logo
Something For The Weekend – Patrick Bergin's cultural picks

Something For The Weekend – Patrick Bergin's cultural picks

RTÉ News​09-07-2025
Over the past four decades, actor Patrick Bergin has been a welcome fixture on screens big and small, whether starring alongside Julia Roberts in Sleeping With the Enemy and Harrison Ford in Patriot Games, or stealing the show in soaps like Red Rock and EastEnders. He's an accomplished songwriter, to boot!
We asked Patrick for his choice cultural picks...
FILM
My favourite film is one called The Fiend Who Walked the West, it is a gothic-horror. I like westerns ,that film had a profound, almost subliminal effect on me as a teenager. It starred Hugh O'Brian as a bank robber and Robert Evans, who provided the persona for the character I played in Sleeping with the Enemy. Don't watch it on your own…
MUSIC
Blonde on Blonde by Bob Dylan and Get Your Ya-Ya's Out by the Rolling Stones loom large in my favourites, as do Merle Haggard and Leonard Cohen. I sang Anthem for the pope at Croke Park. Kíla are my favourite Irish band, and Elanor Shanley is great! I'm always a sucker for a hairy Irish ballad, Liam Clancy being The Master.
BOOK
The Ragged-Trousered Philanthropists by Robert Tressell. Tressell is obviously a nom-de plume and the book was a definite step in my appreciation of social issues in literature and art. Fanny Hill as bedtime reading… nuff said! I'm currently reading Terror, Tears and Tragedy by Noel Howard is a fascinating book about my wife Helen Gold-Bergin's grandmother Lady Louisa Morgan Mountcashel, one that encompasses the early suffragettes, the first divorce in Ireland and a court case that enthralled the world.
THEATRE
Philadelphia, Here I Come! by Brian Friel. This was one of the first plays I ever saw with my brother Emmet in it. He sadly passed last year, I had seen him perform in The Eblana, The Abbey and The Gaiety. He was a great and well-known actor. My mother worked in the Green Room at the Gaiety and my father, a Labour Senator helped start The Little Theatre In Carlow, and the theatre is still going strong today.
TV
Like my hero Bob Dylan, I avidly watch Coronation Street and of course I'm loyal to Eastenders! I love Nationwide and travel programmes. High Road, Low Road is also entertaining. I love anything with a train. My grandfather was the signalman at Carlow Station.
GIG
Kíla at the Cloughjordan amphitheater were magnificent. Rónán Ó Snodaigh is simply the best bodhrán player I have ever seen, he literally makes it talk and sing with astounding rhythms. Go see him whenever you get a chance!
ART
I love to visit the Duke Gallery on Duke Street, Dublin. Norman Teeling, Guggi, Graham Knuttel, John Campion, Sarah Langham and Helen Costello's sculptures are amoung my favourites.
RADIO
I will miss Joe Duffy, but I also love his namesake Louise Duffy, and I am hoping she will play one of my songs on her show someday! John Creedon is brilliant, and if I am away from home the BBC World Service's Shipping Forecast is a great comfort.
TECH
Spotify, where I can check up on how my humble musical creations are doing, My duet with Eleanor Shanley, My Angel, gets a respectful number of streams every week, she is great. Simon Casey recorded my song The Tipperary Waltz, too.. Check it out! My music has also been used in a number of films.
THE NEXT BIG THING...
Let me think.. I'm delighted to say I have two movies in this year's Galway Film Festival: Sunphlowers, an Irish production, and The Captain, an English production for which I received a Best Actor award in the U.K. We are also working on the Lady Louisa film project, based on the book mentioned above.
All in all I have been busy - on August 8th, I open the King John's Festival in Trim, Co Meath, and this September I am speaking at a brand new event, The Lovely Laois Homecoming Festival, the brainchild of Trudi Lalor, with various events across three days, including talks from myself, Noel Fitzpatrick (Supervet) and many more.
Now, it's time to feed the goats!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ryan Tubridy: My day at the races was followed by a night in a distillery
Ryan Tubridy: My day at the races was followed by a night in a distillery

