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Archives for February 2011

Lyric Theatre Belfast appoints first playwright-in-residence

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:00 UK time, Monday, 28 February 2011

The Lyric Theatre has just announced that it's first ever Playwright-in-residence is . He's due to start the year long post in May when the new building opens.

It's a really exciting appointment.ÌýI'm a big fan of David's work, especially.Ìý"Arguments for Terrorism" and "Everything Between Us". He's also a really strong, local voice that mixes contemporary subjects with wit and more than a hint of sinister subtext.

It's a real shot in the arm for the Lyric's Artistic Director Richard Croxford. The Lyric is a producing theatre, but there have been rumblings in the past as to why the London and Dublin stages see premiers of plays by Northern Irish writers first.

There will be a lot of interest in David's tenure and a new era of confidence in staging new writing from here.Ìý

Tangled and Mrs Brown's Boys make me laugh and cry

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:08 UK time, Tuesday, 22 February 2011

It's funny what makes you laugh and what makes you cry. I saw "Tangled" recently and sobbed towards the end. It was the momentÌýthe handsome young cartoon man sacrificed his life for the impossibly prettyÌýPrincess Rapunzel.ÌýOf course, the happy ending was just a few frames away, and he would live, but I don't know what happened to me but I wept. NotÌýa wee wipe away trickle of a tear but a "where is that tissue, blow my nose loudly" kind of cry. The 6 year olds I was chaperoning laughed at me!

Yesterday I cried again. This time with laughter. I was sitting at my desk watching a preview dvd of "Mrs Brown's Boys", the age old stage comedy by Dublin comedian Brendan O'Carroll, whichÌýgot its Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú network premier last night. I knowÌýthe jokes are so old there are hairs on them as my dadÌýused to say about jokes but it made me laugh. Out loud, in an open plan office, to the bemusement of colleagues. One watched it last night andÌýsaid she didn't get what IÌýthought was funny. I hate when people do thatÌý. You begin to doubt whether you know what's actually funny. Then I read the reviews,Ìýmixed to say the least.ÌýOne Facebooker said to me that it "belongs in the 'Fifties on the stage of the old Gaiety Theatre or some-such. Dreadful."Ìý For me it wasÌýpure panto,Ìýpratfalls, man in a dress, and except for the liberal use ofÌýthe F word, it could have been ChristmasÌýin a church hall in rural Ireland. I'm not sure it's going to be Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú's answer to "Fr. Ted" though. Ìý

Brendan O'CarrollÌýisn't Dermot Morgan.ÌýBut what I liked was the knowing look in O'Carroll's eye. As though he was saying, I know you think this isÌýjust Oirish, paddy whackery stuff , feck it, but I'm theÌýone with theÌýbig tv gig. And I'm the one laughing all the way to the bank.

Shona McCarthy is the Chief Exec of the City of Culture 2013

Marie-Louise Muir | 12:52 UK time, Tuesday, 22 February 2011

TheÌýCulture Company 2013 Limited has announced that it has appointed Shona McCarthy as its Chief Executive.ÌýÌýSo, after months of wondering who will head up the UK City of Culture in 2 years time,Ìýwe now have a name. ÌýÌý
Shona is currently Director of the British Council in Northern Ireland.ÌýI remember her, from over twenty years ago,Ìýwhen she was the Director of theÌýFoyle Film Festival.Ìý
So she knows the landscape of the city. She also knows, crucially, what it's like to not win a city of culture bid.ÌýShe led a consultation exercise called "Imagine Belfast" as it campaigned to be European Capital of Culture 2008.ÌýBelfast lost that bid. Derry~Londonderry has won this title.ÌýLet's see what Shona will "imagine".

23% Cuts in the arts budget in Northern Ireland

Marie-Louise Muir | 17:22 UK time, Tuesday, 8 February 2011

I hosted an Arts Extra Cuts Special last week. 24 minutes of passionate debate, which didn't stop after we went off air. Another 30 minutes in the studio of whatÌý23% public spending cuts to the arts budget is going to mean to artists working here.ÌýTheir plans, ambitions, staff, productions.ÌýA slow erosion of output over 4 years. A proposed £4.2 million reduction.

Before we went on air, I used the to askÌýwhat valueÌýwe put on arts and culture here?ÌýAlan McKee a Belfast based writer and performer posted this onÌýour page :-"We have to rid ourselves of the idea that arts funding is some sort of begging bowl. Every pound invested in the arts generates three pounds in the wider economy. Only in Northern Ireland do we have to continually rehearse this argument, this is accepted in the rest of Europe".

