Jeremy Irons – PBS Thirteen Pioneer

Jeremy Irons talks about first being a part of PBS in “Brideshead Revisited”…

Click on the link below to watch Jeremy’s video

http://video.kqed.org/video/2365077882/

Jeremy Irons at NUI Galway Lit & Debate Society

On 12 September 2013, Jeremy Irons opened the 167th Season of the Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway.

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Literary-and-Debating-Society-of-NUI-Galway/153442678075883?fref=ts

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Literary-and-Debating-Society-of-NUI-Galway/153442678075883?fref=ts

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Literary-and-Debating-Society-of-NUI-Galway/153442678075883?fref=ts

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Literary-and-Debating-Society-of-NUI-Galway/153442678075883?fref=ts

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Literary-and-Debating-Society-of-NUI-Galway/153442678075883?fref=ts

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Literary-and-Debating-Society-of-NUI-Galway/153442678075883?fref=ts

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page

Photo via Literary and Debating Society of NUI Galway facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Literary-and-Debating-Society-of-NUI-Galway/153442678075883?fref=ts

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Photo via Abel G.C. @Sai_Deschain on Instagram

Photo via Abel G.C. @Sai_Deschain on Instagram

Photo via @marvfortytwo on Twitter

Photo via @marvfortytwo on Twitter

Via @ChloeRowland_ on Twitter

Via @ChloeRowland_ on Twitter

Photo via @marvfortytwo on Twitter

Photo via @marvfortytwo on Twitter

Jeremy Irons narrates ‘Angel Heart: A Music Storybook’

From Amazon.com

This title was released on September 24, 2013.
Order now. Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.

 

Listen to audio samples HERE.

angel heart a music storybook

Drawing on the tradition of great music-and-story works like Peter and the Wolf, Angel Heart is a music storybook in deluxe CD packaging, featuring best-selling young-adult author Cornelia Funke (Inkheart), and composer Luna Pearl Woolf (Après moi, le déluge) with an A-list cast of performers such as Jeremy Irons, Matt Haimovitz & Uccello, Frederica von Stade and more, with artwork by the award-winning Mirada.
The story: A girl whose heart has broken into a thousand pieces meets an angel. During their travels in the night, the angel enlists the help of spirits of the East, North, West, and South on his quest to mend her heart.
In addition to Angel Heart, (story by Cornelia Funke, music by Luna Pearl Woolf, narrated by Jeremy Irons); the work combines well known songs from The Beatles, classical music and folk music. The visual storytelling design is by Mirada, a multi-platform company that was founded by Mathew Cullen and Pan’s Labyrinth director Guillermo del Toro.

Product Details

Orchestra: Uccello, Childrens Choir of St. Martin de Porres School
Conductor: Michael Morgan
Composer: Luna Pearl Woolf (composer), Cornelia Funke (author)
Audio CD (September 24, 2013)
Number of Discs: 1
Label: OXINGALE RECORDS
ASIN: B00E4V0BUA
In-Print Editions: MP3 Music

Jeremy Irons Opens ‘Books Are My Bag’ at Whyte Books

UPDATED POST: Photos and video from the day of the event –

Photo via the Whyte Books Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/WhyteBooks

Photo via the Whyte Books Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/WhyteBooks

Photo by Jason Lee www.jasonxlee.com via The Mizen Peninsula blog on Tumblr

Photo by Jason Lee http://www.jasonxlee.com via The Mizen Peninsula blog on Tumblr

From the @WhyteBooksSchul Twitter feed https://twitter.com/WhyteBooksSchul

From the @WhyteBooksSchul Twitter feed https://twitter.com/WhyteBooksSchul

From the @WhyteBooksSchul Twitter feed http://t.co/qgwuIDQG5M

From the @WhyteBooksSchul Twitter feed http://t.co/qgwuIDQG5M

Jeremy Irons - Celebrity Supporter of @BooksAreMyBag

Jeremy Irons – Celebrity Supporter of @BooksAreMyBag

Jeremy Irons will be opening the Books Are My Bag party on Saturday, September 14th, at Whyte Books in Schull, Co. Cork, Ireland at 2:30pm.

