 2005, and was featured at
Atlanta's Theatre Gael (America's oldest Irish-American theatre) in 2006. • The Broadway musical
The Pirate Queen depicting O'Malley's life debuted at the Hilton Theater in 2007, with
Stephanie J. Block portraying O'Malley. • American actress Molly Lyons wrote and starred in a one-woman show titled
A Most Notorious Woman, detailing the life of O'Malley. It has been produced internationally at theatres and festivals. • The 2015 play
Gráinne, by J. Costello, K. Doyle, L. Errity, and A. L. Mentxaka, tells the story of Grace O'Malley in six snapshots. It was premiered by Born to Burn productions in Dublin in November 2015, with an all-woman cast playing three female roles and six male roles. The text of the play was published in a limited edition by artisan publishers Gur Cake Editions. • Irish actress, writer and director
Maggie Cronin's first play, a solo show called ''A Most Notorious Woman: Tales of Grace O'Malley'' – premiered in 1989.
Literature •
James Joyce used the legend of Grace O'Malley ("her grace o'malice") and the
Earl of Howth in chapter 1 of his 1939 novel
Finnegans Wake. •
Morgan Llywelyn wrote a 1986 historical fiction titled
Grania: She-King of the Irish Seas. •
Neal Stephenson and
Nicole Galland make extensive reference to her via written correspondence from one of the prominent characters throughout their 2017 novel
The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O. •
Siobhán Parkinson wrote a historical fiction book in 2019 in Irish titled
Gráinne – Gaiscíoch Gael (
Gráinne – Hero of the Irish).
Cois Life. . •
John Crowley's 2022 novel
Flint and Mirror includes the character Gráinne O’Malley. .
Statues • At Westport House – see above. • Outside
"Old St Pat's" Church,
Chicago • Medlicott Street, Newport, Mayo
Other • ''Grace O'Malley Park'' in
Howth, Ireland commemorates her supposed attempt in 1576 to visit the nearby
Howth Castle. According to legend, Granuaile temporarily abducted a family member after being denied entry. • Since 1948, the
Commissioners of Irish Lights have sailed three vessels named
Granuaile. Their current sole light tender, commissioned in 2005, is the most modern serving the coast of the
island of Ireland. • In
Tampa, Florida, Grace O'Malley is the inspiration for Ye Loyal Krewe of Grace O'Malley, one of many crews that participate in the
Gasparilla Pirate Festival. ==See also==