Who we are

Cork Cultural Companions is an Age & Opportunity Arts initiative, delivered by Muintir Cork and supported by the HSE and Cork City and County Councils. Cork Cultural Companions has local networks of members who attend events together regularly in Cork City, Mallow, Bantry and East Cork.

Thursday, 19 December 2024

Little Gem Cork Arts Theatre 15th to 18th January

 


Wednesday 15th – Saturday 18th January 2025 @ 8pm

Little Gem by Elaine Murphy

Directed by Philip O’ Byrne
with: Emma  NĂ­ Bhroin, Aoife O Keeffe, Margaret Moore, Angela Lehane & Shirley Madden.

One year can bring extraordinary change; just ask Amber, Lorraine and Kay, three generations of North Dublin women who find themselves suddenly facing the unexpected. Young Amber’s case of indigestion – or perhaps it’s a brutal hangover? – grows into something more, while her mother Lorraine discovers salsa dancing after an incident at work leads to therapist-suggested self-care and her first real date in over 20 years. Grandmother Kay, “on the wrong side of sixty, but not dead yet,” struggles to adjust to life as a caretaker for her beloved Gem and a visit to Ann Somers doesn’t really help the situation. As the year moves forward, the women confront their individual challenges with courage and humour, finding strength in one another and discovering the beauty and complexity of family.

Hilarious and poignant, Irish playwright Elaine Murphy’s debut play, Little Gem, premiered at the Dublin Fringe Festival in 2008 where it won the Fishamble New Writing Award. It then transferred to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, where it won the Carol Tambor Best of Edinburgh Award, the festival’s top prize. Little Gem made its acclaimed US premiere in January of 2010 at the Flea Theatre. Now Cork based Hunters Moon Theatre brings Little Gem directed by Philip O’ Byrne to Cork Arts Theatre for 4 nights in Mid January.

About Hunters Moon Theatre
Founded in 2018 by Philip O Byrne, Cork based Hunter’s Moon Theatre has been promoting and performing the classic Irish plays throughout Munster. These venues include The Inkwell Theatre, Miinane Bridge, Carnegie Arts Centre Kenmare, St. Johns Theatre Listowel, Ringaskiddy Community Centre and The Everyman Theatre.

Tickets: €18
*Booking fees apply.

Cork Arts Theatre

Carducci Quartet: Spring String Quartet Series 2025






1pm on 18th Jan 2025 at Triskel Christchurch (12.45pm Doors)

Featuring two Cork musicians, the Carducci Quartet is one of the longest established and most admired string quartets on the world stage. They return for their latest tour of Ireland with a beautiful programme including one of Shostakovich’s finest string quartets, marking the 50th anniversary of his death in 1975.


Haydn’s D major Quartet Op.20 No.4 is one of earliest of his many string quartet masterpieces. From the exploratory, expansive opening movement, through a poignant slow movement, a robust Minuet alla zingarese (gypsy-style) to the virtuosic finale, this extraordinary music is engaging and entertaining throughout.


Donnacha Dennehy’s Stamp combines elements of related 14th century dances, the Italian Saltarello and the French Estampie, both of which feature complex, wrong-footing rhythms which Donnacha exploits with clear delight.


Shostakovich’s wonderful ninth string quartet was written in 1964 and is full of vivid characterization, expression and contrast. The stark and cataclysmic vision of the fourth movement leads to an extraordinary finale concluding with a long, exhilarating and life-affirming build-up.


In association with the National String Quartet Foundation.


CARDUCCI QUARTET
Matthew Denton, violin
Michelle Fleming, violin
Eoin Schmidt-Martin, viola
Emma Denton, cello


Programme
Haydn String Quartet in D major Op.20 No.4 [1772]
Donnacha Dennehy STAMP (to avoid erotic thoughts) [2008]
Shostakovich String Quartet No.9 [1964]

BOOK TICKETS

About The Carducci Quartet
Described by The Strad as presenting “a masterclass in unanimity of musical purpose, in which severity could melt seamlessly into charm, and drama into geniality”, the award- winning Carducci Quartet is internationally acclaimed as one of the most accomplished and versatile ensembles of today. Not only mastering the core repertoire, the quartet presents a selection of new works each season and diversifies further with programmes of film music, pop and rock. Founded in 1997, the ensemble has won numerous international competitions, including the USA Concert Artists Guild International Competition, and First Prize at Finland’s Kuhmo International Chamber Music Competition. The Carducci Quartet performs at prestigious venues across the globe including the Barbican, Cadogan Hall and Wigmore Hall, London; National Concert Hall, Dublin; Tivoli Concert Hall, Copenhagen; The Frick Collection and Carnegie Hall, New York; Library of Congress and John. F Kennedy Center, Washington D.C.; St Lawrence Center for the Arts, Toronto; and Concertgebouw, Amsterdam. Festival residencies include Cheltenham, Ryedale, Lichfield, Presteigne, Kilkenny, Canterbury, Snape Proms, and West Cork. In 2016, they took home a Royal Philharmonic Society Award for their project, Shostakovich15, an immense cycle of Shostakovich’s Quartets performed across the UK, North, and South America, with a marathon one-day cycle hosted by Shakespeare’s Globe, London. The project was accompanied by a recording of the 4th, 8th, and 11th Quartets to which they added a further volume in Spring 2019 of the 1st, 2nd, and 7th Quartets, acclaimed by Gramophone Magazine for its “…athletic, upfront performances, clear in texture, forthright in tone and bold in articulation”. The Carduccis returned to the composer in 2022, with performances at the Barbican and Wigmore Hall in London, residencies at Kilkenny and Canterbury Festivals, and a third recording presenting the 9th and 15th Quartets. Highly celebrated for their diverse approach to programming, the Carducci Quartet has devised numerous projects and is regularly invited to perform new works. Their catalogue of programmes presenting music and spoken word includes focuses on Beethoven, Shostakovich, and on the relationship between Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn. In 2015 they curated projects around Philip Glass and Steve Reich as part of the Royal Philharmonic Society Award winning ‘Minimalism Unwrapped’ at Kings Place in London. Their recording of the Philip Glass Quartets, for Naxos, has reached over 16 million plays on Spotify. Education work is an important element of the Carducci Quartet’s work, earning them a place on the Royal Philharmonic Society Award shortlist for their family concert ‘Getting the Quartet Bug!’. The Carducci Music Trust was set up to support their work in schools and with young musicians, and they also perform a number of school concerts each year supported by the CAVATINA Chamber Music Trust.