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Maria Tecce’s seductive Vida for Town Hall

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American jazz singer Maria Tecce brings her acclaimed show Viva, featuring Argentinian and Spanish songs, Italian arias, jazz, and the poetry of Pablo Neruda, to the Town Hall Theatre on Saturday, November 28.

The former Galway resident, who is now based in Dublin where she also has a busy acting career, has been singing from a very young age.

“When I was a kid my mom was always singing in the house,” says Boston born Maria. “She was a classical pianist. All of us played instruments – all the kids – and we all played and sang. It was a little Italian Von Trapp family! We were always playing at reunions and stuff like that.”

Despite this background, Maria didn’t plan a career as a professional musician.“To be honest with you I never thought of making my living through music, at all,” she explains. “I wanted to be a veterinarian; I wanted to ride horses, when I was a kid. I didn’t have any notions of becoming a professional musician; it just happened when I came over to Ireland.

“I came here about nine years ago now, “Maria continues. “And it was just a way of picking up extra money. I really like Irish music, the whole sitting down and playing and having jam sessions, which was very similar to what I grew up with in folk and blues.”

Returning to Galway with this show has a special resonance for Maria, who had her first paid work as a singer in the town.

“My first gig was the best gig, I think, I’ve ever had,” she recalls. “It was in Nimmo’s Wine Bar. It was every Sunday night, I played for an hour and I sat in the corner with my little Spanish guitar and sang songs. And I got 40 pounds and my dinner and as much wine as I could drink. Great gig!” With an accomplished band backing her up, the singer’s latest show was described by The Irish Times as “seductive”, and given that Maria is such a theatrical performer, this is a show that promises to enliven the senses.

“Viva was inspired by a poem by Pablo Neruda, called Me Gustas Cuando Callas,” Maria explains. “I’d studied Spanish when I was in high school; I loved the language. I started collecting songs in Italian and Spanish, and it was the music of the language that attracted me most; the sensuality, the fecundity and the stories of these songs.”

Maria is also influence by artists like Carmen McCrae, Joni Mitchell and Annie Lennox. Recently, she’s been expanding her tastes further.

“I’ve been influenced by opera lately too,” she says. “It’s all about telling stories, the drama and theatricality of opera. It’s about love and sex and death and all sorts of juicy stuff like that!”Maria Tecce’s other career as an actor means her schedule is pretty hectic, but it’s something she enjoys.

“This year was a great year for me as far as acting goes. I did a film with Jack L, which was great fun. That’s called I Love Musicals. Then I did an encore performance of [Hugh Leonard’s] Roman Fever, in Bewley’s Café theatre

.“The acting has been very good for me, and I learn a bit more each time I do it,” she adds. “I’m not a trained musician; I’m not a trained actor. The way I’ve learned is just by doing.”

Is juggling two busy careers not a strain?

“No, I don’t find it difficult at all,” she states. “I find they dovetail quite easily. There’s a conflict in projects coming up in March so we’ll see what see what happens. I tend to think that these things work themselves out, they go the way they’re supposed to go.”

Maria finds that the disciplines of acting and singing can complement each other.

“I do think it comes from a similar impulse,” she says. “For me the catalyst in singing is the music; in acting I have the text. In songs you have the text as well, but you also have the music as an extra catalyst. But I think there’s musicality in language as well; and if you’re lucky and you get a great writer, like Hugh Leonard, there’s so much musicality in his language that it’s a joy to play the role.”

So far this year Maria Tecce has had a month’s run in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, as well as playing shows in Dubrovnik, Prague, Paris, Amsterdam, London and New York. Where do all these gigs come from?

“I do all my own booking,” explains the singer. “I don’t have a manager, I do everything myself. It’s a lot of administrative work; I’d be more than happy to hand it over to someone who wanted to do my bookings. That would be the best thing since sliced bread, but it’s not going to happen anytime soon that I see.”

Being your own boss allows a certain freedom but it can have its price artistically.

“It does take a lot of my energy and it does take a lot of hours,” says Maria. “If I had my way I’d devote more energy to the creative side of things, where I could develop more music or another show, or I could try to find money to record my next album. There are lots of little hats to be worn and the last thing I get to do sometimes is step on stage.

