30 episodes

Imagine WhatsApp voice messages from your best mate only they're two Roscommon reared red rogues with Catholic guilt so spicy you'll quiver in your duvet.
Brimming with notions 11 and nary the legs to match, two 5 foot 3 inches worth of drama students will take you through a rabbit hole of arts and all things Éire.
Born at the turn of the millennium but dressed like your history textbook, as if vintage will ever go out of style!
These gals don't spill the tea, they guzzle it in droves (put the kettle on x)
*This podcast may contain strong language* -but sure it's only a bitta craic.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

In Fairness Misha Fitzgibbon

    • Arts

Imagine WhatsApp voice messages from your best mate only they're two Roscommon reared red rogues with Catholic guilt so spicy you'll quiver in your duvet.
Brimming with notions 11 and nary the legs to match, two 5 foot 3 inches worth of drama students will take you through a rabbit hole of arts and all things Éire.
Born at the turn of the millennium but dressed like your history textbook, as if vintage will ever go out of style!
These gals don't spill the tea, they guzzle it in droves (put the kettle on x)
*This podcast may contain strong language* -but sure it's only a bitta craic.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    INQUIRE - Michael Harding

    INQUIRE - Michael Harding

    Our last episode of the season!
    This conversation marks the final episode in our Inquire series. This week we are joined by award winning Cavan writer Michael Harding. Michael worked as a teacher, a prison social worker and as a priest before leaving the priesthood and studying buddhism for a few years. Michael is a regular columnist with the Irish Times and has written memoirs, novels, plays, and has toured the country doing live talks on his books. Michael has also worked as an actor on screen and stage, and has performed as the Bull McCabe in the Field. You can listen to his podcast, the Michael Harding podcast, on Spotify, Patreon and Audible.
    In this episode Michael talks to Molly about work, mental health, theatre, God and masculinity. This is an enveloping and philosophical conversation that gracefully fails to understand what it means to be human, like all good theatre should.
    You can keep up with Michael’s podcast on Twitter @hardingmichael. You can find his podcast, the Michael Harding podcast, on Spotify, Patreon and Audible, and you can find his columns in the Irish Times. His newest book, A Cloud Where the Birds Rise, is available to buy now from all book shops. This is a collaboration with illustrator Jacob Stack, where Michael’s most memorable musings on the human condition are brought to life by art.
    Patreon.com/hardingmichael.
    Thank you so much Michael for coming on to chat and for sharing your wisdom and eloquent musings with us. To mark the end of a spectacular project, we send ye off with a Ru Mew original song, Rose and Star, which he wrote in inspiration of our podcast. IG @rumewsic, patreon.com/rumew,
    You can find our podcast, In Fairness, on Acast, Spotify and Itunes. You can hear more from us and our interviewees on our Instagram, @infairnesspod, same on Twitter, and In Fairness Podcast on Facebook. Feel free to get in touch on any of these platforms with any questions or suggestions that you may have for us.
    Thank you again to Roscommon County Council for supporting us to create this series, and to our wonderful mentor Catherine Sheridan for keeping us in check and bringing us both together at the very beginning of our journey.
    Research questions, sound engineering and co-producing by Molly Mew, Editing and producing by Misha Fitzgibbon. Thank you so much for listening.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 1 hr 3 min
    INQUIRE - Sharon Mannion

