
‘My worst job? Being a barman in New York City on Paddy's Day with the mother of all hangovers'
When he was 17, George Murphy shot to fame overnight by winning the 2003 series of the RTÉ talent show You're a Star. One of the judges, Phil Coulter, produced an album for him and it reached No 1 in Ireland. Murphy then went on to travel and record with The Dubliners and Aslan. After a spell out of the public eye, the singer-songwriter put in a stint with The High Kings before setting up his own group, The Rising Sons.
The Dubliner also made his acting debut in 2019, performing in the Dermot Bolger play Last Orders at the Dockside at the Abbey Theatre, and he recently completed a run as the lead in the play Dockers at the Ambassador Theatre. Murphy and The Rising Sons will this month start another nationwide tour, which includes Dublin's Vicar Street on September 7. For more tour dates, visit georgemurphy.com.
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Extra.ie
7 hours ago
- Extra.ie
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Irish Times
10 hours ago
- Irish Times
‘The nation loved you': Mourners gather for funeral of Seán Rocks in Monaghan
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RTÉ News
12 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Johnny Logan 'wouldn't rule out' Eurovision mentor role
Johnny Logan has told The Marty Morrissey Show on RTÉ Radio 1 that he "wouldn't rule out" becoming a mentor for "a young artist" in the Eurovision Song Contest. The three-time Eurovision winner - as the singer of What's Another Year in 1980, the singer-songwriter of Hold Me Now in 1987, and the writer of Why Me? in 1992 - was responding to a question from a listener about whether he would represent Ireland at the Eurovision again. "Is that RTÉ?!" laughed the singer. "Would you do Eurovision again?" asked the host. "I don't think so," Logan replied. "It's a different contest, and, you know, I'm much older now, and I've moved on, and I have a very successful career. "To be honest, to do the Eurovision, I'd need to take six months off. I'd need to take the time to write a song that I really believed... that would work. " "But, you know, we've so many great young artists in this country," Logan continued. "I wouldn't rule out being involved with working with someone, working with a young artist to put them through to do it. But you need to be with them at the beginning, with them during the contest, and then also after the contest to make sure they get the most out of the contest. "A lot of people go into it looking for fame, and they don't realise that the Eurovision now is like everything else: your 15 minutes of fame is now 15 seconds - and counting." Logan plays Dublin's Vicar Street on Friday, 29 August.