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Liverpool Irish Festival 2024

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Britain's largest Irish arts and culture-led festival 17-27 October.

Liverpool Irish Festival 2024

Start Date

End Date

Where

Multiple

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Programme headlines

Internationally acclaimed The Armagh Rhymers feature as part of our annual Family Day at Museum of Liverpool, as well as delivering an adult performance: The Trail of TearsMemory (26 Oct). Linking with our new Irish Famine vigil and official annual Irish Famine memorial (27 Oct) is new song — The Ullaloo (I Cantwell, M Snape, 2024) commissioned specially this year. It will be sung here for the first time by the Liverpool Irish Centre Choir. These events precede an Irish Heritage Trust talk on The Poor Helping the Poor. Several heritage tours are included this year, complemented by films, talks and book launches. Linked directly to ‘departures’ and Liverpool Irish Famine Trail work, our Revealing Trails exhibit offers a poignant look at contemporary views on An Gorta Mór, whilst our (self-guided tour) reflects on Irish migration, settlement  and legacy.

Theatre and books

In theatre, Manchán Magan brings Arán Agus Im/Bread and Butter to the Liverpool Medical Institute, comparing language with baking. Big Telly Productions consider mortality and digital afterlives in Granny Jackson’s Dead, whilst Circus 250’s Am I Irish Yet? challenges assumptions around Irishness.

Those who enjoyed Brave Maeve in 2023 will be thrilled that a second children’s volume will be released this year, with readings at Central Library (Sat 19 Oct) and The Old Library (TBC) and an exhibition at St Helens Library (Mon 7 Oct-Sat 30 Nov 204).

In:Visible Women and exhibits

Work with Fréa’s Renewing Roots project brings two films highlighting Ireland’s care abuses, both to be shown on 2 Nov at The Bluecoat. In Each Other’s Shelter We Survive and Stolen (augmented with a Margo Harkin (director) interview and panel Q&A) each contribute to our In:Visible Women work strand.

In our exhibitions we consider the departure of ash trees from our planet. Disease has swept through ash stocks. Michael ’Muck’ Murphy’s work employs the remaining wood In the Window at the Bluecoat Display Centre, whose garden facing windows peer on to the trunks of two felled ash trees. There will also be an eclectic retrospective of Irish makers on show, in the Display Centre, looking back over our In the Window exhibits from previous years.

Local talent

Celebrating local talent, specifically, we look at music and dance in our Melody Maker and George Ferguson Dance School night (Palm House, Sun 20 Oct) called …and so for now adieu/Slán leat. Referencing the North American wakes of the Irish Famine era, the two companies have collaborated to create a night of music and song that reflect leaving.