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Humour and insight in show about love and visas

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Sonya Kelly in How To Keep An Alien.

Actor and writer Sonya Kelly has a happy knack of turning her own life into drama – funny and successful drama at that. Her 2011 show, The Wheelchair on My Face, about her first pair of childhood glasses was developed and produced by Fishamble, and premiered at the 2011 Dublin Fringe,

Since then it has been performed at home and abroad, picking up a Scotsman Fringe First Award and being named as The New York Times Critics’ Pick.

While that show was ongoing, Sonya’s Australian partner Kate was having visa difficulties in Ireland, which has provided the basis for Sonya’s new show How To Keep An Alien.

Kate had been granted a year-long visa for Ireland but it expired shortly after she met Sonya.  Their only hope of being together was if they could prove to immigration authorities here that they were a real couple.

“You are going into buildings you never knew existed, asking people you never thought you’d meet for things that mattered,” says Sonya of the process.

It politicised her, she adds. “It made me wonder about who wants to get into the country and why and made me think about Direct Provision.”

Then there was the fact that over 150 years ago Kate’s great-great grandmother, left Ireland for Queensland, Australia, a link Sonya uses to remind people that immigration is not a new phenomenon.

Kate and Sonya hadn’t known each other too long when they began seeking a ‘de facto’ visa, allowing Kate to stay here. It meant the had to document everything for immigration officials, which put a certain pressure on their relationship, Sonya recalls.

But they survived and their experience has become a humorous, touching and revealing story that won the Tiger Dublin Fringe Best Production award, as well as four- and five-star reviews from critics in Ireland, the UK and Australia. It played at Brisbane Festival in 2014 and at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe.

The show also documents their internal monologues of worries and insecurities, but in a funny way, she says. “There are lots of heroes and villains in the 75 minutes!”

Although it’s a one-woman show, its stage manager Justin Murphy, is onstage throughout, operating lights and sound from there and also performing.

“That was a happy accident,” says Sonya. “He did it for the initial reading and the audience loved it. Now I couldn’t imagine the show without him.”

Sonya is currently touring Ireland with How To Keep An Alien. It’s being presented by Rough Magic and directed by Gina Moxley who also directed The Wheelchair on My Face.

■ It will be performed in the Town Hall Theatre on Tuesday, October 6. Tickets €18/16 from tht.ie, 091-569777 and the box office.

 

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Folk duo launch What Will Be Will Be

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Niall Teague and Pádraic Joyce.

Folk duo Niall Teague and Pádraic Joyce are launching their new album What Will We Be, a  blend of folk, Americana and acoustic music, this Friday, May 19, at 8pm in An Taibhdhearc.

The success of their well-received 2020 release Taobh le Taobh, as well as recent successes at the Pan Celtic and Oireachtas Song Contests, spurred the duo on to record this new album which represents many years of collaboration and musical development.

It features Niall and Pádraic on vocals, harmonies, and acoustic guitars, Maidhc Ó hÉanaigh on double bass and Neil Fitzgibbon on fiddle. The catchy title track, What Will We Be, features contributions from percussionist Jim Higgins (The Stunning, Christy Moore, Paul Brady) and haunting, driving melodies on vocals, guitar, and fiddle.

Themes of love and hope are woven through Come Away with Me which features interplay between piano and fiddle as well as rich vocal harmonies.

People, places, and broken dreams are celebrated and lamented on Martin and Tom, Guitar Gold, Memories of You and Achill Island. The influence of David Henry Thoreau’s novel Walden features on the tracks Simple and Wise and Walden, with the beauty of nature, escape and simple pleasures at their core.

The album moves from minimalistic folk ballads such as Galway Ghost to swirling, string-laden arrangements on the song Neptune, both of which are influenced by maritime tales from Galway. Much of the work on this album was supported by the Arts Council, including work with musical arranger Eoin Corcoran and the string ensemble Treo.

The album will be launched this Friday, May 19, at 8pm in an Taibhdhearc. Tickets €22, plus booking fee at Eventbrite.ie.

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All roads lead to Dunmore as town tunes up County Fleadh

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Most of the competitions for young musicians will take place this Saturday in Dunmore Community School. All the competitions are open to the public.

Dunmore is the place to be this weekend for lovers of traditional music, as the Galway County Fleadh will take place there from this Friday, May 19, to Sunday, May 23.

It is 10 years since Dunmore last hosted a fleadh and the local Comhaltas branch, which has re-formed since Covid, is looking forward to facilitating this gathering of music, song, dance and craic.

The official Opening Concert will take place in Dunmore Town Hall this Friday at 8pm with the acclaimed Mulcahy family from Limerick. Mick, Louise and Michelle are well known throughout the country, thanks to their live performances, television appearances and numerous CDs. They were the winners of the TG4 Gradam Ceoil Grúpa Ceoil Award for 2023.  Tickets for their concert can be purchased on the door and a great night of music is promised.

Two days of competitions will kick off this Saturday at the town’s Community School, with more than 1,500 competitors taking part. Participants will be hoping to qualify for the Connacht Fleadh 2023, which will be held in Ballina, County Mayo, from June 23 to July 2.

Competitions for those aged Under 10, Under 12 and Under 15 will be held in a large variety of instruments on Saturday, as well as in singing and Comhrá Gaeilge. Sunday’s competitions will be for the Under 18 and Over 18 ages groups, as well as in dancing.

On both days a large entry is expected for Grúpaí Cheoil and Céilí Band competitions across all age groups.

Seventeen Comhaltas branches from across Galway will have participants in this weekend’s competitions, which will result in a large number of visitors to the Dunmore area.

Members of the public are welcome to attend the competitions, which offer a great opportunity to hear and see the talent on display. There will be sessions in local pubs over the weekend as well and everybody is welcome to attend these.

For more information on the County Fleadh, go to www.galwaycomhaltas.ie.

 

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Piano concert rescheduled for Tuesday

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Pianist Cédric Pescia.

Music for Galway’s concert with renowned Swiss pianist Cédric Pescia which had been due to take place on April 27 but which had to be deferred, will now take place next Tuesday, May 23, at 8pm, in the Emily Anderson Concert Hall at the University of Galway.

This concert of German classics with Bach at its core, will brings the Bach element of Music for Galway’s 41st season to an end.

This world-class pianist who won the famous Gina Bachauer International Artists Piano Competition, has a repertoire that spans many eras from baroque to contemporary and he is widely known for his elaborate programmes. Cédric Pescia describes music as  ‘language and movement at the same time’.

Audiences will have a chance to experience his soft, clear touch as he performs a programme for solo piano that will include classics such as Schumann’s popular Waldszenen (Forest Scenes), a suite of nine short pieces, and the penultimate of Beethoven’s piano sonatas, No. 31.  These pieces will be interspersed with French Suites by Bach.

■ Ticket for Cédric Pescia’s concert are available at www.musicforgalway.ie, or by phone 091 705962 and on the door on the night. They cost €20/€18. The price for fulltime students of all ages is €6 while MfG Friends can avail of the friends’ rate of €16.

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