The Cork Film Festival
- magazine : Travel Ireland
- numero : 31 - novembre 2016
- date : 01 novembre 2016
- catégorie : Loisirs & vie pratique
Sommaire
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The Kings of the Kilburn high road
Jimmy Murphy’s critically acclaimed
play The Kings of the Kilburn High
Road comes to the Gaiety Theatre
from 1 to 12 November. The play
has been a huge success in New
York and London, as well as being
adapted into an Irish language film,
Kings, in 2006 directed by Tom
Collins and was selected as
Ireland’s official entry for the 2008
Academy Awards for best foreign
language film. Now Livin’ Dred
Theatre Company are bringing it
back to the Irish stage, directed by
Padraic McIntyre and starring
Phelim Drew, Malcolm Adams,
Arthur Riordan, Seamus O’Rourke
and Charlie Bonner. -
Eireburushed at Sean Ocasey Theatre
Brian Merriman’s brilliant play Eirebrushed comes to the Sean
O’Casey Theatre for one night only on 4 November before it embarks
on a US run later in the month. The play has earned rave reviews since
opening at the 2014 Dublin Gay Theatre Festival and was even
mentioned in the Irish parliament, the Dáil, during the debate over
the 2015 Gender Recognition Bill, which was subsequently passed. - Glasnevin Cemetery
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Mise Éire
At the National Museum of Ireland
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The Snow Queen
At the Smock Alley Theatre
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Cork Film Festival
More than 200 films will be showcased at the Cork Film Festival
from 11 - 20 November. Ireland’s oldest film festival will this year
showcase home-grown talent and international features, as well as a
strong focus on documentary film, with 52 documentaries, over 100
short films and 55 countries represented throughout the
programme. -
Waterford Winterval Festival
Ireland's Christmas Festival
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Reeeling in the years
Sculptor Cynthia Moran-Killeavy has
packed an awful lot into her 86
years and she’s still going strong
and working on new material. She
will bring some of those new
works, along with some of her past
gems to a new exhibition at Gallery
Zozimus - Reeling in the Years.
These outstanding bronze, stone
and wood sculptures traverse
Moran-Killeavy’s rich and varied
career, which has taken her from
Ireland, to London, to Spain and
back to Ireland again. -
John Millington Synge
Great Irish Writers