This is the biggest ever campaign in support of a seriously endangered species – your local bookshop!

For more information: Whyte Books – The Bookshop in Schull, Main Street, Schull County Cork. Telephone : 028 27606 email : info @whytebooks.com

Follow Whyte Books on Twitter @WhyteBooksSchul and on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/WhyteBooks

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Jeremy Irons narrates ‘Change’ for the Bela Initiative

The Bela Initiative – an alliance where organisations, individuals, businesses and entrepreneurs can join to collaborate, share information and experience—both to give and to receive in ways that empower oneself or others to develop a clear purpose to serve the whole. To enable a world that works for everyone.

Read more about the Bela Initiative.

Watch the short film, narrated by Jeremy Irons:

Max Irons on BBC One Breakfast

Max Irons made an appearance on BBC One Breakfast on Wednesday 4 September 2013.  He talked about The White Queen, Posh and his new play Farragut North.

See the video HERE.

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Jeremy Irons in ‘Trendy Art of Living’ Magazine

Jeremy Irons is featured in the August 2013 issue of Trendy Art of Living Magazine, issue Nr4(57), from Poland.

Thank you to Magdalena Sapielak for the photos! (Click on them to view them full size.)

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Max Irons on dynasties and The White Queen – The Times

Max Irons is featured in The Times from Thursday 15 August 2013.

The full article is for Times subscribers only and can be found HERE.

However, the text of the article can be read on the photos below. Click to enlarge them to full size:

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Jeremy Irons at Prison Phoenix Trust 25th Anniversary Celebration

Prison Phoenix Trust patron Jeremy Irons was at HMP Grendon on 11 July 2013, as part of the Trust’s 25th Anniversary Celebration. Jeremy read excerpts from letters by prisoners who have written to the Trust. He also read from Shakespeare’s Richard II.

Audio clips have been made available by the Prison Phoenix Trust.

In this clip, Jeremy Irons tells us the history of the Prison Phoenix Trust:

Jeremy Irons at Grendon Prison for PPT 25th

Jeremy Irons Talks Sailing in Irish Examiner

West Cork cruising out of its league

Jeremy Irons's boat - Willing Lass

Jeremy Irons’s boat – Willing Lass

Sunday, August 11, 2013

IT MIGHT seem bit of paradox, but the best way to see Ireland’s raw, elemental natural beauty is to leave the place behind you, in your wake.

By Tommy Barker

You don’t have to go far, mind, to see sheer splendour: a half a mile, a few miles, or in nautical terms, a league or two off the island’s coastline will do in many cases, opening up a fresh, new, waterborne perspective — new horizons, literally.

World traveller, actor and sailing fanatic Jeremy Irons has rightly described his home patch of water along the West Cork coast as “a promised land for leisure sailors”, raving about the amazing scenery, the setting and most often, the solitude.

And, Irons calls for more shore-based supports to build marine activity and visitors, such as marinas and berths to fill in the gaps on the shoreline. Other sailors and old salts note that the country’s dramatic west coast and islands also need marinas to lure and shelter sailors from near and far.

For such a small country, we have unfathomable riches of coastline, especially if you follow every indent of shoreline, visit every cove, peek in a cave, land on an island, balm on beach, whale or birdwatch, or scale a small cliff or promontory upon landing.

As a nation though, we are only very slowly rediscovering our maritime heritage: you can tell from the surfboards and kayaks on roof-racks, and from dinghies and RIBs on trailers behind family cars or jeeps that we’re taking to the rivers, lakes, estuaries and ocean waves in ever-increasing numbers.

Cork’s Ocean to City event has brought hundreds of previous landlubbers to the Lee, and it’s a racing certainty that the recently-discovered love of being afloat will in turn bring people now from the city to the oceans, in return.

