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Irish Times
5 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Little Shop of Horrors review: Bord Gáis Energy Theatre's first homegrown show is a sure-footed take on the cult musical
Little Shop of Horrors Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, Dublin ★★★★☆ It's a rare piece of dramatic art that dispenses with every lead character by the curtain call, but Howard Ashman and Alan Menken's Little Shop of Horrors is unusual in many ways. With its unlikely cast of sadistic dentists, sidewalk bums, stoop-sitters and man-hungry plants, it situates itself firmly on the dark and shadowy side of the street. As the dumb but darling Audrey (Jacqueline Brunton, euphonious) puts it, 'You don't meet nice guys on Skid Row.' Yet what about the bumbling botanist who sleeps under the counter at Mr Mushnik's Flower Shop? Seymour (David O'Reilly, endearing) may not have deep pockets, but he does have green fingers with which he can turn his tribute flytrap, Audrey II (voiced by Kenneth O'Regan), into gold. There is a Grimm lesson here worthy of any age-old fairy tale: where personal ambition is concerned, there are always sacrifices to be made. [ Dublin's biggest theatre is staging its first production. Will its Little Shop of Horrors pull off a coup? Opens in new window ] In this first, admirable home-grown production from Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, collaborating with Theatreworx, no such sacrifices are visible to the audience. Maree Kearns's sweeping Skid Row set spares us no grimy detail, with a revolving floor facilitating easy shifts between indoor and outdoor settings, including the blood-spattered horror show of Dr Orin's pleasure palace. Performances too are very strong. Garry Mountaine's Mr Mushnik is part mensch, part schmuck, leaning into the klezmer cadences of Ya Never Know. Johnny Ward's Orin is a seedy comic tour de force. Playing the key collective role of the story-setting chorus, Ghaliah Conroy, Precious Abimbola and Aoife Dunne do more than justice to the dominating doo-wop rhythms of Menken's score. READ MORE Little Shop of Horrors: David O'Reilly and Garry Mountaine Little Shop of Horrors: Precious Abimbola, Ghaliah Conroy and Aoife Dunne David Hayes, the production's musical director, maintains measured control over the shifting musical styles, although issues with sound levels and mics on opening night swallow some of O'Reilly's solo vocals. Claire Tighe, directing, is sure-footed in her vision of the cult material, leaning firmly into its campest qualities, as Audrey II grows and gets hungrier and hungrier. Chris Corroon's puppetry does too. It goes for Jim Henson-style theatricality more than realism, which makes the dark denouement far more palatable. Those schooled on Frank Oz's 1986 film may be surprised to realise that Somewhere That's Green has more than one interpretation, as John Gallagher's lurid lighting for the finale makes clear. But, following the logic of life and legends, it was never going to end any other way. Little Shop of Horrors is at the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre , Dublin, until Saturday, August 9th


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
RTE survey Galway Races punters on Danny Mullins' eccentric new hairstyle…& Cork GAA legend gives best answer
DANNY Mullins' latest quirky hairdo provided additional entertainment for punters at the Galway Cork hurling great Mark Landers. The 33-year-old often mixes it up on the hair front. He 2 Mullins is one of the more charismatic figures in the sport Credit: @RTEsport 2 Landers gave his seal of approval Credit: @RTEsport And he's gone one step further this time around by having a bit of red dye infused into his look. He's always happy to poke fun at himself for being a bit of a free spirit when it comes to his various hairstyles and so it proved again while explaining the rationale to He laughed: "Yeah sure it's a bit of excitement anyway. I suppose the colour red is fairly eccentric. "But it's something different. I've a good head of hair so while it's there I'll make the most of it." Read More On Irish Sport He then went on to identify the rather random inspiration behind the change-up. He added: "It was just seeing Jimmy Butler (NBA player) with the Miami Heat had done it before. "I thought that looked good so I said I'd roll with that." The national broadcaster then surveyed some punters for their reaction to seeing a photo of the new eye-catching aesthetic. They were broadly supportive towards someone showing a bit of individuality with a refreshing lack of judgement on show. Most read in Horse Racing One person said: "Nothing wrong with being individualistic, good on him!" Similarly, another racing enthusiast hailed: "Absolutely beautiful, colours are fab." The last spectator quizzed