There's something for everyone in Catherine Foley's selective guide to the season of summer schools and festivals which kicks off this month
MAY
Bealtaine Festival, May 1-31
Celebrating creativity in older age, this festival
takes place at venues across the country with a variety of groups,
such as the US-based Liz Lerman Dance Exchange (which will be at
Dunamaise Arts Centre, Portlaoise, and at Source Arts Centre,
Thurles) and Magic Me, a UK-based company set up in 1989 to run
intercultural, intergenerational projects, which will be in Co
Sligo. Events include picnics, exhibitions, drama, song and
storytelling. Tel: 01-8057704
www.bealtaine.com
International Dublin Gay Theatre Festival, May 5-18
Now in its fifth year, this festival presents work
from four continents, with 34 Irish, European and world premieres
of drama, music, opera and cabaret. There are plays that deal with
race, religion, the Iraq war and the Holocaust, and with historical
figures such as Truman Capote and Countess Markiewicz. The cabaret
element includes music at the Cobalt Cafe on North Great George's
Street and a transsexual drag show from Adelaide. A free seminar
will be held in Trinity College on Sunday, May 11, at noon. Tel:
01-6778511
www.gaytheatre.ie
The Trevor/Bowen Summer School 2008, May 23-25
Organised by the Mitchelstown Literary Society, this
festival will have speakers including Irish Times columnist Fintan
O'Toole, who will discuss William Trevor, and Martin Mansergh, who
will talk about Elizabeth Bowen. Other guests include Prof Maurice
Harmon, Louis Redmond and Irish Times literary editor Caroline
Walsh, who will be speaking about her mother, the short-story
writer, Mary Lavin.
Tel: 025-85972 or 086-2420411
www.mitchelstownliterarysummerschool.com
Féile na Tuaithe, May 24-25
Turlough Park is the setting for this National
Museum of Ireland (Country Life) festival in Castlebar, Co Mayo,
now in its fourth year. It offers craft demonstrations,
storytelling events, traditional games, music and a craft and food
market. More than 12,000 visitors attended last year. A free
shuttle bus will run between Castlebar and Ballyvary. Tel:
094-9031773
www.museum.ie
Writers' Week, May 28-June 1
Listowel, Co Kerry, is now gearing up for its 38th
year of literary exuberance. This "Kerry week" will be opened by
Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney. It boasts 14 workshops (all fully
booked before the end of April), a range of readings, signings,
screenings, exhibitions, concerts, broadcasts, theatre, lectures
and tours. Literary giants lined up to attend include Anne Enright,
John Banville, Per Petterson, Hugo Hamilton, Pat Boran, John F
Deane, Lloyd Jones and Diarmaid Ferriter. Tel: 068-21074
www.writersweek.ie
Smithwick's Cat Laughs Comedy Festival, May 28-June 2
Kilkenny will welcome 61 comedians to its streets
for the 15th year of the Cat Laughs. Irish favourites Tommy
Tiernan, Jason Byrne, Colin Murphy and Neil Delamere are all booked
in, while Lee Mack and Arj Barker from the US, Shappi Khorsandi
from Iran, Craig Hill from Scotland, Tom Stade from Canada and Andy
Parsons from England are all returning to perform. Up to 25,000
visitors are expected at 13 venues. Tel: 056-7763837
www.smithwickscatlaughs.com
Docklands Maritime Festival, May 30-June 2
Last year, this open-air festival in the heart of
Dublin attracted a record 70,000 visitors. One of the best features
is likely to be the great fleet of Tall Ships, including the Lord
Nelson, Kaskelot, Atlantis and Artemis, as well as two Irish
vessels, the Jeanie Johnston and the Asgard, which will be open to
the public. There will be an open market, street entertainment from
Spraoi, a River Liffey taxi service and plenty of music. The
weekend is the first in a programme of events under the Down at the
Docklands banner (city residents can also look forward to the We
Are Here 3.0 Festival from June 23 to July 5) and the Analog
Festival from July 18 to 20.