    INQUIRE - Sharon Mannion

    Welcome to this week's episode of In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, a special series of our podcast dedicated to interviewing astounding creative artists that are based here at home in Roscommon. In these interviews we will be talking to actors, theatre-makers, drama facilitators, comedians, writers, directors, poets, producers, a dancer and a weaver. We will discuss how they started in their profession, obstacles they have faced, how they have been impacted by the pandemic, the importance of creativity in their lives, their influences, how they stay motivated to keep creating and most importantly how you, the listener, can support their work. We are keen to make our audiences all around the world aware of the constant stream of Roscommon-based creative work. We also hope this series will encourage some of you to support local art, recognise its necessity and maybe even pursue some creative endeavours of your own. This series comes to you thanks to the generous support of Roscommon County Council who have kindly commissioned this series and endorsed us with the necessary equipment and software to record the interviews safely and remotely during the Summer of 2021.
    This week Sharon Mannion is joining us for a chat. Sharon is an actor, comedian, writer and facilitator of stand-up workshops from Roscommon now based in Dublin and works frequently with Dublin Comedy Improv group. She started out in Inchicore where she trained in acting, and soon discovered stand-up upon graduating, when she started doing open mic gigs in the International Bar in Dublin. Sharon generously talks us through her journey into the performance life and the empowerment of her role as the comic. Improvisation is the way to Sharon’s heart, and we discuss that fatal moment of getting “stuck” and how to push past it. We discuss gender imbalance in the comedy scene, as well as other difficulties of sustaining a career in the arts, including transferring to online comedy nights with Dublin Comedy Improv group at the beginning of the pandemic, bringing joy and laughter to the actor’s lives and to those all around the world. She also answered our questions on her incredible one woman show ‘the Curse of the Button Accordian,’ a hilarious autobiographical piece recounting her time growing up in Roscommon and her journey to becoming the incredible and fierce woman you hear from today. Sharon recounted how she got the idea from page to stage, including the collaboration of having her own writing directed by someone else. This interview is a great listen for anyone who wants to get into comedy, stand-up, improv and acting, as Sharon gives great advice about starting out, trusting your creative instincts and collaborating with others to network and find your creative troupe.
    You can see Sharon’s work on ‘Mondays on Zoom’ with Dublin Comedy Improv, you can find them on Facebook, or find her on Twitter @sharonmannion2 , where she posts most often about her work. Blasts from the Past is to come back in 2022, so keep an eye out for that. (update this depending on release day). You can find our podcast, In Fairness, on Acast, Spotify and Itunes. You can hear more from us and our interviewees on our Instagram, @infairnesspod, same on Twitter, and In Fairness Podcast on Facebook. Feel free to get in touch on any of these platforms with any questions or suggestions that you may have for us. Thank you again to Roscommon County Council for their support in helping us create this series, and to our wonderful mentor Catherine Sheridan for keeping us in check and bringing us both together at the very beginning of our journey. You have been listening to In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, Research and questions by Molly Mew, Sound engineering, editing and producing by Misha Fitzgibbon, thank you so much for listening.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 1 hr 5 min
    Origins of Samhain - Interview with Rathcroghan Visitor Centre

    Origins of Samhain - Interview with Rathcroghan Visitor Centre

    In this episode, Mol returns home to Tulsk to talk to Elaine Conroy and Daniel Curley, two historians from Rathcroghan Visitor Centre, to talk about the area of Rathcroghan; Ireland's Ancient Capital. The three delve into Roscommon's now revealed secrets of pagan warriors, godly queens and deadly folklore around the festival of Samhain. Coming into Halloween, haven't you ever wondered where our spooky and internationally-recognised traditions come from? Rathcroghan plays a key role in some of the folklore around Halloween we recognise today, with Oweynagat being within the many monuments to explore in the area. Oweynagat translates to the Cave of Cats, where the creatures of Halloween are believed to emerge on Halloween night. We also discuss Rathcroghan as the start and end point in the Táin Bó Cualigne epic tale, as the Rathcroghan mound is considered to have potentially been Queen Medb's place of rule. The folks at the centre also talk about the upkeep and goings on of the centre, including constant research and investigation into their surrounding landscape to create a clearer picture of our past.
    A big thank you to Elaine Conroy, Daniel Curley and to all the staff at Rathcroghan Visitor Centre for their time, generosity and kind welcome today! You help preserve, enhance and celebrate Roscommon's rich history every day and help so many of us have incredible pride in where they're from.
    Sound engineering, research, interview, editing and producing by Molly Mew. (Misha is currently away on an incredible journey on her film production career. Fair play Love! We miss you loads xx)
    Music composition by Bernard Delamare. Fair play Bernie.
    All for now! Happy Samhain.
    Ig @rathcroghan
    FB Rathcroghan Visitor Centre
    rathcroghan.ie
    Ig @infairnesspod
    Fb In Fairness Podcast

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 1 hr 7 min
    INQUIRE - Anthony Keigher/ Xnthony

