Derbhle Crotty: ‘Waking The Feminists is having lasting consequence’
Actor on her electric pandemic projects and returning to Portia Coughlan after 25 years
Actor on her electric pandemic projects and returning to Portia Coughlan after 25 years
Theatre has been resilient, but with the Gate in trouble, the sector is on a knife edge
The key issues driving the vote for change are in lockstep with the problems facing artists
News, views and opinions from Student Hub contributors and Irish Times writers
Review: RTÉ’s new Pulling with my Parents show recognises just how weird and warped modern dating can be
Review: Theatre for One’s six microplays are bracing, intimate-as-a-whisper performances
Plays for an audience of one and a Mick Flannery musical are among this year’s ambitious programme
It's the 10th anniversary of the music festival that isn’t just that but rather more of a multimedia experience
The programme of 200+ acts extends across 13 stages and venues
Theatre, music and literature galore is to be found across the city from the 13th June
The past is always present in the award-winning new play by Dylan Coburn Gray. Told in verse, it’s like a record of the modern city in which the needle jumps around
Livin’ Dred seems dutiful to rather than inspired by Mark Doherty’s comic look at stifling tradition
Emmet Kirwan stars in the revival of Mark Doherty’s 2004 play; Tintown explores how idealism can be corrupted by thirst for blood and illiberalism
Performer on the appeal of Deadwood, rising photographer George Voronov, and why Kindles are the ‘anti-phone’
The show echoes Mark O’Rowe’s dramatic monologues and the spoken word rhythms of Emmet Kirwan’s Dublin Old School
Artists and activists are searching for a national character lost in the boom and forgotten in the recession
‘What am I doing with my life? Is there a way I can be zany and mad in a positive way?’
Clare Dunne’s exuberant debut, and a challenging moral puzzle at the Gate
The best music, theatre, comedy, film and spoken word in the coming year
In Conversation: Emmet Kirwan and Ian Lloyd Anderson
The 2018 event includes productions on shame, fatherhood and an Aer Lingus hijacking
Writer Phillip McMahon and director Rachel O’Riordan on making a play inspired by a hidden community of gay priests
The screen fizzes with the talent of some of Ireland’s best actors. But it’s not enough
The Gate Theatre turned 90 this year. Nobody noticed. Selina Cartmell on a challenging first year in charge
Incredibles 2, Ocean’s 8, Jurassic World and Mamma Mia!: Here We Go Again
Radio review: Sean O’Rourke discusses Trump’s America with Maureen Dowd and Ronan Farrow
Late at the Gate review: gifted writer and performer Emmet Kirwan responds to John Osborne’s ‘Look Back in Anger’
Yasmina Reza’s celebrity warhorse returns, while Emmet Kirwan gives a dissenting, rhyming response to ‘Look Back in Anger’
The ‘significant’ financial burden will have implications beyond cancelled events
Many performances around the country called off and festivals are severely curtailed
Stacey Gregg’s award-winning play about a teenager’s fraught search for identity and Grace Dyas’s new play about digging for truth in the shadow of a Magdalene Laundry
TV adaptation of George RR Martin’s Nightflyers and Wolfwalkers among highly anticipated productions
The Gate: Twenty-one-year-old acting newcomer Paul Mescal has been cast in some of the country’s biggest theatrical productions
Oona Doherty and ‘Heartbreak’ director Dave Tynan collaborate on ‘A Concrete Song’
Kris Nelson is cramming as much as possible into his final Dublin Fringe Festival
Emmet Kirwan and Dave Tynan are shooting a low-budget film in Dublin's crowded city centre
‘Riot’ drenches modern Ireland in colour in a triumph of wild and uplifting theatre
Dublin festival is now seeking a new artistic director and a new general manager
ThisIsPopBaby brings its cabaret, club culture and GAA aerial dance to Vicar Street
It’s grown in size but this festival is one of the most relaxed on hectic summer schedule
The Irish Times will be partnering with the festival on Saturday with a programme of talks and debates
The spoken-word festival is holding its final event next week, but its demise isn’t an entirely sad story
No room for misty-eyed accounts of society in ‘The Creative Quarter’
Patrick Freyne: Who thinks getting married in Ikea is a good idea? This groom-to-be does...
Young Blood: an edgy night of hip hop and poetry in the NCH promises to present the voices of the next generation
Emmet Kirwan’s visceral film exposes humbug of State claims to safeguard vulnerable
The writer’s latest short film, developed from a stage show, follows one girl’s journey through young motherhood
Culture review 2016: The familiar delivered fresh revelations, while ghosts haunted many of our stages
Creative professionals are cautiously optimistic but wary of a branding exercise
From Panti Bliss and Hot Brown Honey to The Vaudevillians, here’s what you might pick
The Drop Everything cultural biennial will soon take over Inisheer with art, music, and a specially built sauna
TG4's three-part time-travel comedy depicted an era when mustachioed men were less likely to own yoga mats or live to old age - but just as likely to live with their parents
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