www.dublindocklands.ie
JUNE
Éigse Carlow Festival, June 7-15
The 29th Éigse features a number of
collaborations between groups and individuals from different
disciplines, such as choreographer Liz Roche and composer
Micheál Ó Súilleabháin, who have created a new
dance piece, and Altan and the Carlow Young Artists Choir, who will
stage a concert in Carlow Cathedral. Sean-nós singer Iarla
Ó Lionaird and fiddle player Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh
will also appear. Tel: 0818-205205
www.eigsecarlow.ie
Spréacha, June 9-15
Fingal's international arts festival for children in
Blanchardstown, Dublin 15, welcomes theatre companies from Denmark,
Scotland, Canada, the Netherlands and the US. The fifth
family-centred festival will also feature circus acts, visual art
and storytelling. Tel: 01-8852622
www.draiocht.ie
Bloomsday Festival 2008, June 9-16
This will take place in Dublin city centre, Dún
Laoghaire and Dundrum, and includes the Bloomsday breakfast and
various outdoor readings across the city. Senator David Norris will
perform his one-man show at the Pavilion Theatre, Dún
Laoghaire. The James Joyce Centre will host Bloomsday teas. The
Mill Theatre in Dundrum is presenting a musical reading of Himself
and Nora, a Broadway musical. Tel: 01-8788547
www.jamesjoyce.ie
Dublin Writers Festival, June 11-15
Forty writers are due to take part in what has
become an established element of the city's cultural calendar under
the guardianship of Dublin City Council's Jack Gilligan. This
year's events include a debate on Irish values with Roy Foster,
Ivana Bacik, Alan Gilsenan and David McWilliams, a conversation
between crime writer Ian Rankin and novelist and screenwriter Colin
Bateman, and Tony and Bafta award-winning playwright Tom Stoppard
talking about his career. A special event, Laying the Troubles to
Rest, will look beyond the politics in Northern Ireland with Susan
McKay, Catherine McCartney, Carlo Gébler and Patrick Maguire.
There will be a retrospective look at the career of JP Donleavy,
author of The Ginger Man. Tel: 01-2227850
www.dublinwritersfestival.com
Cork Midsummer Festival, June 15-July 5
Cork City promises 21 days of "music and mayhem", as
well as a new production from Corcadorca Theatre Company of the
Eugene O'Neill play, The Hairy Ape, the Abbey's production of Conor
McPherson's play, The Seafarer, and the theatrical carnival,
Sensazione, which will also perform at the Earagail Arts and
Clonmel Junction festivals this year. The German rock band, Faust,
will make its first appearance in Ireland at the festival's
Spiegeltent and Camille O'Sullivan plans to sing her way into
festival-goers' hearts. Tel: 021-4215131
www.corkfestival.com
Pipeworks Festival, June 20-29
This international organ competition, running since
1980, will include masterclasses and recitals with Daniel Roth,
David Higgs, Hans Fagius and Margareta Hurholz. Tel: 085-7868860
www.pipeworksfestival.com
Darklight Festival, June 26-29
Held at a number of Dublin venues, this event
celebrates cutting-edge film, animation, art and technology, with
screenings, seminars and workshops, including a special focus on
award-winning British film-making outfit Warp Films, as well as a
retrospective of the work of Irish artist and film-maker Paddy
Jolley. Other features include Straylight, a visual art trail, the
debut of the Irish Film Board's Virtual Cinema shorts and a series
of events devoted to computer gaming past, present and future. Tel:
01-6709017
www.darklight.ie
Byrne Perry Summer School, June 27-29
Gorey, Co Wexford, is the venue for this school, now
in its 13th year, and the theme this time is: From "Murder Machine"
to Modern Education? The opening address will be delivered by Lord
Paul Bew, professor of politics at Queen's University Belfast.
Senator Joe O'Toole will give the Gordon Wilson Memorial Lecture.
Other speakers include Danny O'Hare, former president of DCU; Prof
John Coolahan; Ciaran Sugrue, of the University of Cambridge: and
Caitríona Ruane MLA, Minister for Education in Northern
Ireland. Tel: 053-9421248
www.byrneperry.ie
JULY
Cairde Summer Festival, July 2-12
Sligo town will welcome artists such as Indian slide
guitarist Debashish Bhattacharya and Moroccan desert troupe Groupe
Lakrab to Cairde this year, and will host a series of Polish
theatre readings, New Frontiers. The 10-day festival includes
theatre, art, children's and family events and street
entertainment.
