Birthdate: March 26, 1970 (56 Years Old)
Birthplace: Camberwell, London, England, UK
Martin McDonagh (birthname: Martin Faranan McDonagh) is first and foremost a writer of dramas observing—with caustic humor and detail—characters often living on the criminal edge. While his initial fame was as a highly successful and lauded playwright on the London stage (his plays were usually set in violent conditions in western Ireland, the birthplace of his parents), McDonagh has made an emphatic shift to cinema as a triple-threat director-writer-producer, including his Oscar-winning comedy-drama,
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017).
After the success of his early pair of trilogies for the stage—including
The Beauty Queen of Leenane (1996) and
The Lonesome West (1997), as well as
The Cripple of Inishmaan (1996)—Martin McDonagh began his first steps into cinema with a short film,
Six Shooter (2004), with Brendan Gleeson, which won the Oscar for Best Live-Action Short. Soon after this success, McDonagh made his feature debut, the black crime comedy,
In Bruges (2008), with Gleeson and
Colin Farrell as a pair of Irish hitmen in Belgium.
It earned the opening night slot at the Sundance Film Festival and scored McDonagh’s second Oscar nod, for a Best Screenplay nomination. Moving more and more to the big screen and away from the stage, McDonagh also shifted to the U.S. for the setting of his second satirical feature,
Seven Psychopaths (2012), starring Farrell, Sam Rockwell, Woody Harrelson, Christopher Walken, and Tom Waits, and winning a People’s Choice Award at the Toronto Film Festival’s popular Midnight Madness section.
McDonagh’s major breakthrough in the movies was emphatically his third feature, the widely acclaimed
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, with Frances McDormand, Rockwell, Harrelson, Abbie Cornish, Peter Dinklage, Lucas Hedges, and Željko Ivanek. The film was nominated for seven Oscars (including Best Picture and Screenplay), with McDormand (Best Actress) and Rockwell (Best Supporting Actor) winning.
This meant that, with one short film and only three features, McDonagh received four Oscar nominations and one win. In 2022, McDonagh’s fourth feature marked a return to western Ireland with the crime-inflected
The Banshees of Inisherin, co-starring Gleeson and Farrell, and premiering in competition at the Venice Film Festival.