
‘Such important work', praise fans as RTE's Patrick Kielty shares heartwarming visit to children's hospice charity
children
's hospice was the recipient of this year's Toy Show Appeal grant award.
3
Patrick Kielty visited the Laura Lynn hospice
3
Patrick posted a video of his time at the hospice
3
Patrick met with patients and staff at the hospice
In a clip posted to the official Late Late Show
The
star
said: "A lot of people ask me, 'Where does the Toy Show Appeal
money
go to?', and I can tell you that it goes to amazing places like this.
"Today we are here at Laura Lynn to see how your incredible money makes a difference."
READ MORE IN PATRICK KIELTY
The
video
then revealed short snippets of the host meeting young kids who were being treated in the hospice.
The kids all looked delighted to meet Patrick, as well as their nurses and doctors.
Later on, the dad-of-two was happy to grab a musical instrument and sing some
songs
with the kids.
As a group of patients and nurses sang, Don't Worry, Be Happy by Bobby McFerrin, Patrick rattled a tambourine and belted out the tune.
Most read in News TV
The
funny
man then stood up in front of the group and dramatically played a beat on a drum, making everyone erupt into fits of laughter.
After a lovely day spent at Laura Lynn, Patrick jumped in for a photo with a group of nurses outside the building.
Watch throwback moment Late Late Show host Patrick Kielty duelled child Rory McIlroy on the golf course
The group all grinned from ear-to-ear as Kielty posed in the middle.
A caption over the video wrote: "
Today RTÉ and
@communityfoundationireland
are announcing the 169 recipients of the
#RTEToyShowAppeal
grant awards in 2025, with the lives of Irish children right across the country set to be changed for good in a variety of ways.
"All of this is possible due to the remarkable generosity of RTÉ viewers of last December's
'SPECIAL PLACE'
"The kindhearted response from The Late Late Toy Show viewers to the appeal will help transform the lives of over one million children, young people and their families in
"Every county on the island benefiting from grants totalling 5 million euro."
And fans all flocked to the comment section to share their love for the
charity
.
Richard wrote: "Such important
work
."
Miriam said: "A very special place with wonderful children at the heart."
Andy remarked: "Wonderful charity."
And Mandy added: "A deserving recipient."
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Irish Examiner
a few seconds ago
- Irish Examiner
Frank Grimes obituary: Dublin breakthrough led to long career on stage and screen in Britain
When he burst on to the stage of the new Abbey theatre in Dublin in 1967, Frank Grimes, who has died aged 78, was acclaimed as the finest young actor of his generation. That first impact was made as a 19-year-old in a revival of Frank O'Connor's The Invincibles, a controversial piece about the assassination of the then chief secretary of Ireland Lord Frederick Cavendish and his deputy Thomas Burke, in 1882. But it was as the young Brendan Behan in Borstal Boy (1967) that Grimes hit the big time. Behan's rollicking autobiographical novel was adapted by Frank McMahon, with Niall Toibín as the older Behan relating the story of the renegade roisterer on a bare stage. Frank Grimes and Sorcha Cusack as Barry and Helen Connor in 'Coronation Street' in 2008. Picture: ITV/Shutterstock It was a smash hit in Dublin and Paris, and then on Broadway in 1970, where Tomás Mac Anna's production won the Tony award and Grimes was voted most promising actor by 20 New York critics. In a sense, his subsequent stage career, mainly in London in the 1980s, was something of a deflation, though he invariably cleaned up the best reviews in plays by David Storey and Chekhov, and, in 1984, as a mercurial Christy Mahon in JM Synge's Playboy of the Western World on the Edinburgh fringe — all of these directed by Lindsay Anderson, who was Grimes's mentor when he first moved to London in the 1970s. Fair City and Coronation Street Latterly, Grimes was best known for his roles as Fr Lawlor in Fair City, and as the unpredictable Barry Connor on ITV's Coronation Street. Between 2008 and 2015, Grimes appeared in 55 episodes of the ITV soap opera, with his wife, Helen, played in the first season by Sorcha Cusack and in later episodes by Dearbhla Molloy. Frank Grimes as Fr Lawlor and TP McKenna as Tom Mitchell in RTÉ's 'Fair City' in 2004. Picture: RTÉ Photographic Archive He also appeared in episodes of Casualty, The Bill, Doctors and Mrs Brown's Boys. Grimes's best performance on television, however, came in RTÉ's Strumpet City (1980), adapted by Hugh Leonard from James Plunkett's novel, in which he played a beautifully-modulated, mild-mannered Fr O'Connor, a Catholic curate in a chaotic Dublin under British rule around the time of the 1913 Dublin lockout. The wonderful cast included Donal McCann, Cyril Cusack, David Kelly, and Peter O'Toole. Dublin upbringing Born in Dublin, the youngest and seventh child of Evelyn (nee Manscier) and Joseph Grimes, a train driver, Frank was educated at St Declan's secondary school by the Christian Brothers, where he excelled at basketball, algebra, and geometry. He trained at the Abbey and, after his success there, moved to London. He began his collaboration with Lindsay Anderson and David Storey in two plays at the Royal Court — The Farm (1973), as the feckless only son returning to an outraged family gathering with news of his impending marriage to a divorced, middle-aged woman; and as an art student in Life Class (1974), with Alan Bates as the art teacher and Rosemary Martin the model. Frank Grimes won a Jacob's Award for his portrayal of Fr O'Connor in RTÉ's acclaimed television 1980 adaptation of James Plunkett's 1969 novel, 'Strumpet City'. Both of Grimes's performances were luminous, truthful and technically adroit. He played the young Seán O'Casey for RTÉ in The Rebel (1973), a documentary drama by John Arden and Margaretta D'Arcy, and made his only appearance at the Royal Shakespeare Company in O'Casey's masterpiece, Juno and the Paycock; Trevor Nunn's 1980 revival at the Aldwych featured a mostly Irish cast headed by Judi Dench and Norman Rodway as Juno and Captain Boyle. Shakespeare and Chekhov Grimes's Hamlet in 1981, directed by Anderson, was the first Shakespeare at the Theatre Royal, Stratford East, since 1957, but it seemed tame and tight-lipped after Jonathan Pryce's electrifying Royal Court version in the previous year. He was back on track, though, in Anderson's all-star cast in The Cherry Orchard at the Haymarket in 1983 (with Joan Plowright as Ranevskaya, Leslie Phillips as Gaev), stuttering out Trofimov's revolutionary rhetoric before apologetically concluding that, when the day dawns, he would be there — 'or … I shall show others the way'. In 1987 at the Old Vic, in Anderson's revival of a 1928 American comedy, Holiday, by Philip Barry, with Malcolm McDowell and his then wife Mary Steenburgen alongside, Grimes was another memorably reluctant rabble-rouser, drunkenly excoriating the American rich, said Michael Billington, with 'a felt-tipped dagger'. Two years later, at the National Theatre, he was a friendless academic in psychological meltdown as Colin Pasmore in The March on Russia, David Storey's adaptation of his 1972 novel, Pasmore. Another minefield of a domestic drama, it was directed by Anderson in the manner of one of his and Storey's earlier family reunion collaborations, In Celebration (1969). In an impeccably-acted production, Grimes was both participant and observer at the celebratory rites of a family at odds, if not war. Supporting roles on the big screen Grimes played supporting roles in several notable films, including Richard Attenborough's A Bridge Too Far (1977), and in Anderson's The Whales of August (1987), starring Bette Davis and Lillian Gish as two elderly sisters on the Maine coast. He also appeared in Britannia Hospital (1982), the third of Anderson's blistering 'Mick Travis' trilogy. Grimes wrote several plays. Anderson directed his first, The Fishing Trip, at the Croydon Warehouse in 1991 and, before the director died in 1994, was helping him prepare his own one-man show, The He and the She of It, expressing a lifelong obsession with, and devotion to, James Joyce. Grimes married the actor Michele Lohan in 1968, and they had two sons, David and Andrew. After he and Michele divorced, he married the actor and art teacher Ginnette Clarke in 1984. Frank and Ginnette lived in New York from 1982 to 1987, after which they settled in Barnes, west London. His son David died in 2011. Grimes is survived by Ginnette and their daughter, Tilly, by Andrew, and by seven grandchildren, Emily, Hedy, Martha, Reuben, Toby, Monti and Oskar, and two siblings, Eva and Laura. Frank (Francis Patrick) Grimes, March 9, 1947 - August 1, 2025 The Guardian


Irish Independent
2 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
‘This is going to be epic' – devoted fans make the pilgrimage for second Oasis concert in Croke Park
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The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
Parents who force son, 9, to do squats when he's naughty defend themselves & call it a ‘corrective parenting moment'
Scroll down to learn more about the different styles of parenting TOUGH LOVE Parents who force son, 9, to do squats when he's naughty defend themselves & call it a 'corrective parenting moment' A COUPLE who came under fire for making their nine-year-old son do push-ups and squats as punishment have defended their parenting technique. Dustin, 35, and Katie Maletich, 32, from Oregon, went viral on TikTok after they shared a video showing how they handled their son Tommy misbehaving. 2 A video on TikTok showed Dustin telling their nine-year-old son to do 20 push-ups and 60 squats after he told his mum to 'chill' Credit: TikTok/@raisingmaletich 2 Tommy apologized to his mother and the video ended with Dustin telling him, 'I love you,' before the father and son shared a hug Credit: TikTok/@raisingmaletich Recorded on an at-home camera, Tommy was seen arguing with his mother over wanting to use her phone. Katie told him to stop and he replied: ''OK, chill''. The remark, however, left Dustin unamused. ''Did you just tell your mum to chill?'' a shocked Dustin asked the little boy. Without much hesitation, Dustin then demanded the youngster to start doing push-ups. The nine-year-old obliged, immediately getting down on all fours and and starting the exercise. He stopped after doing ten - but the dad still wasn't satisfied and told him to keep going. ''I can't do anymore,'' Tommy said - however, Dustin wasn't having any of it and kept pushing the nine-year-old to ''go, go'' 20 push-ups later, Tommy was exhausted - but his dad then broke the news that he'd also have to do squats. The nine-year-old did a whopping 60 squats before his dad finally told him he could stop. Irish comedian Emma Doran on the differences between her childhood and that of her kids ''Do we tell mum to 'chill out'? Absolutely not,'' Dustin told him after he was done. 'I wouldn't let anybody else talk to her like that so you don't get to talk to her like that.'' Tommy then apologised to mum Katie and the viral video ended with Dustin telling him: ''I love you.'' Sharing the footage online under the username @raisingmaletich, Katie wrote in the caption: ''I will never stop being grateful to be raising kids with a real man who knows how to be a father, especially to his boys. Different parenting styles explained There are four recognised styles of parenting explained below: Authoritarian Parenting What some might describe as "regimental" or "strict" parenting. Parents with this style focus on strict rules, obedience, and discipline. Authoritarian parents take over the decision-making power, rarely giving children any input in the matter. When it comes to rules, you believe it's "my way or the highway". Permissive Parenting Often referred to as "soft parenting" or "yes mums/dads". Permissive parents are lenient, only stepping in when there's a serious problem. They're quite forgiving and they adopt an attitude of "kids will be kids". Oftentimes they act more like friends than authoritative figures. Authoritative Parenting Authoritative parents provide their children with rules and boundaries, but they also give them the freedom to make decisions. With an authoritative parenting style, parents validate their children's feelings while also making it clear that the adults are ultimately in charge. They use positive reinforcement techniques, like praise and reward systems, as opposed to harsh punishments. Neglectful or Uninvolved Parenting Essentially, neglectful parents ignore their children, who receive little guidance, nurturing, and parental attention. They don't set rules or expectations, and they tend to have minimal knowledge about what their children are doing. Uninvolved parents expect children to raise themselves. They don't devote much time or energy to meeting children's basic needs. Uninvolved parents may be neglectful but it's not always intentional. A parent with mental health issues or substance abuse problems, for example, may not be able to care for a child's physical or emotional needs consistently. ''This is masculinity,'' Katie wrote in the caption of the video, which has racked up more than 1.4 million views. But viewers were divided over parenting technique, with some applauding Dustin's method and others slamming the pair for making their son do physical activity as punishment. While chatting exclusively with the Daily Mail, Katie and Dustin defended their actions. ''This is not something exceptionally difficult for him because we all workout together as a family for fun several times a week and he is used to this sort of exertion,'' Dustin explained. '''You can tell right away when I ask him, 'What did you say?' that he knew he had messed up. ''He is such a great kid and is generally very remorseful when he knows that he made a mistake.'' Dustin applauded his son for apologising to Katie without being asked to and pointed out that the moment ''ended with love''. In Dustin's eyes, the physical exercise allows Tommy to ''refocus when he feels that he doesn't have control over his body and mind which always makes him more reception to healthy communication''. The couple said they never expected the video to get the reaction it did, and they viewed it as a ''tender parenting moment''. In the interview, Dustin said it meant something special to his partner because Katie grew up in a home ''where there was a lot of toxicity, emotionally reactive parenting, yelling and anger''. He said that when Katie saw the ''corrective parenting moment'' unfold between the two, it left her ''very emotional'' - and Katie allegedly felt ''inspired''. In response to the online backlash, Dustin reminded social media users that everyone parents in the way they ''see fit''. ''I think as long as you aren't doing anything to intentionally harm your child, I think you get to make that decision,'' he told the publication. As for their parenting method, Dustin explained they're trying to raise Tommy as a ''healthy, happy, resilient and respectful human''. Social media users left divided Online, the video has sparked a fierce debate, leaving many divided. One said: ''I don't really agree with physical exercise being used as a punishment but glad he was supportive of not letting them talk to you that way.'' Another chimed in: ''the fact he even said 'don't give up' & 'good one', encouraging him while also being a parent & disciplining him! literally a perfect example of what good parenting should look like in a situation like this!'' Someone else said: ''this is called tough love and holding children accountable for their actions. a lot of parents don't understand this. which is why we end up with kids running ragged.''