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David Hanly (born 1944, Fairgreen, Limerick) [2] [3] is an Irish writer and former broadcaster. [1] He was a co-presenter of RTÉ Radio 1's Morning Ireland for many years. [4] [5] [6] He won a Jacob's Award in 1985. [1] [7] His television show Hanly's People featured in-depth interviews with people such as Seán Boylan and David Norris. [8]
Laura Elizabeth Arabosa Izibor was born in May 1987 in Dublin, Ireland. [2] She is the fourth of five children born to Irish mother Trish and Nigerian father Saul. [3] [4] [5] After singing "When You Believe", a duet by Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston, in her drama class, she discovered her interest for music; she began writing songs at age 13 and taught herself how to play the piano at 14. [6]
The kids’ energy and positivity has inspired people. It’s a really catchy song.” After it was reposted by a popular TikTok account in a video that accumulated over seven million views ...
The show was presented by Bosco, a small, red-haired puppet, supposedly a five-year-old child with bright red cheeks and a really squeaky voice. Bosco and the other presenters usually spoke English, but to help young children learn Irish, Bosco often peppered English speech with Irish phrases, much like the way Dora the Explorer often speaks Spanish.
Pat Ingoldsby (born 25 August 1942 in Malahide, Dublin, Ireland) [1] is an Irish poet and TV presenter.He has hosted children's TV shows, written plays for the stage and for radio, published books of short stories and been a newspaper columnist.
Wanderly Wagon followed human and puppet characters as they travelled around Ireland visiting interesting locations, rescuing Princesses and generally doing good. The original premise of the show expanded to follow the characters to magical lands of Irish mythology, and into outer space.
Tales of the Fairies and of the Ghost World: Collected from Oral Tradition in South-West Munster. Boston: Little Brown Company Retrieved from University of Wisconsin Library via Archive.org 8 November 2017; De Valera, Sinéad (1927). Irish Fairy Stories, London: MacMillan Children's Books. ISBN 9780330235044 Retrieved 27 November 2017 .
Tommy Sands was born on the family farm on the 'Ryan Road' [7] in the townland of Ryan, near Mayobridge, County Down, Northern Ireland. [8] His parents, Mick and Bridie, both came from families of singers, musicians and storytellers and encouraged a love of Irish culture and tradition in their seven children (Mary, the eldest, then Hugh, Ben, Colum, Eugene and Anne.