´óÏó´«Ã½

Archives for August 2010

Cultural tourism phenomenon in Belfast City Centre

Marie-Louise Muir | 15:08 UK time, Wednesday, 25 August 2010

Take a walk past City Hall in Belfast any day of the week and there are clear signs thatÌý cultural tourism here is thriving.ÌýThe numbers ofÌýtour promoters, in brightly coloured jackets and caps,ÌýwavingÌýfliers to get visitors on busesÌýseem to multiplyÌýby the day.ÌýThey're even beginning to outnumber the Goths and EMOs who perch on the benches outside City Hall.

I fell in behind a tour party recently just to eavesdrop onÌýwhat the tour guide was saying. She was pointing to her right,Ìýto the Northern Bank building.ÌýAs I got closerÌýI heard her tell theÌýparty that this was where theÌýinfamous bank heist had happened! The cameras were clicking as I walked on by.

It got me thinking about what cultural tourism is and how it is still an evolving thing.ÌýÌýTonight I am talking to artist Lesley Cherry who, tomorrow morning will see the unveiling ofÌýa new artwork as part of the Lower Shankill Community Association's Re-imaging Communities Programme. It's calledÌý"Nothing About Us Without Us Is For Us".

The project was funded by the , led by the Arts Council of Northern Ireland. It's one ofÌý155 projects which have been given money throughÌýthe Reimaging Communities Programme, "to restore"Ìýit saysÌý"pride to local neighbourhoods and moving Northern Ireland towards a normal, inclusive and stable society."

The idea toÌýtransform theÌýcultural landscape, but is that what the cultural tourist wants to bring home? Ìý

Ìý

Ìý

Ìý

Ìý

Shauna McGowan's Machi

Marie-Louise Muir | 12:58 UK time, Wednesday, 25 August 2010

A small slender girl came into studio last night carryingÌýornate and colourful screen prints on leather. They almost dwarfed her but as she laid them out on the studio table it became clear that first solo exhibition "Machi" is a labour of love.

a_1-230x230.jpgHer grandfather's long battle with cancer proved the starting point. A memory of the two of them watchingÌý"Jason and the Argonauts"Ìýtogether when she was a child triggeredÌýthe idea for this exhibition. "Machi"Ìý isÌýGreek for strength.ÌýÌýShe says her grandfather's battle with the illness was courageous, and reminded her of Jason's many brave battles.ÌýMythology and family history collide.

Ìý

"Machi" opens next Thursday at the Ards Arts CentreÌýin Newtownards and runs for the month of September. Ìý

Caoimhin Corrigan is Derry~Londonderry Cultural Broker

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:44 UK time, Tuesday, 24 August 2010

ILEX has just announced their first ever Cultural Broker. He is Caoimhin Corrigan. Currently the Arts Officer in Leitrim County Council, he's also Director/Curator of .Ìý

Offaly born, he starts in the biggest arts job in Derry on the 6th of ÌýSeptember. He says he's looking forward to it, especially with the UK City of Culture 2013 imminent. He has started house hunting, although the two houses he liked the look of had SOLD signs on them when he was in the city last week.Ìý

Seems everyone's wanting to move to the City of Culture then!

City Walls light up at night

Marie-Louise Muir | 15:43 UK time, Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Derry based contemporary visual artists Pascale Steven and Conor McFeely have been working on a joint project "Pause/Timeslip". It wasÌýcommissioned by theÌýVoid Gallery, recently included in the Guardian'sÌýbest small galleries in the British Isles.

TheÌýhusband and wife team worked from home,Ìýthey told me earlier, so they could collaborate and look after their children.

They have created two light based works which are going to be projected onto a section of the Walls in Guildhall Square.Ìý

"Pause" by Pascale is text based (that's part of it below)

Ìý

pascale.bmpÌýwhileÌýConor's piece "Timeslip" (that's a projection of it below) is a 10 minute video of a sleeping child. Ìý

untitled.bmp"A giant sleeping child" he said. It's his first public art work and says he's found the experience strange, seeing his work outside of the four walls of the art gallery, with no "sheet of theory".Ìý

The official launch is tonight butÌýthey did do a dry run last night.ÌýIt seems their nearly four hundred year "canvas" looked great.