Consultation on the NI executive's draft budget for 2011-2015 closes tomorrow, the 9th February. Then there isÌýa weekÌýto respond.ÌýÌýThe Arts Council of Northern Ireland is spearheading a high profile "Fair Deal for the Arts"ÌýcampaignÌý:- by letter, petition and Facebook.Ìý

They say a week is a long time in politics as we wait for the NI Executive's decisions on the 16th February. A week isÌýalso a long time for the people who work in the creative industries here to find out what their future holds. As we head into the Cultural Olympiad 2012 and the UK City of Culture in Derry in 2013, some might say how can reputations be maintained in the face of the most swingeing cuts in a generation?

Nosferatu...not for the faint hearted!

Marie-Louise Muir | 16:58 UK time, Monday, 7 February 2011

Ìý

Nosferatu

Ìý

So I got a real sense, earlier today, Ìýof how powerful music can be! I'm in the front row of an empty Ulster Hall. In front of meÌýa big screen. OnÌýitÌýa still of theÌýcreepy looking vampire from the 1922 horror movie Nosferatu.ÌýAnd behind the screen, various organ soundsÌýcoming from the Mulholland Grand Organ.ÌýSome are soft and menacing, shivers down your spine sounds; others are, "stops pulled out" kind of stifle your screams, nervous giggle, grab the person beside you! Not that I did, as the person beside meÌýwas a complete stranger.ÌýMartin Baker, the Master of Music at Westminster Cathedral. He wasÌýcallingÌýout various instructions to the person behind the screen, who, it turned out, was Belfast City Organist Colm Carey.Ìý

Tomorrow night, MartinÌýwill be behind that screen for a special screening of Murnau’s classic 1922 Vampire movie - considered by many the first and greatest adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, even if Stoker's estate wasn't best pleased!

Anyhow,Ìýwhile the film is played, Martin will be playingÌýa live, improvised score.ÌýÌýAnd he's still not sure what notes he'll be playing. This is a man who takes his improv very seriously. It's a respite from his day job. Reading Martin's biog, he's a pretty significantÌýfigure in English Roman Catholic liturgical music. He's Ìýcommissioned and directed the Cathedral choir in the premieres of a number of new choral masses, including works by composers such as James MacMillan, Peter Maxwell Davies, Judith Bingham and John Tavener.ÌýÌýAnd he's hung out, so to speak, with the current Pope in the Sistine Chapel.ÌýÌý

As he calls out to Colm, behind the screen, with variousÌýorganists'Ìýtechnical inspeak,ÌýMartinÌýseems to know whatÌýhe's looking for. He's played the MulhollandÌýbefore.ÌýBack in the 90'sÌýbut this will be his first time since then andÌýsince it was refurbished. At one point, in response to a particularly "let it rip" sound from Colm, he says "that sounds exactly like Notre Dame".ÌýButÌýnow Charles Laughton'sÌýHunchback of Notre Dame and Max Schrek's Nosferatu are sharing space in my head. For someone who couldn't watch Dr. Who in the 70's, this is very scary stuff indeed.

Ìý

Breakfast, the most important meal of the day!

Marie-Louise Muir | 18:09 UK time, Tuesday, 1 February 2011

Before I interview most people in studio, the radio engineer will always ask forÌýa "bit of level".Ìý That's industry speak for "stopÌýtalking and get the guest toÌýtalkÌýso I can adjust the volume".

So I always ask people what they had for breakfast. It's a great icebreaker, and quite revealing. It varies from nothing to a full fry. A memorable one once was 2 weetabix and 2 cigarettes.Ìý

Today Cahir from Derry band "Fighting with Wire" hadÌýwholegrain cereal with banana, very rock n roll! Cellist Julian Lloyd Webber had Special KÌý;ÌýDerek Keilty whose book "Will Gallows & the Snake Bellied Troll" has been chosen for the Richard & Judy'sÌýChildren's Book Club puts uncooked porridge oats into a bowl, thenÌýcornflakes on top; and Mike Ward, tv critic with the Daily Star makes his own muesli! What happened to the days of whiskey chasers and cold baked beans eaten out of the saucepan? Or the story of one very famous Northern Ireland pop star who saidÌýhe had porridge and red wine once for his breakfast in a Dublin hotel?

So what did you have for breakfast? It's only for level!

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