logo
The Guide: Galway arts festival, The Script, Taylor Tomlinson and other events to see, shows to book and ones to catch before they end

The Guide: Galway arts festival, The Script, Taylor Tomlinson and other events to see, shows to book and ones to catch before they end

Irish Times12-07-2025
Event of the week
Galway International Arts Festival
From Monday, July 14th, until Sunday, July 27th, various venues, times and prices,
giaf.ie
Once more around the sun for Ireland's most comprehensive arts festival, which this year further embeds accessibility into its programming. Highlights include photography (Joe O'Shaughnessy's Druid, from Monday, July 14th, until Sunday, July 27th, Kenny Gallery, 9am-5pm, free), opera (Mars, from Friday, July 25th, until Sunday, July 27th, Leisureland, Salthill, 8pm, €40), Resistance to Trump: US congresswoman Pramila Jayapal in conversation with Fintan O'Toole (Saturday, July 26th, Bailey Allen Hall, University of Galway, 6pm, €15) and music (Richard Thompson, Sunday, July 27th, Monroe's, 8pm, €40). A particular must-see is the unique Oh…, the new solo show by the long-time festival collaborator Mikel Murfi (various days, Galway Atlantaquaria, Salthill, 8pm, €25).
Gigs
The Script
Saturday, July 12th, Thomond Park, Limerick, 5pm, €82.80/€78.25/€67.40,
ticketmaster.ie
Visiting Limerick as part of their Satellites world tour (named after their
seventh album
, from 2024), The Script continue to raise the flag for resilience. It is now more than two years since the death of Mark Sheehan, one of their original founders. Danny O'Donoghue and Glen Power (along with their long-term touring bass guitarist, Ben Sargeant) seem hell-bent on celebrating the power of positive thinking with their blend of arena-friendly pop/rock/R&B and more than a few anthemic ballads.
Jessica Pratt
Sunday, July 13th, Vicar Street, Dublin, 7pm, €35, ticketmaster.ie
Jessica Pratt
California's hippie nostalgia, New York's experimental inclinations and London's swinging-sixties vibe run so much through Jessica Pratt's 2024 album, Here in the Pitch, that you're tempted to check the list of contributors to it. Is that Marianne Faithfull we hear, or Joni Mitchell? The Walker Brothers or The Beach Boys? Velvet Underground or Pentangle? The album is one of four that the Los Angeles-based musician has released since her self-titled debut, in 2012, and it more than consolidates her position as the best US singer-songwriter you've possibly never heard of. Well worth investigating.
Supergrass
Sunday, July 13th, Iveagh Gardens, Dublin, 6pm, €50.65, ticketmaster.ie
It's third strike lucky for Supergrass, the Oxford band who re-formed for the second time last year. The main reason for returning is the 30th anniversary of their debut album, I Should Coco, which, as well as being nominated for the Mercury Prize, propelled the band to the forefront of the Britpop movement. Its single Alright, which reached the UK top three, only amplified their appeal. The band's lead singer, Gaz Coombes, said the song wasn't 'supposed to be a rally cry for our generation', but it and I Should Coco have remained just that, no matter the age of the listener.
READ MORE
Visual arts
Summer Open Exhibition
Until Saturday, August 2nd, Swift Cultural Centre, Trim, Co Meath, Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm, free,
swiftculturalcentre.ie
View from the Hugh Lane by Annette Smyth
This inaugural art exhibition featuring the work of almost 50 local artists supports multidisciplinary projects that might not have been undertaken otherwise. Artists involved include Fiona Kerbey, Shane Holland, Annette Smyth, Thomas Hendy, Paula Jane Shuter, John Larkin and Lorraine Clarke. The artworks have been chosen by Belinda Quirke, director of both the Swift centre and Solstice Arts Centre, in Navan.
Musical
Kinky Boots: The Musical
Monday-Saturday, July 14th-19th, Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, Dublin, 7.30pm, €68.40/€60.90/€52.30/€41.05, ticketmaster.ie
Kinky Boots, from Tony Clayton-Lea for The Guide, Saturday, July 12, 2025.
Based on the British film from 2005, and with the bonus of songs by the US pop star Cyndi Lauper, Kinky Boots: The Musical arrives in Dublin for its penultimate run before concluding its tour in Oxford at the end of this month. A Tony and Olivier winner with a mix of show tunes and club bangers, it follows the (true) story of a shoe-factory owner who, in a bid to save his family business from closure, decides to produce fetish footwear for men.
Comedy
Taylor Tomlinson: Save Me
Sunday, July 13th, 3Arena, Dublin, 7pm, €59.85/€49.20, ticketmaster.ie
Taylor Tomlinson
Taylor Tomlinson – one of the most-followed women comedians on TikTok – has, in the past five years, filmed three comedy specials for Netflix and presented the US panel show After Midnight (becoming the only woman host on late-night US television). Tomlinson's Save Me tour, which mines her personal life for material, has its roots in her upbringing in a pious Christian community as well as the removal of her life from such controls. Topics addressed and insightfully ribbed include mental health, sexual preferences and dating.
Arts festival
Earagail Arts Festival
From Saturday, July 12th, until Saturday, July 26th, Letterkenny, Co Donegal, various venues, times and prices,
eaf.ie
Thirty-eight years is a long time to keep the fires burning, but Earagail Arts Festival doesn't seem to be tiring. Its broad range of events includes theatre/dance (Steps into the Wild & Miss Mary, Monday, July 14th, Gola Island, noon, free), music (Poor Creature, Friday, July 18th, Donegal Castle, 8pm, €20) and circus (Tumble, from Thursday, July 24th, until Saturday, July 26th, Ionad Cois Locha, Dunlewey, 3.30pm, €10/€6).
Still running
The Beacon
Until Saturday, July 19th, Everyman Theatre, Cork, 7.30pm, €39/€36,
everymancork.com
Geraldine Hughes
Commissioned by Druid in 2016, Nancy Harris's play receives a revival (and a Cork premiere). The story hinges on the renovation of a house on an island off the west Cork coast, and how notable feminist artist Beiv (Geraldine Hughes) oversees a deep-rooted, intriguing family mystery. Leonard Buckley and Ross O'Donnellan also feature. Sara Joyce directs.
Book it this week
Masters of Tradition Festival, Bantry, Co Cork, August 20th-24th,
westcorkmusic.ie
Westport Festival of Chamber Music, Co Mayo, September 11th-14th,
westportchambermusic.ie
Tom Odell, 3Arena, Dublin, October 23rd, ticketmaster.ie
Serena Terry, Cork Opera House, March 12th,
serenaterry.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cork hurling captain Robert Downey praised for selfless act amid All-Ireland heartbreak and WhatsApp rumour storm
Cork hurling captain Robert Downey praised for selfless act amid All-Ireland heartbreak and WhatsApp rumour storm