If you're in the city over the next few days head down to Guildhall Square anytime between 9pm and 12am.

Seamus Heaney's Human Chain

Marie-Louise Muir | 16:49 UK time, Thursday, 19 August 2010

Got my preview copy of Seamus Heaney's new poetry collection "Human Chain". Louisa, my producer, handed it to me this morning and, I'm not ashamed to admit this, I shouted for joy. Not good in an open plan office and probably notÌýgood forÌýcolleagues who might not share my devotion to the Nobel Laureate. Louisa then burst my bubble of joy by telling me her mum isn't that impressed by his poems.

And, yes, I do understand that some people can and do think what is all the hype about a new poetry collection?

But I've been waiting for this copy of over a year now. Hints of his new poems have teasedÌýme over the past 12 months, in interviews and magazines. He read two to me in a memorable moment in Bellaghy last year when the statue to him was unveiled.

Now I've only flicked through it,Ìýto get a sense of it, stealingÌýtime between scripting tonight's "Arts Extra"Ìýand going out and buying the dinner!

So no academic overview or thesis here. It's just great to have new work from him, epecially when the subject matter of several of the poems deal with his stroke in Donegal. It could have had a much darker outcome. So that's why I let out a shout of joy earlier holding my copy of "Human Chain" at last.

Ìý

Filming tv trailer for new ´óÏó´«Ã½ NI arts show

Marie-Louise Muir | 13:15 UK time, Thursday, 19 August 2010

Just in from filming trailer for the new arts televisionÌýprogramme Ralph McLean and I are hosting this October during this year'sÌý.

We had a great morning in the Grand Opera House in Belfast filming with the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Trails team, Paul Reid and PamelaÌýAndrews and cameraman Bill Brown and soundman Peter Moore.

You can see I'm gettingÌýmy makeup touched up by the makeup artist Anita Brolly. festival.jpgSheÌýwas tellingÌýme she's just back from Shepperton Studios in London doing makeup on the new Martin Scorsese film ".Ìý Sir Ben Kingsley and Jude Law are starring in it. She hasn't met them yet. Apparently they're in Paris at the momentÌýfilming scenes so she'll see them next week.

But she has met "Marty" as she callsÌýMartin ScorseseÌý(!!). He's filming itÌýin 3D too, but forget that, Ralph wasÌýjustÌýimpressed by this close encounter with Scorsese. I was just thrilled to be getting my make up done for me instead of using the driver's sun visor in my car (while parked I hasten to add!!)!Ìý

Still wearing it now. So I should make sure the webcam is on for tonight's Arts Extra!

Ìý

Ìý

Terry Pratchett on being called a Sir

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:06 UK time, Wednesday, 18 August 2010

Terry Pratchett was doing a series of back to back interviews today, to promote the dvd release of "Going Postal", the tv adaptation of the book starring David Suchet.

These interview slots are always timed to the last second. So I turned up early to our studio in Belfast to hear the previous interview from a London studio in full flow. It's strange to hear anotherÌýpresenter talking to the guest you're about to interview. You begin to doubtÌýthe worth of your questions. And then they were laughing, cracking jokes and afterÌýthe goodbye IÌýheard Terry say "nice man" about the interviewer!

No pressure!

He managed a sip of his glass of water beforeÌýthe engineer patched him through to me.

Hello Sir Terry, I said.ÌýNot the start I expected. He was very nice but he doesn't like theÌý"Sir" moniker, especially as it'sÌýused incorrectly. Yikes, we haven't even started the interview proper. The clock is ticking on theÌýtime slot and I am now in an Eat, Shoots and Leaves moment. The worst offenders he says are hotels. When he goes into his hotel room the tv screen is on with a welcome and enjoy your stay but bizarrely it reads "Welcome Mr Sir Terry Pratchett."Ìý

ÌýI was so enjoying our chat that I didn't notice the clock. The engineer cut in after 10 minutes and said we were running over and I had to wind up pretty fast. So I don't know if I made as big an impression as the previous interview. He made a big impression on me.

"Nice man"Ìý

Mike Scott of the Waterboys and Yeats poetry

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:26 UK time, Tuesday, 10 August 2010

came into studio today, to talk about An Appointment with Mr Yeats. That's his show with the Waterboys performingÌýtwenty of Yeats' poems, all put to song by Scott.

