There really is something for everybody at the Sean O’Casey over the next two weekends. On Friday , 25th August , for the first time ever an evening of Burlesque entertainment will be taking place . Featuring East Wall’s own Vixyn Von Trix (Miss Burlesque Ireland 2015) , this promises to be “a night of glamour, …
Daily Archive: August 22, 2017
SITE CALENDAR
Categories
- 1913 Lockout
- Arthur Kavanagh Art
- awards
- BLOODY SUNDAY
- Bloody Sunday 1920
- Book Sale
- canals/boating/canoeing
- Christmas
- CHRISTMAS 2012
- Christmas 2013
- Creche
- DANCING
- Dinosaurs!
- DIY SKILLS
- DOCKERS
- Dublin Dockworkers Preservation society
- East Wall
- EAST WALL HALLOWEEN
- East Wall P.E.G. Drama & Variety Group
- EAST WALL SPORT
- EAST WALL YOUTH CLUB
- Easter Week Rising 1916
- education
- employment skills
- FAMILY EVENTS
- Family Fun Day
- Football
- Gardening Competion
- GREEN ENERGY
- halloween
- History
- HISTORY WEEK 2012
- history week 2013
- Irish Citizen Army
- Irish traditional music
- JOBS
- katie byrne
- Men's shed
- molly maguires
- NASCADH
- NASCADH NEWSLETTER
- Paul O Brien
- PRIDE OF PLACE 2012
- remembering 1913
- rock and roll
- ROCKIN ROAD FESTIVAL
- Sean O'Casey
- Sean O'Casey autobiography
- Sean O'Casey Theatre
- SMITH1
- SOCIAL EVENTS
- sport
- St Barnabas Church
- St JOSEPHS CO ED
- St Josephs Pre School East Wall
- Summertime East Wall
- THEATRE
- Uncategorized
- World War One
- Writing/Arts/Poetry/Theatre
Top Posts & Pages
- Christopher Wolfe - A North Dock victim of World War One U-boat attack
- Rory O'Connor , Jack Nalty and the chess-set fit for heroes
- The Lost Life of Paddy Lynch; GPO Garrison 1916
- Sean O'Casey , Abercorn Road, and the 'Battle of Clontarf'
- WILDE VINTAGE DUBLIN - Every weekend at Merchants Yard
- BLOODY SUNDAY 1920, THE G.A.A. AND ‘STONEWALL’ JACK O REILLY
- "North Wall eye-opener" - a Dockland Pub to remember
- Canon D.H. Hall, the Building Parson: Celebrating the centenary of a housing revolution in Dublin.
- 1902-1912 BOYS SCHOOL ARCHIVE
- "From Ballyfermot to New York and to the Sean O'Casey..." - an interview with playwright Derek Murphy