The Irish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Cork hurling captain Robert Downey praised for selfless act amid All-Ireland heartbreak and WhatsApp rumour storm

FOR the second year running Cork returned from an All-Ireland hurling final without silverware. But the manner of this year's second-half shocking collapse against Tipperary has only added to the deep pain for their 2 Robert Downey of Cork showed up at a kid's hurling camp to help out after a heartbreaking loss in last Sunday's All-Ireland final 2 A post was shared of the Cork skipper on social media at the camp earlier this week Credit: INSTA @tomken81 The Rebel county boards also During the week, speculation swirled on WhatsApp, suggesting a significant dressing-room bust-up at half-time. Amid the noise and rumours, Rebels captain Robert Downey has earned praise for a classy gesture during what must be a difficult week. The skipper turned up to help coach at a local kids' Cúl Camp. read more on hurling A photo was posted to Instagram by former Cork star Tom Kenny from the Grenagh GAA Cúl Camp. The snap showed Downey chatting and coaching the next generation of hurlers - despite the heartbreak of the previous weekend. A caption on the "Thanks to Rob Downey for calling after a tough sporting week for him. Well done boys and girls. Thanks to all the coaches, assistants and volunteers." Most read in GAA Hurling One particularly touching image shows Downey in deep conversation with a group of children as they don hurleys in their hands. The post was later shared by O'Connor Hurleys – a company co-owned by two-time All-Ireland winner Ben O'Connor – who used the moment to condemn the unfounded dressing-room claims circulating online. Liam Cahill's BBC interview gatecrashed by Tipperary GAA stars after All-Ireland final A further post stated: "To anybody ignorant or stupid enough that helped spread a rumour this week, what have you done to promote the game this week?" "This is what Rob Downey did this week after the heartache of losing an All-Ireland final. "Shame on anyone that promoted those horrible stories about our young men this week. You're not supporters, nor are you good opponent. You're lower than low.' It's not clear who runs the O'Connor Hurleys social media page, but the message pulled no punches. Regardless, Downey's decision to attend the camp was a powerful and selfless gesture that hasn't gone unnoticed in many quarters after such a challenging week for the Cork skipper.

The community oven built at an Irish festival, heading for Palestine
The community oven built at an Irish festival, heading for Palestine

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

The community oven built at an Irish festival, heading for Palestine

What's better than a great party? A great party with a purpose. The Great Oven Disco Cantina is a new event at this year's All Together Now festival from July 31st to August 3rd at the Curraghmore Estate, Co Waterford , bringing together big names in food, music and art with a brilliant objective – to send a community oven to Palestine . This new stage and tent will feature food from Tang restaurants, the sounds of Palestinian radio station Radio Alhara, sets from the global electronic music platform Mixmag and surprise Irish artists. Everyone is coming together to raise funds to support an initiative by the Great Oven to set up their first base in Palestine. Founded by chef and TV producer James Gomez Thompson, the Great Oven is an organisation that builds giant, decorated community ovens in refugee camps, conflict zones and informal settlements. He first heard stories of community ovens as a child from his Spanish mother and grandmother. While filming a BBC series in Lebanon with Nigel Slater, he discovered similar ovens being used there. Lebanese producer Nour Matraji shared stories of her grandmother baking bread in a community oven during the civil war, and the pair joined forces to create a community oven in Tripoli with peace-building in mind. It led to an epiphany, Gomez Thompson says, 'that it shouldn't just be a thing for television, it should be an organisation that really exists'. The Great Oven was born in 2019, starting in Lebanon. READ MORE 'It was the peak of the Syrian migrant crisis and then the Beirut port explosion. But we realised we could put ovens in refugee camps and use them for emergency disaster relief.' They wanted to offer an alternative to traditional food aid and handouts, which can be temporary and impersonal. 'People need a place to cook for themselves, there's a simple dignity in the ritual of preparing your own food or sharing food,' says Gomez Thompson. The ovens are built from steel and refractory bricks; they are generally made in the style of the country in which they are built; they have made a number of Lebanese-style Manakish ovens. They can weigh up to two tonnes, and run on gas. 'A lot of people look at them and think you can just do bread, but we do everything in there. We tend to do lots of big shared tray bakes, we work with the food available.' Local artists are invited to decorate them. 'The ovens become safe spaces around which culture starts flourishing too,' says Gomez Thompson. 'People care more if they feel ownership.' The ovens become hubs for cooking, teaching, sharing and bringing people together. The Great Oven team member Ehab Olbe cooking at the Beirut headquaters Cooking at Geitawi Beirut at Nation Station after the Beirut blast So far, Great Oven has set up nine ovens in Lebanon and South Africa and is now expanding to Palestine, which is where one of the ovens from the Great Oven Disco Cantina at All Together Now will end up. The festival event is acting as a springboard and fundraiser for the Palestinian project, which aims to build a cultural bridge between Palestine and Ireland. Gomez Thompson has been based in Ireland in recent years, where he says he has found a strong connection between his work and the country's outlook. He also has family connections here. 'I'm half Spanish, half Irish. I spent a considerable amount of my childhood here, so it's great that Ireland has become such a sanctuary for this project.' The two decorated ovens, which are central to the Great Oven Disco Cantina event at All Together Now, have been decorated at the Irish Museum of Modern Art by Irish artists Maser and Aches. The food cooked in them at All Together Now will be from Tang, who are closing their Dublin restaurants for the weekend and sending their team to Waterford to run daily five-course banquets and an all-day barbecue. The menu has been created by Gomez Thompson and Tang chef Keith Coleman, featuring recipes from Great Oven refugee cooks. And there will be plenty of dancing. Music has played a big role in the Great Oven's story – early on, they turned a damaged Beirut venue into a community kitchen with a dance floor, connecting with an online Palestinian station Radio Alhara. DJs from the station will play at Great Oven Disco Cantina across the weekend, and Mixmag (the UK online dance music magazine) will host Ireland's first Mixmag Lab set, which will be streamed globally. The Great Oven co-founder James Gomez Thompson Once the festival ends, the real journey begins and the ovens will be taken to their new homes. One will go to the Wonder Cabinet creative hub in the West Bank. The other will live at Bohemian Football Club in north Dublin where it will be central to a new programme of community events – a collaboration between Gomez Thompson and Seán McCabe, Bohs' head of climate justice and sustainability – including dinners, pop-ups and possibly match day food, and involving local migrants and economically vulnerable people. 'We want to bring everything we've learnt in some of the hardest places in the world, and see how they can be applied here,' says Gomez Thompson. 'We want to make it a safe space for people from different backgrounds to start cooking and dining together. We want to do community-building banquets, very much like what we are doing at the festival. Food is the great equaliser between people.'

Peter O'Mahony's wife Jessica jokes she's ‘hanging in there' as she celebrates wedding anniversary with throwback pic
Peter O'Mahony's wife Jessica jokes she's ‘hanging in there' as she celebrates wedding anniversary with throwback pic

The Irish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Peter O'Mahony's wife Jessica jokes she's ‘hanging in there' as she celebrates wedding anniversary with throwback pic

PETER O'MAHONY and wife Jessica celebrated their five-year wedding anniversary - with the mum-of-three joking she was "hanging in there". The soulmates tied the knot back in 2020, with Jess sharing a throwback from "those Covid days" on Friday. 3 Peter and Jessica O'Mahony celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary 3 They got married in 2020 before a second wedding in 2022 3 Their anniversary fell on the same day as their son Theo's birthday As a result of the Covid-19 As a result, they had a France . two years later in 2022. Many of the guests were rugby teammates, including ex-Ireland skipper family members and friends. Their anniversary on Friday fell on the same day as their son Theo's seventh birthday. Read More on Peter O'Mahony His mum shared a photo of her middle child with the caption: "Our little man is 7" while lamenting how "time flies". The dual celebration came after the , Ireland 's most beloved sporting figures. Both couples were joined on the beach day by their children with it looking like a hectic if happy scene from start to finish. Most read in Rugby Union The Lowry clan had initially visited the Rebel County in an effort to unwind after On the Saturday of the year's final major, I want to be adopted by Peter & Jess O'Mahony' jokes Shane Lowry's wife after fun family trip to Cork "I tried to get a protein drink down me after eight holes, and I felt like throwing up all over the place. It's been a tough day and I had a bad finish. 'It was hard to take. Then I woke up at 2.30am with cramps in my stomach. I know we have it in the house. "Ivy had it a couple of days ago. Wendy had it yesterday. Me and Iris have it today. It will be gone by the holidays next week so at least that's a plus. 'Honestly, every bathroom I went in and tried to throw up, I couldn't. It's just such a bad feeling. It's just really bad timing obviously.' The Offaly native did still manage to close out his tournament well, however, carding a slick rather than sick round of 66 on Sunday. He acknowledged: "Obviously I would have liked to do better this week, there's no doubt about that. "But it is what it it. I tried my best, I gave it everything I could and it wasn't to be. "For me now the next two months, obviously the play-offs are huge, but my focus and my work will be getting out of bed every morning to prepare for hopefully going to Bethpage and winning that Ryder Cup. "I think it's a big thing for us Europeans and it's a big thing for me. major season is over now so everything turns towards the Ryder Cup."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store