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Archives for June 2010

Harry Clifton is the new Ireland Professor of Poetry 2010

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:34 UK time, Wednesday, 30 June 2010

Around about now in Dublin the Taoiseach is announcing the Ireland Professor of Poetry 2010. It's a pretty significant post which is held for three years. There have been 4 already, John Montague, Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, Paul Durcan and the outgoing one is Michael Longley.

The 5th is the poet . He's maybe not an instantly recognisable name. We had a sweepstake in the office. Names like , and were bandied about, but not Harry Clifton.

Born in Dublin in 1952, he has spent much of his writing life living outside of Ireland. In the 1970's Nigeria, and later Thailand. Then Italy, Switzerland, Germany, England and Paris for ten years. He returned to Ireland in 2004.

He's aware that his time away from Ireland put him outside the mainstream of Irish poets. A poetry collection about Paris and a memoir on his time in Italy maybe didn't plug him into the circuit as much.

When we spoke earlier today, he was the first to bring this point up. He believes that getting this pretty major post signals a broadening of Irish poetry.

And on a more practical note, in these recession ridden times, he very honestly admitted he now has a job for the next 3 years.

Listen here for my interview with Harry Clifton on Arts Extra tonight at half past six.

Daphne Todd's Last Portrait of Mother

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:04 UK time, Tuesday, 29 June 2010

Daphne Todd'sÌýpainting "Last Portrait of Mother" mother.jpghas just won the BP Portrait Award.Ìý

There's been a mixed reaction to this painting. It only struck me as I was talking to Daphne earlier that seeing a dead body isn't the cultural norm for many people.

But here inÌýIrelandÌýwe make an art form of it.

The Irish Wake isÌýa cultural phenomenon.ÌýThe deceased comesÌýback to the house, takes up centre stage, there's tea, sandwiches, sometimes alcohol, there used to be plates of cigarettes passed around, there are stories and prayers. It's a social occasion.Ìý

Daphne says she had a very understanding undertaker who let her sit with her dead mother. For three days after she died, Daphne sat and painted her.ÌýIn a funny way she said it became social too.

SheÌýcould hear the stone masons in another room whistling while they carved headstones.ÌýThe undertakers would put her name in the pot for the tea break.ÌýBut she couldn't bring herself toÌýdrink her tea and eat her kit-kat in front of her mother and would leave the room.ÌýÌý

MirrorsÌýin a wake house are usually coveredÌýorÌýtheir faces turned to the wall.Ìý

With "Last Portrait of Mother", Daphne Todd uncovers the mirror, and reflects her dead mother back to the viewer. In doing so she's breaking one of the last Western cultural taboos - staring into theÌýface of death. ÌýÌý

Paines Plough come to Lisburn

Marie-Louise Muir | 20:34 UK time, Sunday, 27 June 2010

painesplough.jpgOn saturday night I went to Lisburn's Island Arts Centre to hear new writingÌýby 5 local playwrights, Richard Dormer, Martin Lynch, Rosemary Jenkinson, Stacey Gregg and David Ireland.Ìý

The piecesÌýwere all about 10 minutes long, and were on the themeÌý"Come to where I'm from". ItsÌýpart of a UK wide projectÌýcreated by the EnglishÌýtouring new writing company Ìý Their only visit to Northern Ireland was hosted byÌýRansom Theatre Productions.

What made this new writing event a bit different wasÌýtheÌýwriters had to read the material themselves. AndÌýthey were nervous. Even the professional actors among them,ÌýRichard Dormer and David Ireland (who later confessed to me thatÌýhe wasÌýthe mostÌýnervous he has ever been).

I was asked to contribute to aÌýfeedback form afterwards. I started out usingÌýwords like "enjoyable" "thought provoking" and then, as I warmed to the theme, at the same timeÌýthe space ran out on the piece of paper, I realised that there was something elseÌýmuch more critical to new Northern Irish writing thatÌýhad impressed me.ÌýHere wasÌýcontemporary writing, and when I say contemporary I mean written in the last 2 to 3Ìýweeks, that didn't seek to fall back on the old stereotypical "Troubles" voice.