happened to be Landers - who captained his county to Liam MacCarthy glory in 1999. The Irish Sun chat to AK Bets owner Anthony Kaminskas at Galway Races With a nod to the current crop's recent All-Ireland final letdown, he quipped: "I think with the week that's in it he picked the wrong colour! "I think he should have a bit of green and gold in there for Kerry. Not the Cork hurlers anyway. But fair dues to him, it's certainly a brave move out of him." Day two of the seven-day showpiece saw Brian O'Keeffe, spokesperson for 'Sticktotheplan was a dream winner in the opener at 22/1 and then Dunum winning really swung momentum our way as we look to day three.' AGE ONLY A NUMBER In the big Under the guidance of 53-year-old jockey Seamie Heffernan, the Natalia Lupini trained seven-year-old was recording its third career victory at Ballybrit. Lupini said afterwards: 'He did well today and Seamie is a great asset for a small yard like ours. Having a jockey of his calibre is a massive help.' Earlier on in the day, King Of Kingsfield ridden by Jack Kennedy won the Latin Quarter Beginners Chase at 7/2, fending off 6/4 favourite My Great Mate. Winning trainer


The Irish Sun
20 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
‘My voice is gone' – Listen to ecstatic Radio Kerry commentary of David Clifford's best All-Ireland final moments
DAVID Clifford was a joy to watch on Sunday and Radio Kerry's commentary was almost as enjoyable to listen to. The Fossa phenom may not have been on the ball much for he was deadly accurate in making his touches county as Advertisement 2 Tim Moynihan embodies why local commentary is so often the best form of the art Credit: @radiokerrysport 2 Clifford scored three two-pointers to help fire them to their 39th crown Radio Kerry have released a near five-minute highlights package of their commentary duo Tim Moynihan and Ambrose O'Donovan calling the action from The whole video flies by with our personal favourite line describing the Kingdom's frenzied press being akin to "like wasps on cowdung". A close second is him branding the 26-year-old a mixture of a ballerina and a warrior owing to his balance as he rapidly sidestepped two despairing Donegal men before firing over with his right foot. There's also a nice additional bit of colour provided by Moynihan noting that Clifford's two-pointer on the cusp of half-time left Off the Ball double-act Paddy Andrews and Advertisement Read More On GAA For as much as the soon to be three-time Footballer of the Year was in God mode on the pitch, there was an amusing example of him still Paudie Clifford may have to look up to make eye contact with David but he very much lives up to the older brother stereotype. The older Clifford is the more verbose of the two and drove most of their Burlington Hotel interview Some of the highlights included him noting that they were on the same teams growing up despite the age gap as their community of Fossa is so small that playing numbers were often tight. Advertisement Most read in GAA Football The playmaker also joked about his 76 possessions over the course of Harking back to the widely lauded Football Review Committee, he quipped: "Jim Gavin and Eamon Fitzmaurice probably didn't envision me soloing the ball on the spot about 100 times when they drew up the new rules!" Paudie Clifford teases David over childhood nickname during hilarious RTE interview after All-Ireland heroics The best moment, however, was a classic case of a big brother slagging his younger sibling. Asked if they'd always had an innate on-pitch chemistry, Paudie shot back: "The chemistry wasn't great now, we fought every day for about two years straight! Advertisement "Mom was just sick of of dealing with David crying every two minutes. They actually used to call him 'Watery eyes' because he used to cry so much! So that was the chemistry now." AT THE RIGHT PITCH While Paudie was all smiles and in relaxed form by that stage of the day, his immediate post-match interview He vented: "I suppose as a team, we would feel disrespected because we were in three of the last four All-Irelands and we've won two of them now. "And to be called a one-man team when I see myself some of the work that our lads put in… Advertisement 'Like, Joe O'Connor, the turnovers, winning balls, scoring, Jason Foley, Brian Ó Beaglaioch, Gavin White – I'm only naming a few. I see the work that they put in every day. 'To be called a one-man team then, it's nearly like it's disrespectful. It's kind of personal. I suppose that's the angle we were coming from. 'We were close against Armagh last year and we'd be our own worst critics as well. We admitted that we've under-performed definitely as a team over some of the years. 'But I suppose with the work we put in and the players we have there, for them things to be said, it's not nice to hear it." Advertisement