logo
‘What a dress', gush fans as RTE star Maura Derrane stuns in ‘fabulous' designer frock for major awards show

‘What a dress', gush fans as RTE star Maura Derrane stuns in ‘fabulous' designer frock for major awards show

The Irish Sun24-05-2025

RTE star Maura Derrane had her fans gushing after she shared details of her look from the Platinum VIP Style Awards.
The VIP Style Awards took place in the Intercontinental Hotel in Dublin on Friday night with Ireland's most fashionable starlets dressed to the nines.
Advertisement
2
Maura Derrane stepped out in style for the VIP Style Awards
Credit: Brian McEvoy
2
Maura shared outfit details with fans
On Friday night,
The 54-year-old was at the bash as she was up for the Best Look of the Year award.
But the star went home empty-handed with Rosanna Davison taking the trophy.
One loss aside, Maura took to her Instagram today to share some stunning red-carpet snaps from the night.
Advertisement
read more on maura derrane
The mum-of-one looked fabulous in a silk white dress that featured a deep v cut neckline.
The jaw-dropping frock also had three quarter length sleeves along with figure hugging zips on the hip accentuating curves.
Maura's maxi dress was from Irish designer Shauna Courtney, who has also dressed Una Healy in the past.
The piece currently retails on their site for €122.
Advertisement
MOST READ ON THE IRISH SUN
To round off her evening glam, Maura put on a pair of clay earrings from Aurela Belle and put on a pair of
Showing off her look for the evening, Maura wrote: "Platinum VIP Style Awards @vip.magazine.
Maura Derrane shares 'beautiful' video from Italian holiday
"So proud to wear all #irishdesign. This is probably my favourite evening dress of all time.
"It's from a fabulous young #irishdesigner @shaunacourtneylondon So well crafted, amazing cut and soooo comfortable.
Advertisement
"Thanks again to @vip.magazine. A wonderful night @intercondublin."
Friends and fans raced to the presenter's comment section to gush over her fabulous gown.
MAUR FASHION
Claire commented: "What a dress."
Anna said: "I am obsessed with this dress!"
Advertisement
Amelia gushed: "A film star Maura... stunning."
Another fan added: "You look Fab Maura."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lidl Ireland reveals new €3.49 Dubai chocolate product that will send shoppers in frenzy
Lidl Ireland reveals new €3.49 Dubai chocolate product that will send shoppers in frenzy

The Irish Sun

time24 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Lidl Ireland reveals new €3.49 Dubai chocolate product that will send shoppers in frenzy

LIDL Ireland shoppers are set for a frenzy over their newest Dubai-style chocolate product - and it will be hitting stores in just DAYS. The Advertisement 2 Lidl Ireland is set to sell their own Dubai-style chocolate product on Thursday 2 The spread will be perfect for toast or pancakes Credit: Lidl Ireland The Della Sante Dubai Chocolate Cream is set to hit all The tasty spread contains a blend of smooth It combines the flavours of the insanely popular Dubai chocolate but in spreadable form. That means you can slather it on toast, pile it onto pancakes, dip fruit in it or even spoon it from the jar - the options are endless. Advertisement READ MORE ON DUBAI CHOCOLATE It will cost shoppers €3.49 per jar. However, Lidl Ireland chiefs warned that the stock is limited as shoppers are urged to act swiftly if they want to try out their yummy treat. It was reported that the supermarkets may be limiting purchases to three per customer, but this varies by store. Earlier this year, Lidl Ireland launched their Advertisement Most read in Fabulous The low cost supermarket teased their dupe bar on Retailing at a bargain €4.99, the popular bar hit the shelves in supermarkets today. You asked, we delivered' says Irish supermarket as viral chocolate lands in stores but 'they won't last' The J.D. Gross Dubai-Style Chocolate comes in a 122g bar and is the cheapest dupe available from Irish supermarkets. The luxurious treat, which has a green filling made from pistachio and a traditional Arab dessert called Knafeh, often comes with a hefty price tag, with single bars retailing online for €10 or more. Advertisement CUSTOMERS' REVIEWS Chocolate lovers took to the comments to rave about the discounted bar. One person said: 'I bought two in Lidl Cabra today. Nice, five euro a bar.' However, some fans were unable to get their hands on the chocolate bars as they flew off the shelves. One person said: 'Sold out in twenty mins, couldn't get one.' Advertisement Another said: 'I went to Lidl today at 2:30 pm and was so disappointed that there was none left. I'm so sad and hungry for Dubai chocolate.' One shopper said: "9:30am sold out here."

30 years since Riverdance blew our minds and our 'holy f**ks' still echo'
30 years since Riverdance blew our minds and our 'holy f**ks' still echo'

Irish Daily Mirror

time33 minutes ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

30 years since Riverdance blew our minds and our 'holy f**ks' still echo'

IT remains a flame that will never burn low for anybody gifted a ringside seat for its mighty, ecstatic, hot-blooded, jaw-dropping, spine-tingling, seven-minutes-of-wonderment unveiling. In truth, we were more than a little tipsy that night, yet even through that long-ago fug of alcohol, the wave of rapture that invaded the packed bar where we witnessed - stupefied, teary, a chorus of astonished "holy f***s" the only words we could summon - Riverdance being midwifed into the world remains as vivid three decades on as Michael Flatley's immaculately waxed chest. It felt like a detonation of some new Irishness, a marriage of ancient dance and modern expression, something liberating and fresh invading both the evening and the heart with its riveting beauty, mesmerising a global audience of some 300 million. Before writing this piece, to reassure myself my memory wasn't playing tricks, I re-watched Flatley and, first, Jean Butler thundering onto the stage at The Point Theatre on April 30th 1994, the interval act at the Eurovision Song Contest. It is gobsmacking, electrifying, primal, emotional, an authentic "wow" moment that retains all its capacity to fire a lovely cascade of shivers down the spinal chord. A cocktail of fiddles and bodhráns, the lead dancers owning the coliseum, alone under the klieg lights, a triumph of athletic movement, rhythmic tempo, exquisite balance and beguiling cadence. Master and Mistress of the universe. The urge then was to lock away the memory, retain it for the rest of time, the same compulsion that might overwhelm an art lover on encountering a renaissance master's brushstrokes hanging on the gallery walls of the Louvre. At that moment it felt unsurpassable. Perfect. Before it became a commercial behemoth - one watched live by more than 30 million people (five times the population of Ireland) at some 15,000 performances in 49 countries, selling over 10 million DVDs worldwide) - there was this. Just this. A seven minute slot. A transfixed house erupting in spontaneous, orgasmic acclaim. An 'is this really happening?' sense of disbelief and awe. And, as the camera pans to a breathless Flatley, giggling as he accepts the rapture of the audience, the vertigo of new possibilities opening dizzyingly before him, an impossibly youthful Gerry Ryan asking his audience a rhetorical question. "What about that, stunning music, amazing dancing, was that or was it not the most spectacular performance you have ever seen?" Few who had watched Flatley's feet move as if fired from the mouth of a howitzer were inclined to raise a dissenting voice. Looking at it now through the telescope of all those years, Ryan's words don't feel remotely contrived or rehearsed, but, rather an instinctive and visceral response to something irresistible. I was 25 years of age and Irish dancing was so far distant on the polar opposite side of the bandwidth to my interests that it might have existed on the dark side of the moon. And yet, like half the nation, I was entranced by the orchestra of sounds and the sway of elegant, angelic movement. Flatley and Butler had carried the night into another dimension. Our football team was in the long since vanished O'Dwyer's Bar on Dublin's Mount Street, celebrating a league title we had claimed that afternoon courtesy of our own exhibition of superior, Flatley-esque footwork (for some reason I still haven't figured we never toured the world, never had to fight off groupies, never made tens of millions, but, hey, them's the breaks). The Eurovision was on in the background. Nobody was too bothered. Then Bill Whelan's score exploded into life and it was like every living creature in that bustling tavern had been hypnotised. There was never a moment over the next 500 or so seconds when our attention was allowed veer from the TV screen. It was that good, that instantly stimulating, dance as mainlined narcotic, a mood-altering Celtic opiate. Sense of place played a significant role in the elemental ache of joy. It was one of the few times since Italia 90 four years earlier that I had felt that sudden surge - call it patriotism, call it a sense of belonging, call it pride in our heritage - that fills a room to the brim with something I can only describe as heartsoar. We embraced and emoted as we had at the end of the game a few hours earlier. I think there might even have been an eruption of the dreaded Oles. It was a slightly self-conscious way of trying to mask the fact that we were all on the verge of sobbing. It really was that powerful. There we were, a group whose preferred music ranged from The Jam to Bowie to Ska to The Stones, incontinent with emotion because of something we might have scoffed at ten minutes earlier. We were in our native city, yet for some reason the lyric that best describes how I felt in that moment comes from U2's A Sort of Homecoming. "For tonight, at last/I am coming home/I am coming home." So many of those Eurovision interval slots tend to be twee and insecure, but here was an exhibition of rip-roaring Irish self-confidence. A visual, aural, comfortable-in-its-skin feast of excellence. A year later, Riverdance went on the road, and it is that 30th anniversary landmark that was celebrated this week at The Gaiety and at various afterparties that ran long into the night. A confession: I have never been to the full show and never felt an urgent need. In some perverse way, I find the vast global ATM - churning out dollars and yen and all the currencies of the world - into which it has transformed, slightly off-putting. But, we'll always have O'Dwyer's. The emotions awakened by that seismic seven minute rumble in 1994 were sufficiently pure to last a hundred lifetimes. Its innocence; the bone-shaking delight of Flatley hot-footing across the floor with manic, charismatic glee; Butler's effortless elegance and natural-born class; the blur of feet; the way the music hit you beneath the rib cage; the astonishment as we observed the birth of something magical and, the way it made us all all remains gloriously evocative. Ireland would win the Eurovision that night - back then, as invincible as a team co-managed by Jim Gavin and John Kiely, we almost always won - courtesy of Charlie McGettigan and Paul Harrington performing Rock 'n' Roll Kids. Harrington watched the interval act from backstage and still recalls how the arena convulsed. "That night," he says, "felt like the beginning of the roar of the Celtic Tiger and I was right at the epicentre." Riverdance became a synonym for excellence, for a slightly mythical Irish form of self-expression, a way of articulating a cultural moment that triggered a wash of reverence. Liam Griffin, the messianic and erudite Wexford manager who led the county to a first All-Ireland title for 28 years in 1996, lovingly depicted hurling as the "Riverdance of sport." His poetic description was both arresting and apt. Here were two uniquely Irish forms of cultural expression, both dances, one using feet, the other a sliotar and a wand of ash, each seeming to eloquently express a powerful sense of Irishness. In their liquid movement, their natural flow, Cian Lynch or Patrick Horgan or TJ Reid might well be riverdancing. A great hurling match is both a spectacle and a feeling. It finds your gut. It lifts you to a place of brighter light, this tumultuous choir of stick and ball and galloping athletes. At its best, it dresses itself in a cloak of myth. As Flatley and Butler did all those years ago. On Anna Livia's banks, they danced their dance and the ancient river was not alone in nodding its damp, splashing head in approval, in understanding it had witnessed the shifting of Irish art to the highest ground.

I swear by my ‘genius' packing hack you need to try this summer – it'll save you a fortune on baggage fees
I swear by my ‘genius' packing hack you need to try this summer – it'll save you a fortune on baggage fees

The Irish Sun

time39 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

I swear by my ‘genius' packing hack you need to try this summer – it'll save you a fortune on baggage fees

IF you're lucky enough to be jetting abroad any time soon, you've come to the right place. And particularly if you've already spent a fortune on new clothes, beauty treatments and a posh hotel for your next holiday, then this could just be the perfect money-saving trick for you. 3 A couple have shared the packing hack they swear by to save cash on luggage fees Credit: Getty 3 Not only do they pocket extra pounds with this trick, but they're also able to take more clothes on holiday too Credit: Instagram / @first_class_seats 3 So rather than leaving your belongings at home because they don't fit in your bag, why not put them in your neck pillow? Credit: Instagram / @first_class_seats Josh and Amber, a 'creative couple' with a 'passion for travel', have shared their top tip that will save travellers 'a fortune' on So if you're going away for a weekend and are only travelling Posting on social media, Josh and Amber shared the 'genius' way they manage to take more clothes on holiday without having to squeeze them into their suitcase or The content creators demonstrated how they use neck pillows to take at least three extra tops, a pair of trousers and a hat on their trips. Read more Fabulous stories Alongside a clip that was recently shared on Instagram, the couple questioned: 'Tired of breaking the bank on luggage fees? We've discovered a simple yet genius travel hack that's saved us a fortune!' With this 'fly smart' trick, the The duo simply removed the stuffing from inside their neck pillow and added in their belongings. Overjoyed with the simple but effective idea, they explained: 'Remember this Most read in Fabulous 'Your The Instagram clip, which was posted under the username @ Shoppers run to Tesco desperate to nab the 'suitcase of dreams' that's the 'prettiest vintage style case' and 'so cheap' Not only this, but it's also amassed over 14,000 likes and 331 comments. Social media users were impressed with the Holiday packing tips Jemma Solomon, aka The Label Lady has got 5 packing tips to help you get organised for your next holiday. 1. Write a list Think about all the essentials you need to take with you; suncream, medicine, a few games for the kids, beach towels, and write everything in one list, which you can tick off as you add it to your suitcase. Or for complete ease, try Google's AI app - Gemini - which will create a list for you and help you not over pack. 2. Involve your kids Jemma said: 'My girls are getting older, they're 11 and nine, and they enjoy helping to pack. So I send them a list, and say 'this is what you need' and they follow the list. 'And then I give them a rucksack each - and say to them 'you can have whatever you want in there as long as it's not liquid', and they can take that on the plane. And that's their 'home away from home' items.' 3. Try a hack or two She said: "I think they all work, but for different reasons - and you've just got to pick the right one for your trip. "Rolling your clothes is really good to stop your clothes from getting creases. And if you're trying to get a lot of items into your case, it's a space saver. 'Packing cubes are great - for example, I'm going on holiday with my three kids and we're all using the same suitcase for our clothes. "These handy compartments let you separate your clothes, toiletries and tech into designated cubes, maximising luggage space by keeping your items compressed and neatly stacked. "I love taking them abroad with the family and it means my kids can easily take charge of their own items once we've arrived." 4. Decant beauty products Do you really need to take full-size bottles of shampoo and conditioner with you? The beauty industry has evolved so much, you can now buy shampoo bars or sheets - which are much lighter and smaller. Or, if you'll be popping to the shops when you're abroad, consider buying some items when you arrive. 5. Get organised before you come home Jemma said: 'When you repack on holiday [before coming home], the trick is to separate clean from dirty clothes. 'Also pack it in some form of order - so lights, darks, colours for items that need washing, or if you wash your clothes by person in the household, piles for each person. "Then you can put it straight into the washing machine. Do it straight away, don't leave it." One person said: 'Well played.' Another added: 'Great idea!!!' Smart packing! Instagram user A third commented: 'I guess this is smart.' Meanwhile, someone else shared: 'Ingenious.' At the same time, another travel enthusiast beamed: 'Smart Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club The Sun Travel team's holiday essentials WITH decades of experience and hundreds of countries under their belt, the Sun Travel team have shared some of the essential items they always pack on a trip. Here are some of the game-changing items we always pack - and some will barely cost you a thing. Lisa Minot, Head of Travel - Global travel plug with USB (£64) Caroline McGuire, Travel Editor - Hotel Slippers Sophie Swietochowski, Assistant Travel Editor - Pack of 40 earplugs (£40) Kara Godfrey, Deputy Travel Editor - 1 litre water bottle (£8.99) Ryan Gray, Travel Reporter - Bluetooth eye mask (£16.50) Giuli Graziano, Travel Writer - AirTag luggage location tracker (£29.99).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store