It was hard hitting. talking about his mixed reaction, as a ProtestantÌýfrom East Belfast,Ìýto the recent scenes of jubilation in Guildhall Square the day the Saville Report was published.Ìý

It was funny and poignant.Ìý,Ìýwearing an "I Heart Belfast" tee-shirt,Ìýchose to make "home" an ex lover who she keeps going back to again and again and who starts seeing someone else more trendy when she's away living in England. Ìý

It was dry and understated. ,Ìýfor whom home is also East Belfast, wryly noted thatÌýshe had travelled to broaden her horizons, a spell teachingÌýin Poland andÌýRussia, only to come back home and Polish and Russian peopleÌýhave moved into her street.

Disturbing and divided. remembered a night whenÌýhe wasÌý14 years old.ÌýAÌýLisburn Protestant, heÌýhad stood beside a Catholic friend as aÌýmob of nearly 50 young men came to beatÌýupÌýhis friend for getting aÌýProtestant girl pregnant.But,Ìýin something out ofÌýa movie, as the crowd loomed closer, the scene was paused byÌýthe pregnant girlÌýappearing out of nowhere and standing betweenÌýthem and the crowd.

And introduced us toÌýa neighbour of his from the docks area of Belfast, Mrs Baker, whoseÌýstraight talking thoughts on everyone from Ian Paisley to Gerry Adams to Barack Obama can't be written down here.Ìý

Here's hoping the work getsÌýa stage again. ÌýÌý

Ìý

Marie-Louise Muir's last Sounds Classical

Marie-Louise Muir | 19:42 UK time, Sunday, 27 June 2010

So am sitting in studio 8 of ´óÏó´«Ã½, Broadcasting House, Belfast watching the clock. It'sÌý5 toÌý8 and just after the 8 o'clock news I will present my last "Sounds Classical". I've been doing this show for over 4 years now. But about 2 months ago I realised that I had to make a decision. Working weekends, as well as during the week on "Arts Extra", 2 small children, family life,Ìýetc etc....something had to give. And reluctantly it is this show.

So I made the decision to quit, told my boss and gave him today's date as my last show.

As I left the house tonight I said to the two girls "I'm away, last show on a sunday night...mummy will be here now on sunday nights", expecting a warm rush of cheer.ÌýInstead theyÌýlooked miserable.

And then I saw why,Ìýon the tv, there she was, in her glass coffin, the dwarves crying, the woodland animals crying. Snow White. Dead.Ìý

At least I knew that the next frame would bringÌýPrince Charming riding into view,Ìýand, with a kiss, bring her back to life and give my two girls theirÌýhappy ever after.

And bitter sweet happy endings here too. Am not sure how I will be at the end of the show tonight at 10, especiallyÌýwith the last piece of music. It'sÌýmy all time favourite, the intermezzo from Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana.ÌýA piece I first heardÌýbefore I was even born. My mumÌýwas in a production of it in Birmingham when she was eight months pregnant with me!ÌýÌý So there is something about babies and the womb and classical music, becauseÌýit always hits the spot.ÌýIt's only right that it's the last piece of music for me tonight. Oh and for the next 7 days if you fancy listening again on the bbc iplayer!

ÌýÌýÌýÌý

Seamus Heaney new collection of poetry

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:15 UK time, Thursday, 24 June 2010

I seem to be all things Seamus Heaney at the mo.ÌýNote last blog. But had to blog about his much awaited new collectionÌý"Human Chain" which is out on the 2nd ofÌýSeptember published by Faber. I've had a sneak preview of a few of the new poems.Ìý

One called "Miracle" deals with the aftermath of his stroke in 2007. He writes about being lifted up onto a stretcher by two Donegal ambulance men, and likens it to the Bible story of the crippled man whose friends, trying to get him close to Jesus on a healing visit to Capernaum, raise up him onto the roof of the house, then remove the tiles in order to lower him down through the hole. Ìý

In the same poem he expressesÌýhis love for his wife Marie as she holds his hand in the back ofÌýthe same ambulance asÌýit drives himÌýto Letterkenny Hospital.

Another, one of my new HeaneyÌýfavourites,Ìýis called "In the Attic". The attic is in his house, where he does all his writing. In the poem he isÌýclimbing the stairs towards it.ÌýInÌýaÌýtwist on his famous "Follower" poem, he is now the older man.Ìý

"As I age and blank on names/As my uncertainty on stairs/Is more and more the lightheadness of a cabin boy's first time on the rigging".

He is far from uncertain or lightheaded. I can't wait to read more from "Human Chain", and meet him when he's here in Belfast. He's booked to appear atÌýthe Feile an Phobail in West BelfastÌýin August and Aspects Literature Festival in Bangor in September.