Many of these fast-growing, burgeoning and thrilling sports literally just skim the surface of possibilities: there’s a way to go further and deeper. It’s cruising. And it doesn’t just have to be for the elite, or the wealthy.

Essentially, cruising (stop sniggering at the back!) is travelling by boat, either by motor or sail, and the term generally refers to trips lasting several days at least — during which you can cover lots of ground by water, if you get the drift. Sailors have the option of using marinas and established ports bringing trade to bars, shops and restaurants, or just dropping anchor at will at a beauty spot, or a mix of both.

Cruising has long been popular in Ireland, gathering pace in the 1960s, even more so in the noughties, and now is having a bit of a halcyon era, reckons Gail McAllister of the Irish Sail Association, who was cruise co-ordinator for the Gathering Cruise 2013.

That two-week Gathering event unfortunately hit the news for all the wrong reasons as the Dutch Tall Ship and training vessel the four-master Astrid hit the rocks outside Oysterhaven.

Fortunately, all 30 aboard the Astrid were rescued in jig-time, thanks to super-prompt and reassuring attendance by Kinsale and Courtmacsherry RNLI and other emergency services: the cruise for the other 50 boats was, however, incident free, and largely blessed with great weather too.

At any one time, about 80% of the cruising craft along our scenic shores will be Irish-owned and based, and visitors from further afield typically are British, or French, while Germans sailors who come here tend to charter boats from Irish ports, says the ISA’s Gail McAllister who is based in Adrigole in West Cork.

She said the event had put solid legacy foundations down to build Ireland as a cruising destination, with considerable international interest built up for future flotilla cruises. One attraction of the Gathering Cruise was safety in numbers, companionable company, and the chance to try unexplored waters for many of the 50 boats’ sailors. Many of the skippers had never before been beyond a port or two from their home bases: “they felt a little bit safer, a little bit more secure”, McAllister notes.

The event will build over future summers, with a large flotilla gathering envisaged every four years, and smaller, annual ones as well. Interest garnered for the 2013 maiden flotilla cruise was considerable, followed internationally on logs, blogs and on Facebook.

A UK couple, Dave and Carole Winwood from Poole last sailed off the Irish south-west coast 15 years ago, revisiting with a friend Phil Bewl, on a six-week voyage that now sees them Galway-bound — a change from their traditional sailing waters like the Channel Islands, Isle of Man, Brittany and Vigo in Spain. “It’s been great fun and we’re spreading the word about Ireland,” they promised.

According to John Leahy, commodore of the Cruising Club of Ireland, the typical age of those who go cruising is from 40 to 70, an age profile dictated to in part by the cost of boats, and the time involved, though crews can be of any age, and voyages of any duration.

The Gathering saw one sailor, Dubliner Betty Dunne, celebrating her 80th birthday on the water and on shore at Oysterhaven.

Boats can typically cost €25,000 upwards, but more basic ones can be bought for the price of a second-hand car: €5,000 can see you out cruising in safety. Those without boats can join Irish charters or sailing courses, at prices from €500 to €1,000 — competitive with the likes of Greek or Croatian charters.

Not only are more people than ever making trips up and down the incredible coastline, whale and dolphin watching en route, they are served by a bigger than ever choice of support services, from marinas and pontoons to useful, cheery yellow ‘visitor moorings’ for casual arrivals. They are aided and assisted by GPS and other electronic navigation and weather-informing aids, while a potentially life-saving smartphone app, a position monitoring aid called ‘safetrx’ has just been launched with Irish Coastguard back-up.

The Gathering Cruise finished up in Dingle last weekend, with seven of the 50 boats that started in Dun Laoghaire then facing either a return trip or a continuation of a round-Ireland voyage. One crew that had decided to stay in Kinsale and not chance the Mizen rounding instead got a bus to Cork, hired a car and drove to Dingle for the final wrap party, part-sponsored by Dingle Brewery Company, and their Tom Crean beer. Tom Crean? Now, didn’t he really push the boat out?

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