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Spring 2023 Issue

Hibernia: Politics

By Tom Deignan
Spring 2023

April 20, 2023 by Leave a Comment

Adams and Clinton at Cooper Union Former U.S.  president Bill Clinton and Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams both spoke at an event in early April celebrating the historic achievements of the Good Friday Agreement, which was signed 25 years ago. “A return to British direct rule is not an option,” Adams said at the event, held at The Great Hall of Manhattan’s Cooper Union … [Read more...] about Hibernia: Politics

Hibernia: Arts

By IA Staff
Spring 2023

April 20, 2023 by 1 Comment

An Cailín CiúinAn Cailín Ciúin/The Quiet Girl marks a watershed moment for Irish-language cinema. Catherine Clinch is the quiet girl of the title and stars in virtually every scene.  The 12-year-old came to the film via audition tapes sent in by pupils from Ireland’s Gaelscoileanna. Gaelscoileanna are schools where children are taught through the medium of Irish.  … [Read more...] about Hibernia: Arts

Hibernia: Irish America

By IA Staff
Spring 2023

April 20, 2023 by Leave a Comment

Parade a Good Time for Good CauseGood weather meant a good time for a good cause at the 2023 St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Manhattan. Over two million people were estimated to have attended the annual march along Fifth Avenue, that was part of a broader Irish American effort to raise awareness of – and money for – hunger and food insecurity this year. Leading the way was parade … [Read more...] about Hibernia: Irish America

Hibernia: Irish Eye on Hollywood

By Tom Deignan
Spring 2023

April 20, 2023 by 1 Comment

Oscars MomentsThere was good, bad and ugly news for the Irish at the Academy Awards back in March. Of the 20 nominees in the Oscar acting categories, five were Irish – which computes to 25 percent, an amazing statistic for a nation whose entire population is not much bigger than that of the City of Los Angeles. The good news: there were two Irish winners at the Oscars, Ross … [Read more...] about Hibernia: Irish Eye on Hollywood

A Sacred Place: Skellig Michael

Photos and article by Chris Ryan
Spring 2023

April 20, 2023 by 3 Comments

Photographer and writer Chris Ryan visited the larger of the two Skellig Islands off the Iveragh Peninsula in County Kerry, where an early-medieval monastery survives at the edge of the material world.Start at the Dublin offices of Google or Facebook, drive to the southwest tip of Ireland, hop a boat, journey seven miles out to sea, and climb 600 steps clinging to the edge of a … [Read more...] about A Sacred Place: Skellig Michael

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May 13, 1842

The composer Arthur Sullivan was born in London to an Irish Italian mother, Mary Coughan and Irish-born father, Thomas Sullivan. Sullivan composed his first anthem at age 8. At age 14, he was awarded a scholarship to the London Academy of Music. Sullivan began a collaboration with W.S. Gilbert to create the comic opera “Thespis.” He would work with Giblert on fourteen light operas in all, including The Pirates of Penzance and the Mikado. Sullivan’s “Irish Symphony” was first performed in March 1866. He wrote it on holiday in Ireland: “As I was jolting home through wind and rain… in an open jaunting-car, the whole first movement of a symphony came into my head with a real Irish flavor about it – besides scraps of the other movements.”

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