Now based in Ireland the Waterboys front manÌýisÌýpretty passionate about Yeats. So much so that even he said he should get out more. Sitting at his piano with his Complete Yeats finding the poems that sing off the page to him. It's kind of the true artist's pose.

The thing is he wears his passion lightly. And he is so genuine about his fascination with Yeats that it doesn't for a moment feel contrived.

It's how popstars should be. Forget throwing tvs out the window. Arise and go now and get your collected edition of Yeats and lose yourself in The Lake Isle of Innisfree.

The Waterboys perform An Appointment with Mr Yeats in the Grand Opera HouseÌýin Belfast on theÌý9th and 10th November.Ìý

And check out what Mike thought of his day in Belfast today on his feedÌý.

Emma Donoghue's "Room"

Marie-Louise Muir | 22:39 UK time, Monday, 9 August 2010

41NJJwpzwzL__SS500_.jpgWhen I picked up Dublin writer Man Booker longlistedÌýnovel a few weeks ago,ÌýI put it down after a few pages. I had picked up the clues dropped casually, naively,Ìýby the book's narrator. HeÌýhas, after all, just turned 5 the morning we meet him. His name isÌýJack and he lives in "Room" with "Ma". What got to me was when he saysÌýherÌýteeth are all black. He doesn't want to have teeth like her and so heÌýcounts his own teethÌýobsessively.

The rottenÌýteeth triggered something in my memory, Elizabeth Fritzl, whose father Josef imprisoned her, was said to haveÌýhad black teeth when she was found. She also had a five year old son Felix who emerged into the world, "Outside" as Jack calls it. So "Room" clicked.Ìý Room was in factÌýaÌýprison, a woman kidnapped, "Old Nick" who would visit her most nights the abductor, Jack the product of it.

ÌýIÌýput the book down.ÌýI was in Donegal on my holidays. I could hear normal life around me, my two girls downstairs, fighting over which Peppa Pig dvd to put on, I wanted to think aboutÌýwhether to cookÌýdinner or get a takeaway, whether it would stop raining and I could get the two down to the beach for air. I didn't want "Room" in my head.ÌýI went downstairs. Ìý

Back home after the break awayÌýI went back to it again. Then something happened. I fell in love, miraculously seduced. In the midst of aÌýhorror my mind was struggling to make sense of, here wasÌýa chatty, free spirited, inquisitive 5 year old. Jack told me about his day,Ìýhis favourite toys,Ìýwhy he lovedÌýto watch Dora the Explorer and why there was no one else in the world likeÌý"Ma". And through him we glimpse Ma, and what is happening to her. Ìý

And then there was no one in the world like Jack.ÌýI was hooked. So when we're brought back to reality with the "beep beep" of theÌýsteel door of their prison signalling Old Nick was there my stomach lurched and I willed Ma toÌýget Jack into the wardrobe as fast as possible. "Wardrobe" isÌýhis hiding place, Ìýso he can'tÌýsee what is happening.

But heÌýcould hear though.ÌýÌý

And then comes the escape. One reviewer said she punched the air. It is a marvellous moment.

Listen to tonight's interview here withÌýEmma DonoghueÌýon Arts Extra.

"Room" is published byÌýPicadorÌý

Vincent River Irish premier

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:41 UK time, Saturday, 7 August 2010

Just in from incredible production by Prime Cut of Philip Ridley's play Vincent River. Eleanor Methven plays Anita, Kerr Logan plays Davey. This is a from the show which suggests just some of the performances I saw this afternoon.Ìý
It's about the moment these two very different people's lives collide. Anita is the mother of Vincent River. He was murdered 3 months earlier. He was a gay man, found brutally beaten to death in public toilets in London. Davey is the young man who found him. But why has he been stalking Anita since Vincent's death? He says he didn't kill him but what does he know? It's one of the strongest 2 handers I have seen in a long time.Ìý
After the show Eleanor said rehearsals had been the hardest part - the cracking pace and in particular, she said, the dialogue, a lot of which are non sequiturs,which according to Eleanor were the hardest to fix in her head. Now it's locked in she says.Ìý
Kerr Logan is making his professional stage debut since graduating from drama school. With Bangor connections he was raised in Lancashire. He is a talent to watch, holding the stage and his place with Eleanor. It's wonderful to see Eleanor in a central role, her sense of grief and horror at what has happened to her at times painful to watch. It's a formidable show. On tour .Ìý

