New Comedy: Lisa Joyce “Back to School”

Lisa Joyce is an up-and-coming Irish comedian trying to make it on the comedy scene and with her comedy CV to date it seems she isn’t doing too badly at all! With comments like “A rising star” and “brilliant” under your belt along with a couple of prestigious awards you know you’re doing a good job. Lisa bounces, quite literally, onto a stage near you soon (if you live in Dublin or Galway!) with her new show “Back to School” in which she promises to bring you back to the classroom except this time you’re allowed to eat sweets supplied by Happy Pills! Go along to the gigs! Laughs guaranteed! Details oare as follows: Galway Town Hall Theatre (Studio), Courthouse Square, Galway 830pm (doors open 8.00) August 19th tickets: www.tht.ie Dublin The Twisted Pepper, Abbey Street, Dublin 1 8.30pm Show (doors open 8.00) 3rd September tickets: www.thetwistedpepper.com Tickets for both … There’s more

Theatre News: Autumn Run for JB Keane’s ‘Big Maggie’

Druid have announced that John B Keane’s ‘Big Maggie’ is set for the stage once more with a run in Galway’s Town Hall Theatre (November 11th - 19th) and Dublin’s Gaiety (November 21st - 26th). Culch.ie have announced that they’re rather delighted by the news! One of Keane’s best, it deals with all the go-to themes of Irish theatre: money, land, and in this case some secretive sex and black humour as title character Maggie, recently-widowed, becomes the steadfast matriarch in the face of her squabbling, inheritance-hungry children. If you’ve never seen or read Big Maggie then we recommend making it your business this time around. It’s ten years since Garry Hynes directed it for The Abbey and it was commended for how well it was brought into the modern day at the time (it originally premiered in 1969). Hynes is once more in the director’s chair for this production … There’s more

Review: The New Electric Ballroom, Town Hall Theatre, Galway

The first thing that strikes you about Druid’s New Electric Ballroom is the shockingly spare stage design. The lavish promises of the play’s title are dispelled immediately upon seeing the set. Immense grey walls wrap a raked floor and bare furniture. And with that misconception firmly in place, the gaudy colours of hope, regret and habit splash across the stage in Walsh’s absurdist tragedy. The setting, while indisputably Irish, is not any physical place, but that recognisable hinterland that borders Beckett and Ionesco, a place where ideas wear the flesh of people. 3 female siblings are trapped in an epic regurgitation of their memories of the New Electric Ballroom. For the youngest, her incarceration in these memories is vicarious- she is so familiar with the stories of a place she’s never been she prompts the elder sisters in their faltering and reluctant retellings of the dashed hopes of romance. It … There’s more