Tel: 071-9170431
www.cairdefestival.com
Clonmel Junction Festival, July 5-13
Now in its eighth year, the festival will include
shows from the US, Belgium, Switzerland, the UK and Ireland.
Malawian band Mind Body and Soul, winner of the east African-based
2007 Music Crossroads Festival, is coming to perform with Maslow, a
young rock band from Clonmel. The line-up also includes the
prize-winning theatrical carnival, Sensazione; a new show by
choreographer David Bolger; and folk bands from Bulgaria, Romania,
Italy, Spain, Scotland and Norway. Tel: 052-29339
www.junctionfestival.com
Willie Clancy Summer School, July 5-13
Held annually in Miltown Malbay, Co Clare, in memory
of local piper Willie Clancy, this school has become a mecca for
traditional musicians and singers, attracting 1,500 students last
year to its 150 workshops. Tel: 065-7084281 or 065-7084148
West Cork Literary Festival, July 6-12
Bantry, Co Cork, is the setting for this year's
festival, which celebrates its tenth anniversary with readings,
workshops and seminars. It has invited 10 visiting authors - Joseph
O'Connor, Paul Durcan, Colum McCann, Dervla Murphy, Jennifer
Johnston, Carlo Gébler, John Waters, Arthur Mathews, Deirdre
Purcell and Michael Collins - to reveal who their favourite authors
are and the best book they've read. Tel: 027-61157
www.westcorkliteraryfestival.ie
Dublin James Joyce Summer School, July 6-12
Under the directorship of Prof Anne Fogarty, and run
by UCD in partnership with Boston College, the James Joyce Centre
and the National Library of Ireland, this year's summer school will
include lectures on Joyce and Roger Casement from Maria McGarrity,
on Joyce and the Spectral from Luke Gibbons, and on Hollywood and
Joyce from Morris Beja. Taking place in Newman House, it will be
opened by
Irish Timesliterary editor Caroline Walsh. Tel:
01-7168159
www.joycesummerschool.ie
Galway Film Fleadh, July 8-13
The 20th fleadh will feature a selection of
documentaries and feature films from around the world. There will
be masterclasses for directors, screenwriters and actors, and
director Ted Braun will present his film, Darfur Now. Other
features include Stanislow Mucha's Nadzieja and Andrei Wadja's
Kathyn (both Polish). New Zealand films will include the Sundance
Audience Award-winning No 2, directed by Toa Fraser, and Out of the
Blue b, directed by Robert Sarkies. The recipient of the Irish
tribute this year will be Peter O'Toole. Tel: 091-751655 or
085-7150673
www.galwayfilmfleadh.com
Dublin Circus Festival, July 10-13
This is an outdoor explosion of street theatre and
circus performances, which takes place in Meeting House Square and
other locations in Dublin's Temple Bar. Tel: 01-6772255
www.templebar.ie
Earagail Arts Festival, July 10-20
This takes place in venues throughout Co Donegal and
celebrates its 20th year by premiering four new works: a specially
commissioned piece of music from Dónal Lunny; a collaboration
between local artists' group An Cosán Glas and Portuguese
artist Victor Gama to create a new public interactive sound
sculpture on Magheroarty Beach in Gortahork; a retrospective
exhibition on the founder of Op Art, Victor Vasarely, at the
Regional Cultural Centre in Letterkenny; and a new production of
Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. The festival will host
more than 100 events in 15 different locations , including concerts
by traditional musicians as well as post-punk performers The Fall
and British singer/songwriter Richard Hawley. Tel:
074-9168800
www.eaf.ie
Kinsale Arts Week, July 12-20
Festivities in Kinsale will kick off with Ska Cubana
and El Guayabero from Cuba, playing on the battlements of the
impressive Charles Fort, while Elkie Brooks will give her only
concert in Ireland. Also, the Scottish artist Anya Gallaccio is set
to create a site-specific installation at Charles Fort. Tel:
021-4700010
www.kinsaleartsweek.com
MacGill Summer School, July 13-19
Playwright Brian Friel will be celebrated at
Glenties, Co Donegal, in A Feast of Friel, which will include
performances of some of his plays, as well as readings, lectures
and workshops. Established by Joe Mulholland some 28 years ago to
celebrate writer Patrick MacGill, the school can attract up to 800
visitors to one of its sessions. Tel: 074-9551103
www.macgillsummerschool.com
Galway Arts Festival, July 14-27
