On the Street Where You Live (TV series)

On the Street Where You Live
Genre Documentary
Country of origin Ireland
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 6
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Release
Original network RTÉ One
Original release 9 January – 13 February 2009
External links
Website

On the Street Where You Live is a six-part documentary television series broadcast on RTÉ One in Ireland. Examined a different street each episode, the stories are told through local characters who have witnessed great changes come about on the streets of their home city throughout their lifetime.[1] Some footage from the programmes is available to view online at RTÉ.ie. The series was originally aired in January February 2009 each Friday at 19:30. Each episode is thirty minutes in length and featured streets from the cities of Dublin, Galway, Dundalk, Limerick, Cork and Kilkenny.

Episode list

Programme one

The first programme focused on O'Connell Street in Dublin, the capital city of Ireland, and was broadcast on 9 January 2009. It features contributions from Carmel Moran, who lived on the street for thirty-five years and witnessed many events from her sitting room window above the Happy Ring House, Billy Fleming, whose father was a road worker on the street and who himself now drives the Number 11 bus up and down the street several times each day, Herbie Donnelly, who worked in different cinemas on O'Connell Street for fifty-one years until he retired eighteen years before the programme was made, and Pat Liddy, who worked in Aer Lingus on O'Connell Street for thirty years and is now a local historian.[2]

Programme two

The first programme focused on Shop Street in Galway and was broadcast on 16 January 2009. It features contributions from Mary Bennett, who moved from County Clare to Galway in the late 1950s, built a business empire up from a souvenir stall in the Great Southern Hotel to a popular store (The Treasure Chest) located on Shop Street, Jimmy Griffin, who is a member of the fourth generation of Griffin's Bakers, established in 1876, and Pat McPhilbin, who worked in a bakery on Shop Street as a young boy and now cleans the streets for the Galway Corporation to a soundtrack of classical music.[3][4][5]

Programme three

The third programme focused on Clambrassil Street in Dundalk, County Louth and was broadcast on 23 January 2009. It features contributions from Bernadette Kavanagh, whose grandparents ran Connell's drapery store (one of the oldest shop on the street) and whose brother inherited it, Harry Lee, who worked all his life in the shoe trade only to become a radio show host upon the death of his wife, Eamonn Coleman, who grew up over his father's butcher shop and remembers the car bomb which struck the street in 1975, and Hugh Smyth, a local historian who recalls his childhood memories from Clambrassil Street.[6]

Programme four

The fourth programme focused on O'Connell Street in Limerick and was broadcast on 30 January 2009. It features contributions from Thecla Hartmann, who met her husband for the first time on O'Connell Street, and later asked him to dance for "Lady's Choice" in Cruises Hotel, Joe Malone, a regular of The White House Pub for approximately fifty years who fought in the Todds fire of 1959, Liam Hanley, whose childhood was spent living over the now demolished Listons Medical Hall on O'Connell Street (run by his father), and Mark Liddy, a local historian and tour guide in Limerick.[7][8]

Programme five

The fifth programme focused on Patrick Street in Cork and was broadcast on 6 February 2009. It features contributions from Dick O'Sullivan, a local boy who had various jobs on the street and who played music in one of the shop windows, Louise Lee, who came to Cork during the 1960s and opened a Chinese restaurant on Patrick Street with her husband, Declan Hassett, whose girlfriend discarded him under Mangon's clock only for the relationship to redevelop and for him to later propose marriage to her at that same location and who spent some time working with the Irish Examiner, and Kay Bermingham, who grew up outside the city but is now a tour guide inside it.[9]

Programme six

The sixth programme focused on High Street in Kilkenny and was broadcast on 13 February 2009. It features contributions from Pat Shortis, who has received recognition for his charity work and was the Grand Marshal of the 2008 Saint Patrick's Day parade, Anne Ryan, who entered into the family business of an electric shop at seventeen years of age when her mother became unwell, Jim Bourke, who left the priesthood and became a tailor in the family business of a big drapery store and Frank Kavanagh, who has had many different jobs on High Street and was an auxiliary fire fighter but now works in Kilkenny Castle.[10]

Reaction

The series was well received by critics and the media, with newspapers in cities such as Galway and Limerick advertising the episode in which their street was featured.[4][5][8]

References

  1. "About the Series". RTÉ. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  2. "Programme 1". RTÉ. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  3. "Programme 2". RTÉ. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  4. 1 2 "Galway on the street where you live". Galway Independent. 21 January 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2009.
  5. 1 2 "RTÉ programme on Shop St reawakens memories - Urban history revealed in interviews". Galway News. 20 January 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2009.
  6. "Programme 3". RTÉ. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  7. "Programme 4". RTÉ. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  8. 1 2 "O'Connell Street focus for RTÉ documentary". Limerick Independent. 5 February 2009. Retrieved 5 February 2009.
  9. "Programme 5". RTÉ. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
  10. "Programme 6". RTÉ. Retrieved 20 February 2009.
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