Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for January, 2011

…people are preparing for the weekly carvery, washed down with a few minerals. What are they like?

Seriously though, there is nothing more Irish than the Sunday carvery dinner. That’s actually The Foxhunter in Lucan, which does a lovely carvery.

Read Full Post »

‘Let Them Eat Cheese’.

Ha’penny Bridge, yesterday. I’d been meaning to snap this for a while.

Earlier on we posted littleman’s excellent ‘Bertie on top’ stencil, only a street away from this. The city is a canvas….

Read Full Post »

Newspaper ad taken out to lure poor unfortunates in....

Recently, the subject of Dublin’s ugliest building and what would constitute a deserving winner (if that’s the right term) came up on our Facebook page in discussion. Quick as a flash, Hawkins House was proposed. I’ve always been painfully aware of it, owing to using the Pearse Street bus stop opposite, but when you actually go down to have a look at it up close you realise that perhaps Dubliners are a little bit hard on Liberty Hall.

Like an East Berlin block of flats, the 1962 Hawkins House looms over everything around it, visible from College Green and even poking its ugly head over the other neighbouring structures to make it visible from the O’Connell Bridge.

It’s truly heartbreaking to think that this is the spot where once stood the glorious Theatre Royal. I don’t know where they filmed Goodbye Lenin, but they missed a great location here.

Hawkins House, take a bow. You horrible, horrible place.

(more…)

Read Full Post »

This was in the Metro Herald yesterday morning. It was one of two letters complaining about The Field at the Olympia. Unusually, I’ve spotted plenty of letters and commentary like it popping up over the last few days, the majority of it criticism not of the play itself but rather the theatre, and indeed the audience.

I have to say I attended The Field last week and thought it excellent, and loved the Olympia as a venue. It was my first time to see a play there, normally going for one of two extremes in the form of small independents or The Abbey. I did see one woman (elderly) moved to seats nearer the front owing to not being able to hear the actors (the things you hear during an interval eh?) but all in all it went without a hitch. Anyone else?

Read Full Post »

Bertie on top.

Spotted yesterday. An oldie but a goodie from littleman still in place, it will likely be there long after Ahern rides off into the sunset too.

Will the election see more street art like this on the streets of the capital?

Some oldies that came to mind:

artist unknown

(more…)

Read Full Post »

Come Here To Me is on ‘the Twitter’. Are you?

I love it, it lets me follow Michael Lowry’s life in a way breakingnews.ie never did.

Popular tags seem to include #fadestreet, #vinb (g’wan Vincent!) and #recession. Just like WordPress then….

Read Full Post »

A look at the Dublin story of ‘Joe Edelstein’s Alarm’ in Little Jerusalem.

Back in September, I paid a visit to the Irish Jewish Museum in Portobello, a pretty incredible gem covering everyone from the fictional (Leopold, I’m talking to you…) to the very real Jewish characters in Dublin history.

One of the characters touched upon was Joe Edelstein. Joe’s name would have been very well-known in the area that became Dublin’s ‘Little Jerusalem’. He was a businessman and writer of some importance in the Jewish part of the city. The Irish Times of September 11 1908 noted for example that he spoke at a meeting of the Judaeo-Irish Home Rule Association at the Mansion House in Dublin and proposed that “….this great meeting of Jews resolve to support such measures as will tend to secure for the people of Ireland a full grant of self-government.”

Edelstein wrote a most controversial work, The Money Lender, which was not well received in the Jewish community of the capital. A copy of it can be seen in the museum today. It was felt by some that the book re-inforced negative stereotypes about the community. It was published in 1908. Despite objections to the work, Joe remained an influential figure in the Jewish community, and newspaper archives show he continued to speak at many public events, continuing to champion the Home Rule movement.

Sadly, Edelstein, once an influential figure in his community, was to fall on hard times and turn to drink. The Irish Independent of November 11, 1939 noted that he was fined a sum of 40s for an offence arising out of being drunk. On one occasion Edelstein was fined by damaging works in the National Library.

Manus O’Riordan has done some excellent research on the Jewish community in Dublin, and noted that:

Edelstein was a man with a serious drink problem, and was subject to frequent psychiatric breakdowns, with resulting periods of hospitalisation. In fact, one such commitment to the Richmond mental hospital for a whole nine months stretch stemmed from the scandal of his 1911 conviction for the crime of indecent assault….

… Edelstein lived on New Street, the central venue for James Connolly’s outdoor public meetings during his 1902 Wood Quay election campaign, and a straight continuation of Clanbrassil Street, the principal thoroughfare of Dublin’s “Little Jerusalem”.

(more…)

Read Full Post »

Joe Higgins Bingo.

There’s an election on the way. You might have heard that.

Expecting to see plenty of Joe Higgins on the television, a friend from the
Red Writers blog has created Joe Higgins Bingo, or a potentially very dangerous drinking game for those on the left.

Here are some Higgins catch phrases you should listen out for. Get a kebab in (he’s up against a Lenihan, by chance….), a few bottles of red lemonade and enjoy.

Read Full Post »

Stand Down Cowen

Dublin’s hardest working ska/reggae band The Bionic Rats re-work The Beat’s classic Stand Down Margaret.

 

Read Full Post »

TODAY MARKS the newest chapter in the storied history of Dublin’s oldest surviving charity. The Sick and Indigent Roomkeepers Society is probably also the one with the oddest name.

Today the society – which was established in 1790 – is moving up in the world, sort of, as it changes location from 34 Lower to 74 Upper Leeson Street.

In reality, the change, which moves them farther from the city centre, is necessary for the organisation’s survival. Put simply, it can no longer afford the rent during a time when donations are scarcer and requests for help more frequent.

So yesterday, paintings came down, mementos were taken off the shelves and hundreds of years of Dublin city’s history was packed into boxes to be moved to a new home across the Grand Canal. – The Irish Times

We learn today that the The Sick and Indigent Roomkeepers Society is moving address once again. Before Leeson Street, they were based on Palace Street (Dublin’s shortest street with only two addresses) from 1855 to 1992. Here they left one of Dublin’s best loved Ghost Signs.

Read Full Post »

This is a jeu d’esprit, a fusion of the real, the fantastic and the legendary, by a writer of amazing technical virtuosity.

So began the 1939 review of Brian O’Nolan’s classic At Swim Two Birds inside The Irish Times, a paper he was all too familiar with one could say. The reviews latter assertion that “it is quite impossible to give an accurate idea of the contents of the work” is something that will resonate with many!

In it’s first six months, a mere 244 copies of the work were sold. The warehouse of Longman’s, the works publisher, were destroyed by a German bombing during the second World War and that, for a period, marked the death of At Swim Two Birds.

My favourite of the authors works, Blue Raincoat are staging a production of At Swim Two Birds in the Project Arts Centre, Temple Bar.An excellent review of the companies production can be found at the site of the Irish Theatre Magazine, written by Patrick Lonergan of NUI Galway.

At Swim Two Birds is a genuine celebration of the theatrical: it sent me back to the original novel – but it also left me waiting impatiently for an opportunity to go and see the play again.

The play will run from February 22 to March 5, and tickets are available from the Project Arts Centre online.

A pint in The Palace and a trip to the theatre is in order.

Read Full Post »

100 exciting things…

… you didn’t know about the city centre!

Thanks to Eif C for sharing.

Lots of familiar places: Hop House, Mary Abbey, Freemasons Hall and Sunlight Chambers.

Lots of new ones: Wittgenstein plaque, Old Burton Building and Blessington Basin.

Great idea. View it better here. Props to Designing Dublin

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »