logo
Denis Lehane: Richard Harris exhibition recharged my batteries

Denis Lehane: Richard Harris exhibition recharged my batteries

Irish Examiner19-07-2025
Farming for me, was learned, not from fancy books or from the wise words of a Teagasc adviser.
No. I learned my farming the hard way. I learned it from TV, the movies and idle chat after Mass on a Sunday morning.
A lot more farming was learned while holding a pool cue down in Bealnamorrive pub on a Friday night, than was ever picked up in Moorepark.
Call me old-fashioned, call me blind to the modern world, call me deaf to modern trends, but I think far too much emphasis is placed on classrooms.
The most important lessons in life are usually learned in the quarest of places.
Back in the 1970s, when farmers ruled the world, and when RTÉ had the good sense to broadcast classic rural soaps like 'The Riordans', I learned many things about the land. I learned that wise old farmers, like Tom Riordan, usually wore grey hats and spoke very slowly.
And later on, from Glenroe, I learned that you didn't have to be a genius to be a farmer, or to get married to a fine woman like Biddy.
In fact, all you really needed to do was say words like "Well holy God!"
I also learned that Joe Lynch, who hailed from the heart of Cork City could pass for a farmer, if given a convincing limp, a few dirty eggs, and the right cap.
Glenroe gave me a great grounding in farming and in life.
But it was from Richard Harris and his portrayal of The Bull McCabe in the movie The Field that I learned the most of all.
Jamie, Damian, and Jared Harris viewing an exhibit at the launch of 'From Dickie to Richard — Richard Harris: The Role of a Lifetime', at the Hunt Museum in Limerick. Picture: Alan Place
Richard Harris should have received an Oscar for his efforts — or at the very least an all-star award.
But alas, he received very little. And this was shabby treatment for a man in his finest hour.
Harris was brilliant, we will never see his likes again.
Anyhow, when a current exhibition opened recently in Limerick, dedicated to the great Harris, it was no surprise to find me biting at the bit to go.
I was like a hungry suckler calf bawling for the pap long before the doors opened.
And when they finally opened, I rushed in like a bullock galloping into a meadow of freshly-grown grass. I was in my element.
To say I was excited about the exhibition would be an understatement.
The Harris exhibition was better than any farm walk for me.
Harris and the Bull McCabe are to farming what Pelé is to soccer, or Pavarotti is to fine dining.
Granted, The Bull was a little rough around the edges, but sure, even in the finest paintings you will find a chip or two, if you look closely enough.
The Bull could also be abrupt at the table, and of course, not forgetting the murder.
Yerra The Bull was far from perfect.
I won't deny that.
But sure, who in farming is without his or her share of faults?
Let him who is without sin cast the first stone into the transport box.
What makes The Bull so special in farming is his passion for the land.
It's as simple as that.
It was a passion that overshadowed everything else.
And Harris in The Field gave us this passion in spades.
Farming without passion is like a tractor without diesel.
You are going nowhere without it. You are a spluttering failure.
And, while you need a lot of things to farm successfully, if you don't have a passion for the job, you are wasting your time.
The Harris exhibition in the Hunt Museum in Limerick had me spellbound from the moment I entered the building.
And when I returned here to my farm in Kilmichael, I tackled my pike and hitched up to my wheelbarrow with renewed vigour.
I was ready once again for whatever the land could throw at me.
Like a flat battery after getting a recharge, I was energised for farming and was more than ready to take on the field.
'From Dickie to Richard — Richard Harris: The Role of a Lifetime' continues at the Hunt Museum until November 16, 2025.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Top comedian on life after massive weight loss
Top comedian on life after massive weight loss

Extra.ie​

time9 hours ago

  • Extra.ie​

Top comedian on life after massive weight loss

Comedian Alison Spittle has spoken publicly about life as a 'fat b***h', (her own phrase), and how she has changed her life by taking the weight loss jab Mounjaro. Speaking to Brendan O'Connor on RTE Radio 1 this morning (Saturday) the popular comedian broke down in tears when describing her life as an overweight woman, the reactions of the world around her, and the difficulties when people only see you as 'fat' and don't see you for who you are. Taking the listener back to her childhood she recalled a memory of when she had to attend a doctor after catching her hand in a car door, and the doctor made comments about her weight, as an eight-year-old child. Alison Spittle – Pic: RTE She says in her experience doctors are the worst for judging people on their weight, citing an experience when she asked a medical professional about the possibility of being prescribed weight loss injections, the doctor replied 'I don't believe in easy outs'. It's as if doctors want to punish people for being fat by making them work harder to lose weight. Alison recalled being hospitalised with cellulitis last year and being told while there that she was pre-diabetic and needed to lose weight. The London-born funny woman told how her cellulitis – a skin infection which affects deep layers of tissue, actually turned into septicaemia which left her very unwell and completely bedridden for several months. Alison Spittle – Pic: RTÉ Admitting she had never tried to lose weight before, but realising this was best medical advice, she was prescribed the weight loss injection Mounjaro and it has changed her life. 'I miss less buses now' she joked. The title of Alison Spittle's new show is quite daring, entitled 'Fat B***h', Alison says the name of the show is very fitting as she has endured this name calling all her life, but the show sees Alison reflect both on her own experience of life as a bigger woman, and society's unhealthy attitudes to size, all wrapped up in what can be best described as 'a joyful comedy show' She has since had to modify the name for her shows in Edinburgh as the council there wouldn't allow the title Fat B***h on posters around the city. She has renamed the show 'BIG'. Alison Spittle at Electric Picnic 2018. Copyright Nick O Donnell Speaking to the Anglo Celt newspaper earlier this year, Alison reflected on her life as a child and said 'If I wasn't fat when I was younger I don't think I'd be a comedian now, because I don't think I'd bother trying to be funny. Trying to be funny is the thing you pick up when you're younger and it's always to deflect from something.' But what about the attitudes of people to the popularity of weight loss injections like Mounjaro and Ozempic, Spittle finds it difficult to understand why anyone would have a negative reaction to it, and when people say its the easy way out, she retorts 'What? Do you want someone to have a hard time'? 'I explain my instinctive reaction against such drugs would be the fear that perfectly healthy people would take it when they have no need'. Diabetes and Weight loss injection pen Ozempic She believes the huge popularity and surge in the use of weight loss jabs provides a valuable insight into how society treats 'fat people'. 'If they feel that scared about being fat, it's because they feel that scared about being treated like s**t and we have to then acknowledge that fat people don't get treated that nicely.' Alison Spittle, much loved and still as funny as ever, takes to the stage at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival from July 29th to August 24th before returning to Ireland for the Big Dublin Fringe September 16th to 20th.

Wicklow author pens children's picture book inspired by Wexford memories
Wicklow author pens children's picture book inspired by Wexford memories

Irish Independent

time11 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Wicklow author pens children's picture book inspired by Wexford memories

It was standing room only in Hodges Figgis in Dublin when Aileen, in conversation with RTÉ's Áine Lawlor and publisher Eoghan Mac Giolla Bhríde of Éabhlóid, described creating the book, its inspiration and the decision to publish it as Gaeilge. Attendees could view the original handmade book and a fine-art lithographic print collection, of which NCAD purchased one limited edition copy for their NIVAL collection. Aileen spoke about how, during a dark period in lockdown, she sought her happy places, Cahore beach being one of them, which brought back memories of walking with her mother and encountering foxgloves, lying in the grass, listening to the sounds of nature. Speaking at the launch, Áine recalled when her colleague Aileen from the RTÉ graphics department first shared the book, then a work in progress, how she was immediately drawn to it because of the language used in the book. 'I'm old enough to remember my grandmother using words like fairy fingers and God's little cows; these were the traditional names that I remember when growing up … the story is about a child finding redemption in our nDúchas, and this is a book that gives great meaning to that word Dúchas,' she said.

Tom Vaughan-Lawlor: ‘I was so vulnerable and needy and so broke and I was so emotional that he had faith in me'
Tom Vaughan-Lawlor: ‘I was so vulnerable and needy and so broke and I was so emotional that he had faith in me'

Irish Independent

time14 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Tom Vaughan-Lawlor: ‘I was so vulnerable and needy and so broke and I was so emotional that he had faith in me'

He played an iconic role in Love/Hate and has starred in Avengers blockbusters, but his next act is back to his roots on stage in Dublin. Here, the Dundrum actor talks about his thespian father, going from hard times to Hollywood, and the role that changed his life Tom Vaughan-Lawlor is telling me about a brush with the paparazzi. It happened around the same time he was starring as gangland kingpin Nidge Delaney in RTÉ's much-vaunted crime drama Love/Hate. 'I remember this one time I was getting money out of an ATM and I had no funds. I can't remember why; my card was rejected or something,' he says, smiling a little at the memory. 'And it was in the newspaper, and then on telly, when they were going over the papers. And people were like, 'He's got no money.' I mean, maybe I didn't, I don't know, but some paparazzi got me with a long lens.'

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