“I think it has its pros and cons, like any job,” Maria says about her career. “It is insecure, inconsistent – sometimes – but I’ve lots of friends who’ve lost their jobs recently. The benefit of it is to do something I love, something I have passion for. Once I step on stage all the problems, anything, it all falls away. I can lose myself in the music and that is a gift; it’s a gift I could never put a price tag on.”

Maria Tecce’s love for what she does comes through in her winning performances, and Viva is a show well worth catching.“I feel like the luckiest woman in the world some days, I really do,” she says. “It’s tough, and I wouldn’t recommend it anyone, but if it’s in your heart and you can’t live without it, you have to do it.”

Maria Tecce plays the Town Hall Theatre on Saturday, November 28 at 8pm. Tickets €18/€16 from www.tht.ie or 091-569777.

Sports News Archive

Galwegians get back to winning ways with six try rout of Students

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Galwegians 38

UCD 17

Galwegians got back to winning ways with a comprehensive six-try demolition of UCD in cracking match at Crowley Park on Saturday.

 

‘Wegians came into this game lying in second from bottom, and a win was vital to get their league campaign back on track, and they opened the scoring in the 12th minute when two graduates of their own underage system combined, with out-half Tadhg Leader feeding no 8 Eoin McKeon who made a fine break.

McKeon was stopped just short of the line, but he managed to off-load to Leader to score the opening try, which he duly converted for a 7-0 lead.

The danger from the visitors clearly came from their free-running backline, and they levelled matters in the 18th minute when full-back Michael Twomey sliced through the cover to score a try, which was well converted by out-half Niall Earls to level the game.

It got better for the Students when they took the lead on 25 minutes. ‘Wegians were punished when a long lineout throw in their own 22 went crooked in the strong breeze, and following quick clean scrum ball, UCD flanker Richie Bent took a pop pass to crash over near the posts, with Earls again converting for a 14-7 lead.

However the home side responded well and they completely dominated the remainder of the half, and just before the half-hour mark an excellent break by young winger Matthew Dever set up an attack, which was finished off several phases later by scrum-half Dave Moore who sniped over near the line.

Leader’s conversion levelled the game for a second time, and the hosts deservedly regained the lead just before the break. It followed an excellent cross-kick deep into touch from Leader’s younger brother Darragh, who made a very impressive debut at full-back.

‘Wegians won possession on the Students’ lineout, and several phases later it was older brother Tadhg who got in for his second and his side’s third try in the right-hand corner, leaving it 19-14 at half-time.

The Students thought they had levelled the contest once again at the start of the second-half when referee Simon McDowell awarded another try to full-back Twomey following the opening passage of play, but it was overruled as the touch-judge had seen a tackle in the air on ‘Wegians captain for the day Brian McClearn at the restart.

 

For more, read this week’s Connacht Sentinel.

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Sports News Archive

November 20, 2009

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An extraordinary attack was made on the house of Mr. Berty Powell, assistant county surveyor, in Athenry last Friday night, About midnight loud knocking was heard at the front door and this was followed by kicking at the door and a man put his foot through the door and broke glass in the panels.

The windows on the ground floor were then broken – nine panes in four or five windows having been smashed.

The following morning, an Athenry man was taken before Mr. Stephen Ruane P.C. at a special court and charged in connection with the attack.

Paths problems

The residents of Mountbellew are about to petition the County Council to have the paths of the town repaired. Since the opening of the roads for the laying of pipes in connection with the sewerage schemes, the paths in some places have fallen under the road level and in wet weather, the water remains on the surface. The path leading to the Church, Convent and Monastery is also in very bad repair.

Slums menace

The relationship between housing and public health was stressed at a recent meeting of the County Galway Board of Health when the insanitary conditions in Ballinasloe were put forward as the main grounds for sustaining a petition by the people of Ballinasloe for a district hospital in the town.

It was stated that doctors were often called to see patients living in conditions in which even the most elementary principles of hygiene or comfort were absent.

About £13,000 was due by patients for treatment at the Galway Central Hospital.

No small portion of that was due by patients who could have been treated in their own homes if the surroundings were such as to enable the doctors to work effectually.

Fire tragedy

As a result of falling into a fire while her mother was fetching water from a barrel outside the door, a three year old from Derrygimla, Clifden, received burns which resulted in her tragic death at Galway Central Hospital.