Extra.ie​

time10 minutes ago

  • Extra.ie​

Ryan Tubridy: My day at the races was followed by a night in a distillery

Clare and I were invited to Ascot last week and while I wouldn't know one end of a horse from another, it seemed like an interesting way to spend a Saturday afternoon and it helps that I'm very fond of the host that day, Elgin Loan, the man at the helm of The Irish Post newspaper in London. He gathered an eclectic bunch of Irish punters who mixed easily with each other between races and lunch. Some of Ireland's finest actors were there as Lisa Dwan, Orla Sanders and Bronagh Waugh swapped stories and tips alongside Dexter star, Paddy Gibson whose mother made sure he was on good behaviour! Chef-du-jour Anna Haugh was in flying form as she continues to make big waves in the UK both at her own venues and on television. It was great to reconnect with Ardal O'Hanlon who has some very exciting book news coming down the tracks and Harry Herbert was as jovial and convivial as ever (despite not having his wife, Clodagh McKenna there on this occasion) so all told, it was a beautiful day at the races. Ryan Tubridy and Ardal O'Hanlon. Pic: Getty Myself and Clare had to dash to Winchester for our friends' birthday celebrations held at the Bombay Sapphire distillery (think Wonka but with gin) and a fine night was had by all. Needless to say, the rest of the week was very calm! I'm reading a very gory and thoughtful book called In Memoriam, below, by Alice Winn. As well as being a love (that 'could not speak its name') story it's a visceral description of the depredations and degradations of not just the First World War but, I suspect, any ground war at whatever point in history. The writing is so good that as I found myself on the Tube, trundling along the Jubilee Line every morning this week, I was lost in the trenches and no man's land of Flanders or the Somme. I could feel the endless damp and hear the screams of endless bombs and gnawing of rats as wave after wave of soldiers got mown down in what feels like senseless slaughter. I got so caught up in the story that I took myself off to the National Portrait Gallery just off Trafalgar Square as I wanted to revisit some paintings from that era as part of my immersive deep dive into all things WWI. When I got to the gallery (free admission) I was struck by a grand group portrait of the politicians who made the decisions and then, on turning to another wall, I saw the military men who executed those decisions. They are both extraordinary paintings, there's no doubt but given the era, it's hardly surprising that there are zero women in either study. Were they behind the scenes making important contributions and subsequently airbrushed from history? I don't know enough about that but I wonder if we put all the leaders currently at war in one painting and their generals in another, would there be much of difference in the ratio of men to women? National Portrait Gallery just off Trafalgar Square. Pic: Getty I'm happy to say that the walls and rooms of the National Portrait Gallery are populated by many Irish figures from history. I spotted Kildare man, Ernest Shackleton striking a most impressive pose and George Bernard Shaw and Charles Stewart Parnell are there as sculpted busts – both very impressive. Also there is the famous aviator, John Alcock (honorary Irishman!) who along with Arthur Brown made the first non-stop flight across the Atlantic Ocean in 1919. Their Vickers Vimy plane landed just outside Clifden where the two men are remembered thanks to a beautiful statue in the town square sponsored by the businessman, Seán Mulryan. As a footnote, the pilots were awarded £10,000 by the owner of this newspaper who offered the prize for the first people to cross the Atlantic without stopping in less than 72 hours. Sadly, John Alcock didn't live to see the end of that year as he soon died in an air accident. Thankfully, their names and incredible story live on in Clifden and beyond. I've been watching a lot of episodes of a programme called The Assembly in which a group of neuro-diverse people interview a well-known person about everything and nothing. It's a brilliant idea that challenges the interviewee and the viewer for a plethora of different reasons. Gary Lineker didn't seem particularly comfortable, David Tennent was very eager but the actor Michael Sheen, right, handled the situation with the most skill and ease. He rolled with the punches (and there were a few) but was kind and thoughtful with it. As it turned out, I managed to secure a ticket for a play he is currently starring in at the National Theatre on London's South Bank. The play is called Nye and tells the story of Labour firebrand, Aneurin 'Nye' Bevan whose legacy will forever be his role in the foundation of the NHS. On paper it doesn't and shouldn't sound very interesting but on stage, it's a triumph. The production, acting and stagecraft is second to none and it's all held together by an immaculate central performance by Sheen whose Welsh tones are hypnotic throughout as the story traces Nye's childhood, election to parliament, elevation to the Department of Health and ultimate legacy. It's emotional, historic and utterly compelling. It helped me understand why (most) British people venerate their health system and its sense of fairness but also the provenance of the NHS through the prism of a miner's son who made it to the top echelons of power. He wasn't perfect by all accounts but he was passionate, could deliver a speech and get things done – more of this please!

Michael Jackson's ‘next Thriller' written in Ireland to be RELEASED with doc of family's summer in Westmeath cow shed
Michael Jackson's ‘next Thriller' written in Ireland to be RELEASED with doc of family's summer in Westmeath cow shed

The Irish Sun

time40 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Michael Jackson's ‘next Thriller' written in Ireland to be RELEASED with doc of family's summer in Westmeath cow shed

