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Gerry Ryan's son Rex shies away from sharing details on upcoming stage role as ‘The Monk'

Gerry Ryan's son Rex shies away from sharing details on upcoming stage role as ‘The Monk'

Sunday World26-05-2025
Ryan family in the dark about show detailing life of notorious gangster
Gerry Ryan's son Rex has shied away from sharing details about his upcoming stage role as Gerry 'The Monk' Hutch from his siblings, sister Bonnie has revealed.
The eldest child of the late RTÉ broadcaster is set to direct and star in a play based on the veteran criminal's life at Ryan's Glass Mask Theatre in Bestseller Café on Dawson Street next month.
'The Monk', a one-man show, takes place entirely in the holding cell of the Special Criminal Court, five minutes before Hutch is set to receive the verdict of his 2022 trial at the Special Criminal Court in Dublin, where he stood accused of murdering David Byrne at the Regency Hotel in February 2016.
Rex Ryan's sister Bonnie
But the Ryans have no idea what to expect when it comes to the 65-minute drama – having to wait until June 10 to see their brother transform into The Monk on opening night.
'We actually really know nothing at all about it. It's going to be a total surprise,' Rex's younger sister Bonnie Ryan tells the Sunday World.
'He's been working really hard on it and I've no doubt that it's going to be amazing. ​
Rex initially got his blessing after a half-hour video call with Hutch from Wheatfield Prison back in 2022, organised by Hutch's son Jason.
Speaking to the Irish Independent this month, the 35-year-old explained how he sought permission to tell The Monk's story on stage.
'
He told me to do what I like and that if it was my fiction, and not his, I could go ahead. 'I don't give a bo***x, Rex.''
Rex Ryan in The Monk
He met Hutch at Glass Mask Theatre last year around the time of Hutch's Dáil election bid
'I asked him loads of factual questions and probed him about his first memory, his childhood,' Rex detailed.
This meeting, paired together with research from 'multiple other sources' – including Hutch's appearance on the Crime World podcast last November – helped him piece together the story of Gerry 'The Monk' Hutch.
Rex is now finally ready to play one of Ireland's most polarising figures on stage.
'The Monk' will take place at the Glass Mask Theatre on Dawson Street from June 10 to 21.
Rex Ryan in The Monk
News in 90 Seconds - May 27th
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The Russian-flagged crude oil tanker Belgorod transmitted intermittent location data as it travelled through Ireland's EEZ on 6 and 7 May, two months after EU sanctions on the vessel were announced. The Primoyre passed the Irish coast twice between 13 April and 2 May, going 'dark' to location tracking services for periods while off the coast of Clare and later Donegal. Tony Cudmore, a retired Brigadier General with the Irish Defence Forces, said "an awful lot of this activity is intended to provoke and possibly to call into question the State's authority." "The danger is that a perception is being created that the State's authority in this area is being diminished," he added. He warned that there is also a significant environmental risk linked to the oil tankers, and that the clean-up cost would likely have to be borne by Ireland in the event of an oil spill while a vessel was uninsured. "These ships are like having vehicles travelling on your roads which have no NCT. 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The Panama-flagged vessel, the Eventin, had been on its way from Russia to Egypt with a cargo of around 100,000 metric tons of oil, worth some €40 million. Ami Daniel believes Ireland could take other steps to challenge vessels operating without insurance or valid maintenance records. "It's not just enforcement at sea. It's enforcement on the flags [of convenience] and what they do with the flag states," Mr Daniel said. "The Irish Government can absolutely reach out to them and send them letters. For instance, are they allowing them to do ship-to-ship transfers and get fuel or other provisions while out there?" he added. The Department of Transport told RTÉ that the Irish Coast Guard, through its responsibility for search and rescue, maritime casualty and pollution response, actively monitors traffic in Irish waters and recognises the "risk that some of these vessels pose." "These risks include the increased possibility of a maritime casualty and search and rescue incidents from such vessels. For this reason, the Coast Guard has instituted specific measures to monitor the presence of these vessels and passage through and out of Irish EEZ" it said in a statement. Sanctions impact Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the EU, UK and the US have imposed restrictions on Russia's energy sector, aiming to weaken its economy and limit its ability to fund the war. As part of that, specific ships have been banned from EU territorial waters, denied insurance, and prevented from accessing certain maritime services as well as all European ports and territorial waters. Last week the EU announced its 18th sanctions package against Russia which includes an additional 105 vessels being banned from accessing EU ports and locks, or undertaking ship-to-ship transfers of oil. The UK also placed sanctions on 135 oil tankers in Russia's "shadow fleet" this week. In total, the EU has now imposed sanctions on more than 400 shadow fleet ships. All European ports are also effectively barred from temporarily storing, handling, or processing Russian crude oil and petroleum products, with limited exceptions. However, even with the sanctions, income generated by Russia's exports have remained stable. The federation exported 7.8million barrels of oil per day in 2021, a figure that had dipped only slightly three years later to 7.5million barrels per day, as it successfully redirected supplies to countries like China and India, according to the International Energy Agency. John O'Brennan, Professor of European Politics at Maynooth University, attributes that at least in part to the activity of the shadow fleet, and says that individual European countries could do more to step up enforcement at a national level. "Some national authorities within the EU have been less than vigilant about upholding those sanctions. That gap is one that Russia has been successfully able to exploit over the last couple of years," Prof O'Brennan added. Prof O'Brennan noted some Greek shipping owners have been prominent in selling their old vessels on to Russia to repurpose, rather than spending money on scrapping them.

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