Search Results for 'Agnes'

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Summer sale in Belladonna

It’s sale time at Belladonna Bridal, one of Ireland’s best-loved bridal shops, located in Centrepoint, Liosbán, Galway.

Gigantic summer sample sale in Belladonna

It is sale time at Belladonna Bridal, Ireland’s best loved bridal shop located in centrepoint, Liosbán, Galway. In order to make room for the new collections that have started arriving for 2015, Belladonna is holding a gigantic sample sale.

Gigantic summer sample sale in Belladonna

It is sale time at Belladonna Bridal, one of Ireland’s best loved bridal shops located in Centrepoint, Liosbán.

Pinocchio escapes to Comer for more panto pleasure

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The cast and crew of Deenside Pantomime Society have come together once again for their annual pantomime which is renowned for entertaining the masses for the week in Castlecomer.

Dancing at Lughnasa at Town Hall

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TWENTY YEARS after its first staging at the Abbey Theatre, Brian Friel’s classic drama Dancing at Lughnasa comes to the Town Hall next week in an acclaimed new production by Second Age Theatre Company.

In the end the Mayos didn’t say much

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In the early 1990s the Mayos in Galway were getting so uppity that it was decided that action would be taken. It is believed that Seamus Keating, the legendary Galway city and county manager, and a Tipperary man to boot, was never slow in taking the hard decision. Exasperated by the controls exerted by the Mayos, their prestigious positions in all walks of life in the city, their swagger about the place, and the whingeing by the few Galwegians left on his staff at the unfairness of it all, one day he pressed the red button on his desk.

Oliver! at the Town Hall

“PLEASE SIR, can I have some more?” is one of the most famous sentences ever uttered by a fictional charachter and it comes of course from Oliver Twist.

Portrait of the writer as a young man

The great Welsh poet Dylan Thomas (Oct 27 1914 - Nov 9 1953) had absolutely no interest in school. He attended Swansea Grammar where his father, DJ Thomas, was the much feared English teacher. Both the boys and the staff were afraid of his temper, so much so that when Dylan, frequently bored with school, walked out murmuring that he was gong to write ‘bloody poetry’, if he met the headmaster on his way, the head would only nod, and say; “Don’t get caught, will you?”

 

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