I also hadÌýa strange dream about him the other night which involved me interviewing him and catching sight of, under the legs of his suit trousers, a shiny bright red pair of doc martens. I had taken cold medication before going to bed so attribute the surreal nature of the dream to that. Ìý

However, when I see him, I will have to find out if he has, at any point in his life, ever owned a pair of red DMs!

Seamus Heaney Bloody Sunday Poem

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:39 UK time, Tuesday, 22 June 2010


In 1972 Seamus Heaney drove from his home in Belfast to DerryÌýon the day of the funerals of the 13 people killed on Bloody Sunday.ÌýThe late Luke Kelly of the Dubliners later asked Heaney to write him a song about his feelings on the journey.ÌýHeaney wrote .
It wasn't published until 1997 when Heaney gave it to the Derry Journal to mark the 25th anniversary of Bloody Sunday.ÌýIt's just beenÌýre-published in a special edition of the same newspaper.Ìý
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Derry~Londonderry City of Culture final pitch

Marie-Louise Muir | 15:57 UK time, Thursday, 17 June 2010

The team leading the bid to be UK City of Culture 2013 made their final presentation earlier today.ÌýAt 930 this morning in Liverpool, the team gotÌý20 mins toÌýlay out their stallÌýandÌýthenÌýwere grilled for over an hour and half by the judging panel, led by Phil Redmond. According to the people in the room it was "robust" and concentrated on key themes of "community and leadership".

Among the bid team, the Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness. In his speech to the judgesÌýhe spoke about theÌýlast few days in DerryÌýin the wake of the Saville Report. I spoke to him after and asked why he felt he had to raise this?Ìý

He said the impetus to talk about it had come from comments made to him from the momentÌý he arrived in Liverpool,Ìýat both a public reception last night hosted by the Mayor of Liverpool for all 4 bidding cities and even before they started their presentation this morning.ÌýMany of them saidÌýthey were really struck byÌýthe images they had seen on the tv on Tuesday.ÌýDeclan Kelly the US Economic Envoy to Northern Ireland with the United States government was also in the room. He talked about how the scenes from the Guildhall SquareÌýwere front page newsÌýin the NewÌýYork Times.

But isn't there aÌýworry I askedÌýMartin McGuinness that this could go against the city? WhenÌýyou have the Prime Minister David Cameron apologising for Bloody Sunday, it could be said that Derry has had its moment in the sun andÌýthisÌýglobal publicity could go against the bid.ÌýHe didn't agree, saying one was the past, the bid was looking forward to a better future.

He's also a Derry man so he would say that! But the Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg is also a Sheffield man. Could this go in Sheffield's favour? According to Martin McGuinness, every time he has met David Cameron,Ìýthe PMÌýends their meetings saying good luck for the bid. Mmmmm. Political machinations! I wonder does he say the same to Nick?

Is this the year I read Ulysses?

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:06 UK time, Monday, 14 June 2010

Every Bloomsday I promise whoever I'm interviewingÌýthat this is the year I will read James Joyce's modern classic Ulysses. And every year, as soon as the day isÌýover, ÌýI forget about it, until roughly this time, less than 48 hours to Bloomsday.

As the 16th June looms, I still haven't opened the copy I own. But at our planning meeting earlier there must have been a rush of blood to the head as we decided that I would, along with Noel (my producer) and Grainne (one of the production team) start tonight, read Chapter 1 and see how we feel tomorrow!Ìý

Noel has a head start as he has already read it, I have bluffed my way through at least 6 Bloomsdays now andÌýGrainne says she has tried to start it at leastÌý3 times and once lived in a house where everyone owned a copy but nobody had ever read it!

Noel reckons that we could get it finished within the month. Just in time for Bloomsday 2011!

The day I played the lambeg drum

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:57 UK time, Monday, 14 June 2010

This was a first for me today. Learning to play the lambeg drum. John our sound engineer took this photo on his phone while I was being given a go.

DSC00311.JPGDon't know how those fellas do it as I had to get one of them, Jonathan, to hold it up for me.ÌýAm aÌýlightweight.

This lambeg drum is being launched tomorrow. Lagan Village drumming school is unveiling and naming it in memory of Thomas Andrews the designer of the Titanic.

Old Pump house tomorrow in the Titantic Quarter at 11am.

