leprechaun

killough

From top: Leprechaun postcard, 1900; Nottingham Evening Post item on the Killough Leprechaun

Room for a little one?

Historical blogger Sibling of Daedalus writes:

We all know that Ireland is the home of the leprechaun but when was one last actually seen? Recent leprechaun sightings are few and far between in the newspaper archives, with the most recent one being almost one hundred years ago.

On Monday, 20 April 1908, the Irish Times reported a sighting at Killough, County Westmeath, of a little man of dwarfish proportions in a red jacket, suiting the traditional description of a leprechaun.

The news occasioned great excitement in the district, and a wholesale hunt for the man in the belief that his discovery would lead the finder to a crock of gold.

This search proved unsuccessful, and a subsequent letter-writer to the Times suggested that what had in fact been seen was a blue baboon which had recently escaped from a travelling circus in the neighbourhood.

However on August 13, 1908, it was reported that a ‘little man’ had in fact been captured in a wood near the town of Mullingar, and admitted as a (presumably non-simian) inmate to the local workhouse.

He was described as eating ‘greedily’ and communicating only in ‘a peculiar sound between a growl and a squeal

Very quickly thereafter, a representative of an American museum and theatre of varieties in Glasgow visited the workhouse, and, following an agreement with the supposed leprechaun and his father, took him to Glasgow by the midday train, apparently with a view to his appearing in a music-hall.

Although both parties were described as leaving ‘in the best of spirits,’ there are no further reports of the Killough leprechaun either in a music-hall or elsewhere.

Anyone?

Tales of Old Dublin (Sibling of Daedalus)

UPDATE:

Sibling of Daedalus writes:

In 1913, a tenant farmer in Tullamore was taken to court for having a filthy residence. It was stated in court that he was the leprechaun’s father and had sold him for £10. Some disapproval of this was expressed in light of the fact that the leprechaun had been ‘hardly tamed‘ at the time of his sale.

It appears that the purchaser was Mr Pickard, of the Panopticon Music Hall, Glasgow, who exhibited an Irish leprechaun there between 1908 and 1914. Also part of the show for some of this period was the young Stan Laurel, later to become famous as part of the double-act Laurel and Hardy. Perhaps the Leprechaun ended up in Hollywood too?

More as we get it.

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Free this evening?

The programme for IndieCork film and music festival hits the streets of the real capital  city today, with a launch happening at 5.30 at Rising Sons Brewery in the city centre.

The festival is in its fourth year, and boasts a wide-ranging programme of films in short and feature-length, as well as a rake of new music.

Get ’em while they’re hot, also available in ones and zeroes.

IndieCork

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Long Dark Twenties.

A new comedy mini-series by three writer/performers from Dublin: Kelly Shatter, Luke Benson and Kevin Handy, who say:

Long Dark Twenties follows Lily and Ben, two friends living in Dublin, who suck at adulthood.

Lily and Ben have been drifting along aimlessly, working unfulfilling jobs to fund forgettable weekends. Now in their late twenties, they’re seeing peers get hitched, promoted, buy houses, and have babies. It’s high time they become responsible adults, a task which proves more than a little difficult for Lily and Ben.

Over the next five Thursdays, a new episode will be released online at 12noon here.

Full disclosure: the makers are the new tenants of Barry from his August office space post.

Long Dark Twenties (Facebook)

Thanks Barry

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From top: Kerry Independent TD Michael Healy-Rae and hotelier Frances Brennan

Tomorrow night.

On the Late Late Show.

Gareth Naughton writes:

[War on Everyone] Actors Alexander Skarsgård and Michael Peña will join Ryan Tubridy on The Late Late Show this week. They’ll hotfoot it from the film’s Dublin premiere to join Ryan live in studio, alongside director John Michael McDonagh.

…Former Ireland international Jason McAteer will tell viewers how hanging up his boots left him in a spiral of depression…Queen of the bonkbuster Jilly Cooper joins Ryan on the Late Late couch to discuss her new book ‘Mount!’ and…

…as Dáil Éireann returns and New Politics faces into its first budget, we’ll look forward to what people can expect in the coming months with Kerry Deputy Michael Healy Rae… and we’ll be in bed with At Your Service star Francis Brennan.

Music from: Josh ChristinaSmokie and Heroes in Hiding.

The Late Late Show is on tomorrow night on RTÉ One at 9.35pm

Rollingnews.ie

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Filmmaker John Mulvaney is one of many to turn his lens on music in Ireland, in lieu of any support for the community by the industry/officialdom.

Thus was born Fractured, a documentary series with an eye on metal and other harsh noises in Ireland, running on Metal Ireland and screening at various festivals and events throughout the past year.

The newest episode focuses on Clonmel prog/sludge outfit zhOra, and explores the band, their music, and growing/sustaining music outside of the industry in Ireland.

New episodes will appear here as they happen, also, but for now, here’s a catch-up playlist of the rest of the series so far, with eight episodes ready to watch.

Fractured

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At last we are getting some data regarding the performance of the motor insurance business in Ireland.

The mere fact that 21 companies are listed as providers is extraordinary when five companies account for 87 per cent of policy losses.

One company accounts for 37 per cent of the market losses, two others for 15 per cent, followed by two more at 10 per cent, with one major player in marginal profit.

One must, given the wide divergence in losses, ask the simple question as to why we are seeing huge and uniform percentage increases across the board, with the threat of more to come. We might be forgiven if we came to the conclusion that in reality we don’t actually have a competitive market.

That these companies would take their policy income and invest it in markets that are at their most volatile in decades is at the very least foolish.

The fact that this is common practice and a mechanism to underpin what clearly is an unstable, if not an unsustainable, business in its own right, suggests the need for urgent Government intervention before many hard-pressed motorists are forced off the road.

It is ironic that as I write this one of the larger providers has a television campaign extolling the virtues of its policies. Surely retrenchment should be the order of the day.

Derek MacHugh,
Bray,
Co Wicklow.

Insurance and motorists (Irish Times letters)

Previously: ‘There Is A Cartel Of Insurance Underwriters’

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No Monster Clublost somewhere in the backwoods

What you may need to know…

01. Bobby and the lads are off in Amerikay at present, pressing the flesh and raking up road miles to support their current 7″ record, Where Did You Get That Milkshake?.

02. It’s somehow the Dublin lo-fi lads’ debut 7″ after a rake of releases, but also their first for Stateside label Emotional Response.

03. We would hope that the video above, for single Do the Mess Around, has not been an accurate portrayal of events thus far.

04. Broadsheet readers situated Stateside might be able to show up and give ’em the shlag. The rest of their tour takes them to the Dev in Utica tonight; tomorrow night to Otto’s Shrunken Head in Manhattan; Candy Apple Island in Bloomfield, NJ on the 2nd, and New Funky Jungle in Providence, RI on the 5th.

VERDICT: Another pop gem the likes of which Bobby Aherne and the boys seem to just have in a stockpile somewhere. Grand.

NO MONSTER CLUB

Broadsheet.ie