    INQUIRE - Anthony Keigher/ Xnthony

    ***This episode contains strong language & sexual references, it may not be suitable for all listeners***
    Welcome to this week's episode of In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, a special series of our podcast dedicated to interviewing astounding creative artists that are based here at home in Roscommon. In these interviews we will be talking to actors, theatre-makers, drama facilitators, comedians, writers, directors, poets, producers, a dancer and a weaver. We will discuss how they started in their profession, obstacles they have faced, how they have been impacted by the pandemic, the importance of creativity in their lives, their influences, how they stay motivated to keep creating and most importantly how you, the listener, can support their work. We are keen to make our audiences all around the world aware of the constant stream of Roscommon-based creative work. We also hope this series will encourage some of you to support local art, recognise its necessity and maybe even pursue some creative endeavours of your own. This series comes to you thanks to the generous support of Roscommon County Council who have kindly commissioned this series and endorsed us with the necessary equipment and software to record the interviews safely and remotely during the Summer of 2021.
    This week we are joined by Anthony Keigher, or Xnthony, who grew up in Roscommon and has been based in London and working in the cabaret and nightlife scene there since 2013. Anthony speaks to us openly and authentically about the practical and confident approach he takes in his work, particularly in his aim to educate his audiences in a fun, exhilarating and challenging way. Anthony uses history, music, various mediums of performances and most importantly; fun, to create memorable nightlife pop cabaret shows in nightclubs and theatres in London, with the important aim of including diversity and representation in his team. He generously shares with us his experience behind creating Confirmation, an autobiographical pop show about growing up in Roscommon, the only county in Ireland that had the majority no vote in the 2016 marriage referendum, and the abuse he suffered from a young age because of being gay. Anthony, like in a lot of his work, set out to investigate why his home county felt this way about gay marriage, and candidly shared with us about the retraumatising effects creating and staging this show caused, but also the important lessons it taught him in his own work and others’. Thank you again, Anthony, for sharing this with us and our audiences, and for creating the magnificent Confirmation which, as we will hear from this interview, did go on to inspire young budding artists. While it’s important to nurture your inner diva, Anthony also strongly believes in facilitating spaces for others’ to show off and sparkle in his community work, such as the colouring-in art exhibition he helped create with the Brothers of Charity in Roscommon and with the Legends and Legacies ball, in which he created a space for older members of the LGBTQ+ community to showcase their talent. We could talk at length about the amazing and innovative work Anthony creates, but we’ll let him say it for himself. This episode contains strong language and sexual references and may not be suitable for audiences of all ages.
    Thank you so much for tuning in to this week’s episode of In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, you just heard there from Anthony Keigher AKA Xnthony, and thank you so much to him for joining us for that lovely chat. You can find Anthony on his website at www.xnthony.com or instagram and twitter @xnthony, and if you’re in London do make sure to catch his show Oliver Cromwell is Really Very Sorry when it hits our stages. You can find our podcast, In Fairness, on Acast, Spotify and Itunes, make sure to tune in next week to hear from (next week’s artist’s name, short description of them). You can hear more from us and our interviewees on our

    • 1 hr 7 min
    INQUIRE - Fregoli Theatre Company

    INQUIRE - Fregoli Theatre Company

    Welcome to this week's episode of In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, a special series of our podcast dedicated to interviewing astounding creative artists that are based here at home in Roscommon. In these interviews we will be talking to actors, theatre-makers, drama facilitators, comedians, writers, directors, poets, producers, a dancer and a weaver. We will discuss how they started in their profession, obstacles they have faced, how they have been impacted by the pandemic, the importance of creativity in their lives, their influences, how they stay motivated to keep creating and most importantly how you, the listener, can support their work. We are keen to make our audiences all around the world aware of the constant stream of Roscommon-based creative work. We also hope this series will encourage some of you to support local art, recognise its necessity and maybe even pursue some creative endeavours of your own. This series comes to you thanks to the generous support of Roscommon County Council who have kindly commissioned this series and endorsed us with the necessary equipment and software to record the interviews safely and remotely during the Summer of 2021.
    Fregoli theatre company were formed in 2007, and named themselves after the quick-change theatre artist Leopold Fregoli, channelling that same high-energy and adrenaline-filled style of performance. We are joined in this interview by newest member Tara Finn who joined in 2019 as an actor, Jarlath Tivnan, actor and writer and Kate Murray, actor and director who both joined in 2011. After Maria Tivnan and Rob McFeeley performed Disco Pigs by Enda Walsh at the ISDA festival in 2007, they were awarded best actress and best director for their work, and encouraged by Gina Moxley, one of the judges, to continue their work in a theatre company. As the company grew and adapted over the years they have shifted focus to work primarily on original scripts.
    Thank you so much again to the group for making time in their busy schedule to join us for that amazing chat you can find them as Fregoli Theatre Company on Facebook and @fregolitheatre on Instagram. You can check out their website at fregolitheatre.ie for more info on them or to get in touch. Make sure to keep an eye out for their production of Cross Street later this year. You can find our podcast, In Fairness, on Acast, Spotify and Itunes. You can hear more from us and our interviewees on our Instagram, @infairnesspod, same on Twitter, and In Fairness Podcast on Facebook. Feel free to get in touch on any of these platforms with any questions or suggestions that you may have for us. Thank you again to Roscommon County Council for supporting us to create this series, and to our wonderful mentor Catherine Sheridan for keeping us in check and bringing us both together at the very beginning of our journey. You have been listening to In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, Research and questions by Molly Mew, Sound engineering, editing and producing by Misha Fitzgibbon, thank you so much for listening.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 1 hr 7 min
    INQUIRE - Brigid Kavanagh