Dr. Casey, Clifden, who was sent for, came at once, and having done all he could ordered the child to be sent to Galway to hospital where she died shortly after admittance.

1959

Sheep invasion from the North

The cattle invasion from over the Border has greatly diminished, but the invasion of sheep and lambs had markedly increased, especially since the sheep and lamb prices slumped in the North and Britain.

Victuallers are feeling the effects in loss of trade. Lambs imported from the North have particularly depressed trade in the West, where dressed lamb is being offered at prices so low that one would have to go back many years to find a parallel.

Urgent needs

To meet the increasing demand for a water and sewerage scheme to serve the urban area of Ballinasloe, both of which were urgent, would cost £68,000, the Council was told by their engineer. This would mean an additional 2/11 in the £ on the rates – this year 47/9 in the £.

In detailing the need for an extension to the water plant, Mr O’Connor, Town Engineer, said it was urgent. In the past eight years, demand for water went up 40 per cent.

Free houses

Tenants on the Scanlon Estate, Dunlo Hill, Ballinasloe, are anxious to purchase their houses from the trustees of the state, and are negotiating to do so. These seven houses were offered ‘free’ to the local Council by the owner, a Miss Scanlon, at present in the U.S.A., but the Urban Council refused to accept the offer.

Pub talk

How men in a public house at Ballymore put Fianna Fáil in and out of office and then did the same with Fine Gael with the result that the time passed until the Gardaí ‘caught’ them, was told the District Justice Loftus at Williamstown Court, when a Ballymoe publican was summonsed for a breach of the licensing laws at 1.40am on 16th June last.

 

Defence said it was the night of the Presidential Election and the men began discussing politics and put Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael into and out of office. In fact, the breach might be said to be caused by the Government having too many elections.

Shanty towns

Referring to “misunderstandings” with regard to recent statements made at Galway Chamber of Commerce in connection with “shanty towns” around Galway City, Mr. J. Lydon, president, said that he wished to make it clear that the members only wanted to control “unsightliness”, and that all types of holidaymakers were welcome to the city.

1984

Car tax strike over potholes

A ‘golden’ half-mile of road between Galway and Moycullen on which £500,000 has been spent over five years has sparked off a car tax strike threat from angry motorists.

For though half a million pounds has been spent by Galway County Council, the stretch is known among motorists as ‘the corrugated road’ because it is unfinished and potholed.

Frequent users of the road have reacted by threatening to withhold road tax payments.

Residents’ fears

People living in Corrib Park in the city have threatened to block a newly-built roundabout near their estate to prevent it being brought into use in a row over the safety of their children.

They plan to form a human chain on the roadway to prevent traffic from using the partially-completed roundabout, built as part of the approach network to the new bridge planned to cross the Corrib between Newcastle and Terryland.

Bus attacks

CIE may withdraw its bus service at night from a number of Galway City estates following a series of incidents in which drivers have been attacked and windscreens smashed by stone-throwing youths.

There have been at least four incidents over the past six months in which buses travelling through Inishannagh Park have been attacked with stones, while there have been numerous incidents in which the drivers of the one-man buses have been abused.

New trains

The most recent and up-to-date CIE train, the Inter-City Mark III, has passed its first week in operation – running from Galway to Dublin four times a week – with flying colours.

It is now faster to travel to Dublin by Inter-City than it ever was before. The Mark III is capable of doing a maximum speed of 95 miles per hour, compared to 72mph on the older trains.

However, it is at present impossible for the Mark III to do its maximum speed as the track running between Galway and Dublin would not be capable of holding it.

Signpost plea

A demand has been made for proper signposting and safety measures at unprotected piers in Connemara – it came following the deaths of three brothers who drowned when they lost their way in dense fog and their car plunged into the sea at Caladh Thadhg.

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O Fatharta goal puts Leitir M—r on cloud nine!

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Leitir Mór 2-14

Westport 2-13

(after extra time)

Declan Tierney atTuam Stadium

THERE is much greater satisfaction to be derived from winning a gripping encounter than prevailing in a rout. The expressions of the faces of the Leitir Mór players after this cracking Connacht intermediate club football final bore testament to that.

As darkness drew close at Tuam Stadium on Sunday, the South Connemara side could scarcely believe their good fortune as they edged out an equally wonderful Westport side in a match that had everything.