Ìý

Joan Lingard and her original manuscript

Marie-Louise Muir | 12:24 UK time, Monday, 14 June 2010

Lingard.jpg

Wonderful moment with Joan Lingard on Friday when I was recording with her for the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Ulster doc "Kevin & Sadie". She's holding the original handwritten manuscript for her first Kevin & Sadie book "The Twelfth Day of July" which she wrote in 1969.

JoanÌýhas gifted all her manuscripts to the where they are currently on show for the first time.Ìý

She was tickled pink she had to wearÌýwhite gloves to touch her own work.

(pic courtesy of neilharrisonphotography.com)

You can hear my conversation with her, including a very emotional visit to her old house inÌý Holland Gardens, East Belfast, the first time she had been back inside her childhood home in over 60 years, on Sunday 11th JulyÌýat 1.30pm ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Ulster.

Dr. Flanagan I presume?

Marie-Louise Muir | 20:21 UK time, Sunday, 13 June 2010

TPFlanagan.jpeg

Ìý

The great Irish landscape painter Terence P FlanaganÌýwhen he received an hononary degree of Doctor of Fine Arts (DFA)Ìýfrom the University of Ulster at the end of last week.

He had said to me the day before that he was nervous about the occasion. Being in the spotlight. But doesn't he look proud?

He got the title surrounded by family and friends, including his greatest fan his much loved wife Sheila, but also surrounded by many of his early works which are on show in the Ormeau Baths Gallery as part of a selected exhibition "Correspondences".

And there will be more from Dr. Flanagan in the late summer. The FE McWIlliam Gallery outside Banbridge will host new work in August,Ìýwhich TP saidÌýhe was going toÌýconcentrate on when all theÌýfuss had died down! Ìý

Julia MacRae, Kevin & Sadie and Gorilla.

Marie-Louise Muir | 23:04 UK time, Thursday, 10 June 2010

So it turns out that Julia MacRae is a household name, even if most households don't know it, including my own. After I posted my last blog about her being the only publisher to take a risk with Joan Lingard's "The Twelfth Day of July" in 1970, I kept thinking why is her name so familiar? Put her name into google and about 170,000 results, 0.27 seconds later, and there she was. Julia MacRae Books, involved in children's publishing for ever. Her name isn't as big as the author's and isn't on the front cover, but if you have children/grandchildren/great grandchildren, look at the back of the books for the publisher's name and I bet you her name will be there.Ìý

One name in particular dominates her portfolio, the current Children's Laureate , whom she championed from 1980.Ìý
While he was doing well, it was a book called " which she published in 1983 that put Browne on the map.Ìý

Pity I didn't know this before I interviewed her because then she could have put me straight on a question that exercises me every time I read it to my daughters. Is the bow tie wearing gorilla who wears her daddy's hat and coat actually the little girl's daddy dressed up, is it a dream that the little girl is having or is it magic and toy gorillas can grow big in the night and embark on all sorts of adventures?Ìý

I think magic is the safest option, because if it really is the daddy dressed up, (a) how did he swing through the trees holding her and (b) why wasn't he arrested for scaling the walls of the zoo at midnight?ÌýAnd (c) why does he have a banana in his back pocket the next morning when the little girl wakes up?Ìý
I rest my case.

The woman who gave Joan Lingard a break

Marie-Louise Muir | 15:38 UK time, Thursday, 10 June 2010

Julia MacRae may not be a household name but, 40 years ago, when she was working for the book publishers Penguin, aÌýwriter friend passed on a manuscript for her to read. It was by aÌýyoung Belfast born writer called Joan Lingard who was feeling a bit fed up after her novel had been given the run around by other publishers. TheÌýnovel she was looking at was called "The Twelfth Day of July", the beginning of the Kevin and Sadie love story.Ìý

Before Julia read it other publishers had rejected it. It wasÌý1970 and something written about theÌýTroublesÌýwas, according to Julia",Ìý"not only controversial"...it wouldn'tÌýsell".

She says sheÌýjust saw a great story. Forty years later the book she published and the 4 subsequent ones have never been out of print. She knew her stuff.

Ìý

Belfast's Romeo & Juliet

Marie-Louise Muir | 16:37 UK time, Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Joan Lingard's Kevin and Sadie books turn 40 this year and Joan is coming back to Belfast to mark it with a doc I'm fronting for ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio Ulster. The first book in the series "The TwelfthÌýDay of July"Ìýintroduced us to Kevin McCoy and Sadie Jackson, a Romeo & Juliet/West Side Story for Belfast in the Troubles.ÌýSo I''ve been re- reading them seeing as the last time I read them was *cough* circa 1979. ÌýÌý

To my joy, the two I've read so far "The Twelfth Day of July" and "Across the Barricades" still have the raw power of that first read. The illicit thrill of that divided love, the violence, sectarian hatred, the struggle to understand each other and then the reality of having to move away in order to live a better life.ÌýKevin says to Sadie towards the end of the second book "Across the Barricades", "I don't like the way we've got to live. It's not living anymore. Not living the way I want it". ÌýAnd so he decides to go away, thus setting the scene for the thirdÌýbookÌý"Into Exile". If I'm honest, I do remember getting a bit jaded by the end of "A Proper Place", the 4th book.ÌýMaybe I had just grown out of them,Ìýand Kevin McCoy, now a married man with child, didn't grab me as much as the young, dark eyed,Ìýdark haired teenage Kevin I had first read about. Instead I was fancying the guys in Smash Hits and Look In!

"Across the Barricades" is still taught in some schools here. TheÌýyear 10 pupilsÌýreading it were bornÌýaround 1997, a year before the Good Friday Agreement. Kevin & Sadie'sÌýBelfast must seem almost pre historic.

"Kevin and Sadie" goes out on ´óÏó´«Ã½ÌýRadio Ulster on Sunday the 11th July atÌý1.30pmÌý

Yann Martel in Belfast

Marie-Louise Muir | 21:07 UK time, Friday, 4 June 2010

Yann Martel said to me earlier tonight that the Canadian Prime Minister has "no imagination". Speaking to me on stage at the opening of the literary weekend he said, that despite sending Stephen Harper a book every fortnight for the past 3 years, the Canadian PM had yet to reply to him. In the meantime Barack Obama had sent a handwritten note to him after reading Ìý"Life of Pi" to his daughter. The first time Mantel reckoned a letter from the President of the United States had been sent to a resident of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.Ìý

But, hold on, isn't a Prime Minister a bit busy to join an unsolicited invite to a book club? Maybe, says Mantel, but politicians should be "dreamers....like philosopher kings...nourished by literature". I wonder if there was a similar book club for our local politicians in Stormont what books should be sent to "nourish" them?Ìý

Mantel says the only book Stephen Harper has ever publicly said he liked had an Irish connection. Joyce? Beckett? Wilde? No, the book in question was the Guinness Book of Records. It got a laugh from the audience.Ìý
To find out more about Mantel's reading list for the Canadian PM check out.Ìý


The Undertones v The Human League

Marie-Louise Muir | 22:57 UK time, Wednesday, 2 June 2010

Two of the competing cities in the UK City of Culture bid 2013, and have ancient history. The rock n roll poster boys for Derry The Undertones in their song My Perfect Cousin have a dig at Sheffield's finest synth pop export the Human League with the verse:Ìý
"His mother bought him a synthesiser/Got the Human League in to advise her/Now he's making lots of noise/Playing along with the art school boys/Philip's trying to attract his attention/But what a shame - it's in vain - total rejection." Ìý

Even my perfect cousin won't take on Phil Oakey.Ìý

So how about a Battle of the Bands for City of Culture? ÌýThe bidding cities are down to do a face to face pitch in a few weeks time. Scrap it and get The Undertones Versus The Human League, then throw in Black Sabbath for Birmingham and Beth Orton for Norwich. Now that would be a cultural face off.Ìý

Belfast homeless photographs at Waterfront Hall

Marie-Louise Muir | 14:28 UK time, Wednesday, 2 June 2010

I saw photographs today that genuinely made me cry. 08.jpgImages like this one. He'sÌýa young homeless Lithuanian man on the streets of Belfast. It's the way heÌýlooks straight at the camera, his eyes kind of defying you toÌýdareÌýlook away.ÌýThe black bruise under his eye tells another story. It's magnetic.Ìý

His wife's picture hangs on the wall next to him. She looks so much older than her years. Her head is in her hands.

"Looking in" is a new exhibition of works by Belfast photographer Donal McCann, commissioned by the Welcome Organisation, a local charity which offers basic needs food, showers, laundry and a daytime drop in centre for homeless people.

They describe the photos as "showing the human face of homelessness".ÌýFor me, I was being asked to look into the eyes of a person I probably walk past every day.Ìý

This exhibition needs to be seen by a much wider audience. Let's hope that it gets the chance to tour other venues in Belfast and further afield.

ÌýIt's at the Waterfront Hall from today until the 29th June.

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