The City of the Tribes is about to embark on its
31st year as the location for one of the countrys biggest and most
exciting festivals. There will be a big top on the banks of the
Corrib, opening with a show from Australian company Circa, called
By the Light of the Stars that are No Longer. There will be a new
play from Enda Walsh, called The New Electric Ballroom, at Druid
Theatre; music from Malawian group Tinariwen, who headlined at
Glastonbury last year; the return of Dutch company Close-Act, with
a new show called Rebels. The Macnas parade, with a cast of 500,
will take place at night this year. Tel: 091-509700
www.galwayartsfestival.com
JFK Dunbrody Festival, July 18-20
Now in its eighth year, this is a weekend of live
open-air music in New Ross, Co Wexford, with markets, street
theatre, mime artists and circus acts. Sharon Shannon, Mundy, the
Furey Brothers and Davey Arthur are among the musicians booked to
play. Tel: 051-425239
www.jfkdunbrodyfestival.org
Éigse Eatharlaí, July 25-27
Now in its third year, the traditional music
festival's focus shifts to sean-nós singing, sean-nós
dancing and the Irish language. The proceedings will all be
conducted in Irish, with concerts taking place at Tig Roy and
workshops at Lisvernane in the Glen of Aherlow near Galbally, Co
Tipperary. Participants include flautist Catherine McEvoy, harpist
Cormac de Barra, fiddle player Máire Breathnach, singer
Seosaimhín Ní Bheaglaoich and sean-nós dancer
Máire Aine Ní Iarnáin. Tel: 062-37032 or
087-2572281
www.eatharlai.ie
Boyle Arts Festival, July 25-Aug 1
Works by more than 100 artists, including Basil
Blackshaw, John Shinnors, Seán McSweeney, William Crozier and
Felim Egan will feature in this year's visual arts programme. There
will also be music, dance, comedy, drama and literature, with Phil
Coulter, Regina Nathan, Sandra Oman, the Drawing Room Opera
Company, writers John Banville and Bernard MacLaverty, and comedian
Kevin McAleer. Tel: 071-9663085
www.boylearts.com
Yeats International Summer School, July 26-Aug 8
The 49th school to be held in Sligo has programmed
16 seminars, dealing with subjects such as the poet's modernity,
his influence and his muses. Eighteen academic speakers from around
the world, including the universities of Kentucky, Genoa and
Victoria (in British Columbia), will take part. The poetry workshop
over the first weekend will be led by Rita Ann Higgins, and Yeats's
play, The Dreaming of the Bones, will feature at the drama
workshop. Tel: 071-9142693
www.yeats-sligo.com
John Hewitt International Summer School, July 28-Aug 1
Let There be no Walls is the theme of this year's
school, which is celebrating its 21st anniversary. Taking place at
the Market Place Theatre in Armagh, the school is held in honour of
the eponymous Northern Irish poet, born in 1907. Participants
include Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney, Prof George Watson and
Senator Maurice Hayes, as well as comedian Kevin McAleer and
traditional musicians Martin Hayes and Dennis Cahill. Conor
O'Clery, formerly of The Irish Times, will give a talk called The
Paradox of Walls, while the title of Prof Freddie Roken's address
is The Violin Player at the Road Block. Tel: 048-90321462
www.johnhewittsociety.org
World Fleadh, July 31-August 4
Musicians including Mundy, Sharon Shannon, Shane
MacGowan and Tommy Fleming will make their way year to Portlaoise
this year for the third World Fleadh. As well as its session trail,
with up to 15 stops along the route, and a nightly giant
céilí in the specially constructed dome, there will also
be a strong focus on family entertainment this year, with a world
food and craft fair, theatre, a hot air balloon, puppets, a circus,
a busking competition and art exhibitions. Tel: 057-8681155
www.theworldfleadh.com
AUGUST
Spraoi, Aug 1-3
Waterford's annual festival of street theatre brings
carnival spectacle and colour to the Viking city. This year's
line-up includes the UK-based Gandinis as well as the Flying
Buttresses. Tel: 051-841808
www.spraoi.com
Kilkenny Arts Festival, Aug 8-17
Now entering its 35th year, the festival has John
Williams, the American composer, conductor and pianist, as one of
its headline acts. Williams composed the film scores for Jaws, Star
Wars, Superman, Jurassic Park and Harry Potter, among many others,
and is a five-time Oscar winner with 45 Academy Award nominations.