Oscar the Grouch in Belfast

Marie-Louise Muir | 13:21 UK time, Thursday, 5 August 2010

DSC00145.JPGMe and Oscar the Grouch and Carroll Spinney, the voice of, and man behind, not only Oscar but Big Bird of Sesame Street fame.ÌýThe two were in Belfast to meet the residents of "Sesame Tree". That's Northern Ireland's own version of Sesame Street.Ìý

I've never seen so many people craning their necks through the glass to get a peek at anyone I've ever interviewed before. Outside the studio there was a sense of mass hysteria mixed with nostalgia that was pretty infectious.

Carroll/Oscar took it all in their stride. One woman was openly weeping. Another invited him to her wedding! And told Oscar that she was going to name her first child Oscar.

And there was a queue to get pictures taken, autographs and hugs, mainly for Oscar.

Listen to the interview tonight on Arts Extra at 6.30pm to hear me flummoxed by maintaining eye contact wtih a puppet. It's the original Talk to the Hand moment.ÌýÌý

Oscar the Grouch is in the Building

Marie-Louise Muir | 12:10 UK time, Thursday, 5 August 2010

Oscar the Grouch is in the building, with his "friend" Carroll Spinney. They'reÌýwaiting for me in studio 8c.ÌýI amÌýinordinately excited.ÌýForget Seamus Heaney or any of the big names in the world of arts and cultureÌýwho I have met and interviewed!

Oscar the Grouch isÌýa living legend!ÌýHe is my childhood.

Ok am away to meet him now. Best not to keep him waiting. Seeing as he is famous for his "grouchy" temperament.

More to come after we meet!

Crescent Elderflowers

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:57 UK time, Tuesday, 3 August 2010

It's not often I find myself wishing myself olderÌýbut that's what happened today when I met the Crescent Elderflowers Dance Company,Ìýa lively, lovely bunch of older womenÌýbased in the Crescent Arts Centre in Belfast. I wanted to be one of them.ÌýBut to be anÌýElderflower you have to be aged over 60. The youngest is 62, the oldest 80.

IMG_3394.jpgRenee, 71, tells me she hasÌýtwo artificial knees but that hasn't put her off embracing her "inner dancer" as she calls it,ÌýalthoughÌýyesterday's knee bending warm up was a bit much. She told their 27 year choreographer Eileen McClory to go easier on them!

Moya, one of the youngest, in her early sixties,Ìýsaid they've been discovering bits of themselvesÌýthey haven't used in a while.

They've got a show coming up this Friday. "Here Comes the Sun" has been devised by the women themselves, who haveÌýlived, worked and raised familiesÌýin Belfast for the past 40Ìýyears.

They appear as mothers,Ìýwives,ÌýBritish army,Ìýparamilitaries and children playing with toy guns.

They talk about how, when their teenage children went outÌýat night, during the height of the Troubles, theyÌýdidn't rest until everyone was back under the roof of the house again - worried that theyÌýwould get caughtÌýup in trouble or end up being arrested.

Set against the drama outside their front door, life ticked on and, in one section,Ìýthey try to remember who among them was the first toÌýown aÌýwashing machine.Ìý

There's so much laughter and energyÌýI'm reminded of that film "Cocoon", when the older people get a new lease of life from the rocks the aliens have left in the swimming pool next door to their retirement home. Except this time, there are no extra terrestrials but a lot of endorphins released by exercise and movement.

And as well as aÌýhealth kick, local older age groups like the Elderflowers could be in line for aÌýfinancialÌýkick too.ÌýA new fund has just been announced by the Arts Council ofÌýNorthern Ireland, which is giving £700,000 inÌýan .

ÌýThe Crescent Elderflowers perform "Here Comes the Sun" in St Mary's University College as part of on Friday 6th August at 3pm.

´óÏó´«Ã½ iD

´óÏó´«Ã½ navigation

´óÏó´«Ã½ © 2014 The ´óÏó´«Ã½ is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.