From WW1 to the wars within ourselves - St Patrick’s Cathedral remembers
Tree of remembrance has attracted 220,000 people to share their grief since 2014
Tree of remembrance has attracted 220,000 people to share their grief since 2014
‘Creative documentary’ tells of Nazi rocket scientist who played key role in 1969 event
Galway International Arts Festival review: President’s address, and hit show ‘Flight’
Highlights so far? David Mach, Enda Walsh, Sonya Kelly and Museum of the Moon
This year’s festival boasts a full moon, and a garden, theatre, gigs, talks and thoughts
Jane Austen one-women musical is staged with lashings of sharp wit and loving irony
In 1930s rural Ireland, Katie Roche is a young woman with notions. In 2017, this revival of Teresa Deevy’s neglected classic has clearer aims
Jimmy Gralton was infamously deported from his own country for giving his community a space for dancing and revolutionary ideas. There’s more room for the former than the latter in the Abbey’s handsome, musical and nostalgic telling of his tale
Barack Obama granted former intelligence analyst clemency after seven years in jail
Susan McKeown has been exporting Irish culture her whole career. So can her festival of Irish arts become part of the fabric of New York City and beyond?
Two site-specific plays around Moore Street and the GPO are among the most daring of the Rising centenary productions
Fighting Words seeks volunteers, Nuala Ní Chonchúir and Paula McGrath launch new novels, and celebrities and authors read at Dubray Books
John B Keane created the fearsome Bull McCabe in response to a brutal murder. Can the dramatisation of unsolved crimes and miscarriages of justice bring closure?
The group’s latest performance is inspired by Wilde’s 1882 trip to lawless Leadville
‘Staging Intercultural Ireland’ brings together plays and interviews on inward migration
Journalist says attempts still being made to ‘blacken’ whistleblowers
Politicians, journalists and social justice campaigners among petition signatories
Life in the Free State was no jape, according to Ken Loach's affecting, beautifully shot but somewhat underpowered drama
This simple story is carried off with all the zest and grit we expect from Ken Loach
Fiach MacConghail suggests a UN general assembly be convened in Dublin
Family of the late Princess Grace have denounced the film
The main programme this year is dominated by serious, off-centre film-makers including Loach, Leigh and the Dardennes, while a welcome sprinkling of controversy accompanies a film about the late Princess Grace
Review: Douglass, an escaped slave forced to flee the US in 1845, was so moved by the poverty he saw in Famine-era Ireland that he felt he must speak out against the causes of human suffering generally
Signatories supporting call by Afri include former UN assistant secretary general Denis Halliday and ex-Garda Sgt Bernard McCabe
The stage seems densely populated. So how come the dressing rooms are so empty?
A deceptively breezy, carefully constructed story that has a little problem with authority
Help the writer deliver the best play possible. Get the basics right early. Do very little for a successful show, then claim the credit. Welcome to the tricks of the dramaturg’s trade
So says playwright and actor Stefanie Preissner of trying to get your show noticed at the Fringe, which, like negotiating the hilly city itself, can be an uphill slog or a freewheeling delight
The veteran director will take on life story of man deported to US by de Valera government in 1933 because of perceived communist sympathies
An Irishman’s Diary: On the lesser-known journalists who died with Francis Sheehy-Skeffington
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices