From the late ‘60s until 1998, when the Good Friday Agreement wound down hostilities between the Catholic nationalist Irish Republican Army and the U.K.-supported loyalist protestant militias, Northern Ireland was afflicted with the conflict known as the Troubles. One could read and watch a lifetime of reporting on this subject and still not have a firm handle on its nuances, contradictions, factions, facts and figures of the fight for, and against, Irish independence and reunification — a story going back centuries.
It’s certainly well beyond the power of any docudrama to take it in whole, and the strength of FX’s “Say Nothing” — a nine-episode historical drama now streaming on Hulu — is that it doesn’t try to. Created by Joshua Zetumer, who adapts Patrick Radden Keefe’s multiple award-winning 2018 nonfiction book, subtitled “A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland,” it focuses instead on a handful of characters, their activities and relationships.
The drama, which spans the years of the Troubles (and beyond) is framed by the Belfast Project, a series of off-the-record until after-death interviews conducted by Boston College between 2000 and 2006. “Say Nothing” re-creates only two, with IRA volunteer Dolours Price (Lola Petticrew young; Maxine Peake older) and commander Brendan Hughes (Anthony Boyle young; Tom Vaughan-Lawlor older), called “The Dark.” (Both have died; Price in 2013 and Hughes in 2008.)
As such, it takes place largely, and asymmetrically, within the world, and worldview, of the IRA, focusing on Dolours and her younger sister Marian (Hazel Doupe) and senior officers Hughes and Gerry Adams (Josh Finan, young; Michael Colgan older), who would become a famous mainstream politician. A disclaimer at the end of each episode acknowledges Adams’ denial that he was ever a member of the IRA or involved in political violence; it’s a claim “Say Nothing” otherwise freely dismisses.