Sinéad O’Connor Biopic Officially in the Works — Here’s What We Know
The early life of the late singer-songwriter and activist hero Sinéad O’Connor (1966-2023) will be coming to the screen, courtesy of ie: entertainment. Hailing from O’Connor’s native Ireland, this production company has already helmed a documentary, 2022’s Nothing Compares, which chronicled her career ascent and subversive public image. That film was produced with the involvement and approval of Sinéad O’Connor herself, providing an encouraging track record for ie, as it sets out to tell the same story in dramatic narrative form.
An Artist and Activist in Equal Measure
Sinéad O’Connor’s passionate political pronouncements occupy such a prominent place in her legacy that it’s easy to forget that her late-1980s ascent was based purely on her musical talent. Her debut album, 1987’s The Lion and the Cobra, was critically acclaimed upon release, and her 1990 follow-up, I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got, won her a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Album in 1991. That same year, however, she boycotted the Grammys for being too commercial and declined to accept her award.
This decision would set the tone for O’Connor’s reputation in the years immediately thereafter. Even more (in)famous than this boycott was the 1992 episode of Saturday Night Live wherein she ripped apart a picture of Pope John Paul II as a protest against the Catholic Church’s corruption, notably its abuse of children. This demonstration (which would prove prescient in its motivation more than a decade later) cemented her reputation as a self-described “protest singer,” which thus became inseparable from her artistry. The forthcoming biopic is intended to be an account of this pivotal period in her career: of her swift ascent to musical fame and the even swifter rise of her renown as a sociopolitical firebrand.
Production Breakdown – What We Know
This biopic, as yet untitled, has been under development since at least the release of its 2022 documentary counterpart. Nine Daughters and See-Saw Films have joined ie: entertainment in producing the film, which is also receiving its funding from BBC Film. Its director is Josephine Decker, who already has a strong drama-film pedigree thanks to her previous directorial efforts, Shirley (2020), Madeline’s Madeline (2018), and Butter on the Latch (2014). The script will be penned by Stacey Gregg.
As of August 18, no cast members or release dates have been confirmed, but if the people behind the camera are anything to go by, there’s ample cause to have optimism for this dramatization of the uniquely compelling Sinéad O’Connor.