SONGS written in Ireland by Michael Jackson for an unreleased album originally dubbed 'the next Thriller' will finally see the light of day. The music dates back to when The King of Pop fled here in the Advertisement 4 Michael Jackson's unreleased album will finally see the light of day Credit: AFP 4 The King of Pop spent a magical summer in Ireland with his three children Credit: Social Media Collect Staying in a converted cow shed with his family, some of the biggest names in But the sessions were never completed before However, studio boss Paddy Dunning revealed how he has just returned from the Paddy Dunning told The Irish Sun on Sunday: 'The sessions started last year and we have already had the Korean boy band BTS over with us in Grouse Lodge, recording one of the songs. Advertisement READ MORE IN MUSIC 'There's about ten more, written especially for Michael by the collaborators he worked with in Ireland — including producer Rodney Jerkins and rapper Nephew, who have signed up for the project.' The businessman said he has also met and got the agreement of the estate of Jacko to release the record — and a documentary about the pop star's magical summer in Ireland, which saw him frequent local cinemas with his three Paddy revealed: 'Michael's estate told me to plough ahead with this because like me, they see it as a tribute to Michael. 'And for the documentary we're going to get everyone's memory of working with Michael in Ireland.' Advertisement Most read in Music Exclusive Exclusive Explosive Michael Jackson documentary Leaving Neverland 2 reveals first look trailer ahead of release this month And studio boss Paddy told how he met with Jackson's eldest son Prince on his recent visit to the US. Paddy said: 'Prince was talking about his memories of being in Grouse Lodge, and all the fun they had. 'He said himself, his brother and sister would be back over to Ireland to see us again.' Advertisement The Billed as the tallest moving statue in the world, Paddy's Giant is composed of millions of programmable LED pixels, which can instantly take the form of any man or woman, or historic or popular personality. MJ 'ANONYMOUS' IN IRELAND Paddy told us: 'We have the first Giant in Vegas but we have 19 other countries signed up — Shanghai came on board while I was in the US this week.' The entrepreneur made it back to Dublin on Thursday night for the tenth anniversary celebrations of the Irish Rock and Roll Museum in Temple Bar, at which independent local promoters Leagues O'Toole and Paul 'Timo' Timonay were presented with awards for their contribution to the Advertisement Paddy became pals with Michael Jackson during the five months he was here in Ireland in 2006 and even came to visit him in his Docklands home. Paddy previously said Jacko 'just could not believe' the anonymity that he enjoyed during his trip. He said of MJ: 'He could walk around . . . he immersed himself in Irish culture and took a special interest in Irish history.' 4 MJ brought his children with him when he stayed at Grouse Lodge in 2006 Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd Advertisement 4 Paddy Dunning said he was signing up superstar artists to sing the songs originally intended for Michael Credit: Garrett White - The Sun Dublin

World famous singer Anthony Kearns to open Fleadh – ‘It's great to be able to stand up in front of your own people and fly the flag for Wexford'
World famous singer Anthony Kearns to open Fleadh – ‘It's great to be able to stand up in front of your own people and fly the flag for Wexford'

Irish Independent

time41 minutes ago

  • Irish Independent

World famous singer Anthony Kearns to open Fleadh – ‘It's great to be able to stand up in front of your own people and fly the flag for Wexford'

This year, Anthony will help open Fleadh Cheoil na hÉeireann, the largest annual festival of traditional Irish music, dance and song anywhere in the world which Wexford will again host. While he is most widely known as a tenor, this is an invaluable opportunity for him to reconnect with his roots. From Kiltealy, known as 'the most sign posted village in the county' he laughs, he first performed at the Fleadh decades ago. 'It's funny now. A friend of mine, Ed Rowsome dug up some information and found that I performed in the 1980 Fleadh in Sligo as an U'18. The trad was what we were reared on.' The Fleadh is a lot of things, and it can be different things to people. It will be an unprecedented tourism opportunity, invaluable to businesses across the county, but at its core is music. For boys and girls and men and women who have put in countless hours of practise to master their trade, this is their All – Ireland Final. 'People shouldn't underestimate that, it is about the competition. It's an All – Ireland, from every parish and county. It's very competitive, and it hasn't changed. The kids today are just phenomenal… It's like being in the field, throw in the ball and blow the whistle.' The singer owns Rackard's pub in Killane. Yes, the same place where John Kelly, 'the boy' was from, immortalised in the Patrick Joseph McCall song made famous by The Dubliners and he is struck by the crowds that come out for trad sessions. 'We had 27 or 28 musicians at the last trad session in the lounge. You can spot young talent coming through. There is one chap in particular from Wexford who is just off the charts as a bodhran player. And if he doesn't make a career in this profession, I'll eat my hat.' John's love and pride for Wexford isn't artificial or a matter of convenience. It runs deep. In 2013, he joined his friend Michael Londra and 'half of Wexford', alongside the good and the great at Arlington Cemetery to mark five decades since President Kennedy's death. But unsurprisingly, the last Sunday in September in 1996 was pretty unforgettable for him. 'I didn't think we'd be waiting so long for our next All – Ireland, but that day was special. I came up from Kerry, I was singing at a friend's wedding. I got to Heuston Station and I couldn't get across the city. I was sitting in a Taxi going nowhere. 'I called a friend of mine, Jim who worked in The Plough bar on Abbey Street. Jim called John McCarthy, a former Dublin footballer and Garda who came over on a motorbike and escorted me out of the traffic and brought me to the gates of Croke Park. 'There, I entered with Michael O'Hehir, who was in a wheelchair at the time and went straight onto the pitch to rehearse with the Artane Boys Band. I still have my ticket with the stub attached because I was rushed in so quickly…. And the celebrations. Sure I suppose we're still celebrating.' By opening this year's Fleadh, Anthony will join President Michael D Higgins on stage. He knows what it means. 'It's wonderful to be back on home soil. I'm singing one song for them and of course that is Boolavogue. Eithne Corrigan is going to be accompanying me on piano, she's well known in the Wexford music scene. It's great to be able to stand up in front of your own people and fly the flag for Wexford. It's a full circle moment.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store