Some well taken scores, crucial goals, fantastic saves and a nailbiting finish evoked every emotion possible from the near 1,000 spectators who witnessed a match full of more twists and turns than they would find on a Gaeltacht road.

It was not surprising that Leitir Mór players, management and supporters were absolutely ecstatic after the match because apart from winning the prized provincial crown, they knew full well they could equally have lost it.

In fact, it was Leitir Mór who forced extra time to be played when Ferdia Breathnach scored a last gasp equaliser in injury time – they knew they had gotten out of jail and were relieved that they still had two 10 minute periods to prove themselves.

And that they did. Their hero of the day, Patrick Mark O Fatharta, really came into his own and scored the crucial goal three minutes in the second period of extra time to give his side a two point cushion.

O Fatharta, listed amongst the substitutes on the programme, played the full game at corner forward and contributed a tally of 1-7 and was ultimately the difference between the sides and his valiant efforts have put Leitir Mór within an hour of appearing in Croke Park.

However, even though his tonic goal late in the match proved the crucial score as far as his side was concerned, there was still plenty of wind left in the Westport sails and they had at least four chances of either making a draw of it or winning it for themselves.

If O Fatharta was doing the business up front, then so too was goalkeeper Eoghan O Conghaile who pulled off two incredible saves – the most crucial one coming in the dying seconds when Westport seemed odds on to snatch victory.

The Westport full forward Damien Keane had crept inside the Leitir More full back line and had a goal at his mercy only for O Conghaile to approach from his line and smother the kick. The sighs of relief from the Leitir Mór supporters were palpable.

While Leitir Mór looked like winning the match on several occasions, there were as many times when they appeared to be heading across the Corrib potless. It was an incredible match, full of intensity and excitement and was played at a blistering place throughout.

On occasions, Leitir Mór’s over elaboration threatened to be their undoing but they compensated with some brilliant patches of play – and particularly late on when it counted most.

Leitir Mór had the better start, looked comfortable when they held a four point lead during the first half and ended up having to summon up all their reserves to force extra time.Through Antaine O Griofa and Cristoir O Flatharta, they won the midfield exchanges throughout the first half but yet there was only a limited supply of ball reaching their forwards with the Westport backs marking very tightly and successfully.

County player Fiachra Breathnach moved from full forward closer to midfield and this had an immediate impact with Leitir Mór scoring four points in a five minute spell to lead by 0-7 to 0-3. Ferdia Breathnach, Daithi MacDonnchadha and Patrick Mark O Fatharta all finding the range.But this advantage was short lived with Leitir Mór relinquishing a lot of possession needlessly and it was one of these blunders which led to Lee Keegan finding the net for Westport in the 29th minute which actually gave them the lead at the break with Philip Keegan having earlier scored two points from play.

With Westport leading by 1-5 to 0-7 going into the second half, the sides were level twice before substitute Eamon O Lionsigh found the net having been on the field a mere four minutes. It came from a move involving Daithi MacDonnchadha and Fiachra Breathnach and put Leitir Mór into a two point lead.

Things were not going great for Westport who saw a couple of good scoring chances being wasted and then wing back Brian Higgins being sent off for an after tackle foul. With a Leitir Mór victory seemingly on the cards, Westport corner back Liam Joyce turned the game on its head with a goal the start of three minutes of injury time – putting the Galway intermediate champions a point in arrears again.

When Ferdia Breathnach scored a long range equaliser for Leitir Mór, it was no more than they deserved – neither did Wesport deserve to leave Tuam with a victory in such a last gasp manner.

It was to extra time and again Leitir Mór were guilty of hemorrhaging a lot of good possession as they stayed one point in arrears at the end of the first period, 2-11 to 1-13 in favour of Westport.It was Patrick Mark O Fatharta’s goal three minutes into the second period which sealed the match for Leitir Mór although they did have to endure some agonising moments as Westport sought a winner or at worst an equaliser but it was not to be.

Eoghan O Conghaile, Coilin O Hogain, Seosamh Seoige, Ciaran Bairead, Tomas O Griofa, Antaine O Griofa, Cristoir O Flatharta, Daithi MacDonnchadha, Patrick Mark O Fatharta, Eanna O Cathain and Fiachra Breathnach were the heroes of this 80 minutes of inspirational football from both sides.

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