Eithne Dunne

Eithne Dunne


Died: December 22, 1988
in Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK

Movies for Eithne Dunne...

The Mutations
Title: The Mutations
Character: Nurse
Released: May 22, 1974
Type: Movie
A mad scientist (Donald Pleasence) crosses plants with people, and the results wind up in a sideshow.
bee
Title: Pride and Prejudice
Character: Mrs. Gardiner
Released: September 10, 1967
Type: TV
BBC's 150th anniversary production of Jane Austen's novel of the same name.
bee
Love's Labour's Lost
Title: Love's Labour's Lost
Character: Princess of France
Released: May 6, 1965
Type: Movie
A scholarly king and his three companions swear off the society of women for three years, only to have a diplomatic visit from a French princess and her three ladies-in-waiting thwart their intentions.
bee
Dementia 13
Title: Dementia 13
Character: Lady Haloran
Released: September 25, 1963
Type: Movie
A widow deceives her late husband's mother and brothers into thinking he's still alive when she attends the yearly memorial to his drowned sister, hoping to secure his inheritance, but her cunning is no match for the demented, axe-wielding thing roaming the grounds of the family's Irish estate.
bee
She Didn't Say No!
Title: She Didn't Say No!
Character: Miss Hogan
Released: September 30, 1958
Type: Movie
Bridget Monaghan, a single mother who has had six children by different fathers, shocks the conservative inhabitants of an Irish village.
bee
No Resting Place
Title: No Resting Place
Character: Meg Kyle
Released: January 12, 1951
Type: Movie
The brilliant British documentary filmmaker Paul Rotha made his feature-film debut with 1950's No Resting Place. Filmed on location in Ireland, the film is a lightly fictionalized study of that country's itinerant workmen. Michael Gough plays tinker Alec Kyle, whose life is thrown into turmoil when he accidentally kills a man. Kyle spends the rest of the film evading Guard Mannigan (Noel Purcell), a civil servant who relies on instinct rather than scientific deduction to get his man. Without ever trying to elicit sympathy for his characters, director Rotha manages to compellingly detail the miserable living and working conditions of Ireland's nomad artisans.