Frankie Starlight Title Art

Synopsis

PosterFrom the producer of My Left Foot (Noel Pearson) comes Frankie Starlight. Directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg (Brideshead Revisted , The Object of Beauty), and starring Anne Parillaud (La Femme Nikita), Matt Dillon and Gabriel Byrne, Frankie Starlight is a film about love, life, laughter and the occasional miracle.

Set in post-World War II Ireland, this is the story of Frankie and his mother Bernadette (Parillaud) who, as an 18-year old girl, left France smuggled aboard an American troop ship in return for sexual favors. Put ashore in Ireland, the penniless Bernadette gives birth to a son, Frankie. Through the kindness of customs officer Jack Kelly (Byrne), Bernadette is able to raise Frankie in Dublin. Jack teaches Frankie about the stars, sparking in him a lifelong mystical obsession with the cosmos. As an adult, Frankie weaves his love for and knowledge of astronomy into a novel based on his recollections of his mother's relationships with Kelly and an ex-GI (Dillon). After his book is published and he moves from isolation to potential celebrity, we discover how his mother's colorful exploits shaped Frankie's life.

Anne Parillaud and Matt Dillon Frankie Starlight is based on Chet Raymo's best-selling novel entitled "The Dork of Cork." Raymo is a lecturer in astronomy at Stonehill College in Massachusetts, but has spent every summer for the last 16 years in the village of Vantry, County Kerry. It is the combination of his knowledge of the stars and time spent in Ireland that inspired him to write this magical tale of love and the stars.

In the summer of 1993 Raymo sent his new novel to Noel Pearson, the producer of My Left Foot and The Field. "It was one of these books that had shamrocks and stars and leprechauns all over the cover so I didn't read it for ages" says Pearson. "Then one day I just flicked open the cover and there was a sticker in it saying, 'this could be your right foot.' That evening I began reading it at 9 pm and put it down at 7 am the next morning." Pearson then gave the novel to Michael Lindsay-Hogg who read it, met with Pearson a couple of times, and decided to direct the film.

Anne Parillaud and Gabriel ByrneThe story, which spans over 30 years, is set in France, Ireland and the United States. Shot on location in Ireland, a French village was constructed on a farm in County Kildare, and the Normandy scenes were done on beaches on the east coast of Ireland.

The central character, Frank Bois, is played by two newcomers to the screen, Alan Pentony as the younger Frankie, and Corban Walker as the older one. Walker, a well-known sculptor in Dublin, was cast after just one screen test. Pentony was more difficult to find. Pearson explains, "We had a hard time finding young Frankie as we had to match him to someone fifteen years later. Nuala Moiselle, the casting director, searched the length and breadth of Ireland and finally stumbled upon Alan in Drogheda. He had the exact qualities we were looking for- fresh, warm and appealing."

Anne Parillaud plays Bernadette, Frankie's beautiful French mother. Parillaud read the script once and her agent called to ask if she could do it. She flew from an island off Brittany on a Tuesday, met with Pearson and Lindsay-Hogg on Wednesday, and the deal was done on Thursday morning. By coincidence, Chet Raymo had used a picture of Parillaud for inspiration with the character of Bernadette while writing the novel.

Matt Dillon and Alan PentonyThe character Jack Kelly, played by Gabriel Byrne, is a customs officer who befriends Bernadette after she is put off a U.S. warship while trying to escape from France to America after the death of both her parents during World War II. Jack for a brief time is Bernadette's lover, but then becomes more of a father figure to both her and Frankie. It is Jack who introduces Frankie to his lifelong interest in the stars. Byrne's reaction to reading the script was "I thought it was very simply written. It was just one of the best things I had read in a long time."

The final stage in casting was to find an actor to fill the part of Terry, Bernadette's American lover. The script was sent to Matt Dillon, who had previously worked with Michael Lindsay-Hogg in the theatre, and he agreed to play the part. Interestingly enough, Dillon notes that "I always thought that because of my Irish background I would come here to play an Irish man, not an American."

Chet Raymo was joined by Ronan O'Leary to co-write the screenplay, and by September 1994 Frankie Starlight was in production. It was shot for six weeks in Ireland and one week in Texas.


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