Also at the festival will be John Anderson, the Pulitzer
Prize-winning author, and Jamie Atkins with his touring children's
theatre, Circus Incognitus. Opening night will have its climax in
the grounds of Kilkenny Castle. Tel 056-7763663
www.kilkennyarts.ie
Parnell Summer School, Aug 10-15
Education will be the subject of debate at Avondale
House, Rathdrum, Co Wicklow, this summer, under the academic
direction of Prof Mike Cronin, of Boston College, Dublin, with
speakers including Caitríona Ruane MLA, Northern Ireland's
Minister for Education, Conor Lenihan TD, and Philip Watt, director
of the National Consultative Committee on Racism and
Interculturalism. Tel: 01-2852113
www.parnellsociety.com
Merriman Summer School, Aug 17-23
This will be the 41st gathering of the Merriman
school. It will be held in Ennis, Co Clare this year, with a
special focus on the heritage of Clare and Thomond. Contemporary
social and cultural developments will also be addressed. The summer
school is run mainly in English but includes an Irish-language
strand and the option of "brush up your Irish" workshops. The
school features music, set dancing, daily poetry readings and
outings. Tel: 086-3820671
www.merriman.ie
Summer School of Early Irish Harp/ Scoil na
gCláirseach, Aug 20-26
Now in its sixth year, the school's participating
visitors will include Ann Heymann of the US, as well as historical
harpist Andrew Lawrence-King of Guernsey, and Ireland's harp
specialist (and the school's director), Siobhán Armstrong.
Harpists come from all over the US, Europe and Japan to learn
through intensive tuition, lectures, informal talks and concerts.
There will also be visits to museums to view ancient instruments,
and a chance to study playing techniques from medieval times to the
18th century. Tel: 051-646286 or 091-443042
www.irishharpschool.com
The Humbert Summer School, Aug 21-24
Delegates will convene at Ballina, Killala, Lacken
and Kilcummin in Co Mayo for the school's 22nd year. Themes will
include the challenges for Brian Cowen's Government, Bertie Ahern:
Tried by Media?, Post-Lisbon Europe, and the Peace Process in the
North 40 years after the Civil Rights Movement and 10 after the
Good Friday Agreement. Speakers will include the school's hononary
president and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, John Hume, and Cardinal
Seán Brady. Tel: 087-2418461
Festival of World Cultures, Aug 22-24
For the eighth time, Dún Laoghaire will become
the mecca for a cross-section of exciting musicians from around the
world. This year's line-up includes the headlining Sa Ding Ding,
who has been described as the Chinese Björk. The 24-year-old
singer fuses Chinese folk melodies with the influence of trip-hop.
Hailing from a Mongolian and Chinese background, her original songs
and scores feature traditional Chinese instruments, including
bamboo flutes and the stringed zheng. Also due to play at the
festival is the New York-based Balkan Beat Box collective, whose
blend of world music rhythms comes from an array of musical
influences: Mediterranean modern dance, Middle Eastern gnawa
grooves, funky folk rhythms and the raucous rhymes of Brooklyn
rap.
www.festivalofworldcultures.com
Desmond Greaves Summer School, Aug 29-31
To be held at the Pearse Centre in Dublin 2, the
theme for the 20th school is the Civil Rights Movement in Northern
Ireland. Tel: 087-2308330
www.greavesschool.com