    INQUIRE - Brigid Kavanagh

    Welcome to this week's episode of In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, a special series of our podcast dedicated to interviewing astounding creative artists that are based here at home in Roscommon. In these interviews we will be talking to actors, theatre-makers, drama facilitators, comedians, writers, directors, poets, producers, a dancer and a weaver. We will discuss how they started in their profession, obstacles they have faced, how they have been impacted by the pandemic, the importance of creativity in their lives, their influences, how they stay motivated to keep creating and most importantly how you, the listener, can support their work. We are keen to make our audiences all around the world aware of the constant stream of Roscommon-based creative work. We also hope this series will encourage some of you to support local art, recognise its necessity and maybe even pursue some creative endeavours of your own. This series comes to you thanks to the generous support of Roscommon County Council who have kindly commissioned this series and endorsed us with the necessary equipment and software to record the interviews safely and remotely during the Summer of 2021.
    Brigid Kavanagh was born in 1926, in Bunnamuca in Co Roscommon. She is a writer and poet whose first book was published in 2020. She started writing regularly in the early 1980s on a typewriter. Ironically, this was while she was recovering from breaking both wrists after an accident. She attended writers’ classes courtesy of Dundrum Adult Training & Education from 1984, and continued to write over the next decade. Brigid had attempted on multiple occasions to get published, but struggled without the representation of an agent. It was in the early 1990s that she submitted insightful recollections of her rural childhood to the Ireland’s Eye magazine. This was followed by contributions to Ireland’s Own and many of her stories have since been published in both magazines. These stories form the basis of her book, in My Mind’s Eye - Walking Amongst Ghosts, intermingled with biographical and historical accounts of people and events mainly connected to Roscommon. Brigid is a long-time member of the Roscommon Association in Dublin and had her first article published in the Roscommon Association Yearbook of 1993. She has made regular contributions to this and to its successor, Roscommon Life. As recently as 2018, one of her stories was included in New Roscommon Writings. Her family helped Brigid collect her work, published and unpublished, under the one roof, so to speak – in My Mind’s Eye - Walking Amongst Ghosts. 95 stories and poems, one for every year of her life so far.
    In My Mind’s Eye - Walking Amongst Ghosts is available in Strokestown in Dawn til Dusk, Beirne’s and Spar, in Elphin is Glancy’s, in Newsround in Roscommon and Longford town, in Four Mile Community House Shop, in O’Connor’s in Tulsk, in Spar in Kiltoom, in Kelly’s Londis and Boyle Craft King House in Boyle and in O’Briens in Lanesborough. You can also pick it up in Galway in Charlie’s bookshop or in Alan Hanna’s in Rathmines. You can also keep up to date with the book on its Facebook page, In My Mind’s Eye - Walking Amongst Ghosts. You can find our podcast, In Fairness, on Acast, Spotify and Itunes. You can hear more from us and our interviewees on our Instagram, @infairnesspod, same on Twitter, and In Fairness Podcast on Facebook. Feel free to get in touch on any of these platforms with any questions or suggestions that you may have for us. Thank you again to Roscommon County Council for supporting us to create this series, and to our wonderful mentor Catherine Sheridan for keeping us in check and bringing us both together at the very beginning of our journey. You have been listening to In Fairness Inquire: Roscommon Artists, Research and questions by Molly Mew, Sound engineering, editing and producing by Misha Fitzgibbon, thank you so much for listening.

    Hoste

    • 54 min

Top Podcasts In Arts

Fresh Air
NPR
The Moth
The Moth
Snap Judgment Presents: Spooked
Snap Judgment
99% Invisible
Roman Mars
The Magnus Archives
Rusty Quill
Snap Judgment
Snap Judgment and PRX