Connect with us

News

An interview with Con Houlihan (Part 1)

Published

on

In January of 2012, just a few short months before his death, legendary Kerry sports writer Con Houlihan sat down with Killarney Advertiser sports columnist Eamonn Fitzgerald for a wide-ranging conversation. In Part 1 of a two-part interview, Con speaks about his writing methods, his childhood in Castleisland, and his favourite ever Kerry players.

 

Dublin has a special attraction for me. Very regular journeys to Croke Park for well over half a century has been part of it.

Less regular, but very enjoyable also, were the visits to Lansdowne Road, Dalymount Park and its offshoots, Glenmalure Park, Tolka Park, St Pat’s of Inchicore and Home Farm. Leopardstown, Harold’s Cross and other sports venues had their own attractions. Sport apart, the country’s capital is home for many of my friends.

Dublin is home from home for one such great Kerryman: Con Houlihan, originator of “arise Knocknagoshel and take your place among the nations of the earth”. He was 86 years old a short time before Christmas. Con was very much part of my interest in sport, particularly when Dublin in the rare auld times was also home from home for me.

86 WINTERS

Wasn’t it Yeats himself in ‘Among School Children’ who wrote about what he thought the impressions schoolchildren had of him when he was visiting them as a senator.

“A sixty-year-old smiling public man. With sixty or more winters on its head.” Con has 86 and he has aged, of course, physically. The huge frame in the mighty big anorak (long before it became Bertie’s trademark) that I met so often at the Canal End, or in Jimmy O’Brien’s on Munster Final day, was no more. It has been a good spell now since we met. Time to head for Dublin.

His eyes narrowed when I entered the hospital ward. “Who have I now?”

“Another Kerryman, Con.”

“Oh, and your name?”

“Éamonn Fitzgerald.” Silence for all of nine, maybe 10 seconds at a stretch.

“1972, Offaly. Replay”. The mind was as sharp as ever, as I discovered over the next two hours.

He had five of that day’s daily papers in front of him. The day was still young, about half-ten at most, yet at that stage he had spent several hours reading their contents.

“Where are your glasses, Con?”

“I never had them in my life and I don’t need them now either,” he replied, and the first of many twinkles illuminated his visage. The best of wine was rising to the top, like beaded bubbles winking at the brim. His favourite tipple of late is brandy and milk. Something to do with sustenance, he explained.

THE CANAL END

Like thousands of other sports lovers through the decades, I eagerly awaited the Evening Press hitting the streets in mid-afternoon on the Monday after the All-Ireland final. What would Con’s perspective be from his vantage point at the Canal End? He avoided the Press Box. He preferred to be on the terraces, with the plain people of Ireland. In the press box, journalists can be cocooned, somewhat adrift of the atmosphere generated by the spectators. Furthermore, there are several games being played and action replayed in the minds and bodies of the partisan supporters on the terraces. Con was among them.

That’s why readers waited for Con’s report. It would be different; it always was. Other scribes wrote to a formula of mainly factual account of the battle for Sam. Not so, Con.

Did you write your column, directly after the match, Con?”

He was off and you knew best not to interfere with a classical wordsmith in a stream of consciousness, so beloved by Joyce, that great Dub. “After the match I went drinking, to Mulligan’s in Poolbeg Street and to many other hostelries as well, and I was in no hurry home. I started penning my thoughts at 4am on Monday morning. That’s when I do all of my writing. My thoughts are clearest at that time of the day.

“That goes back to growing up in Castle Island (his preferred spelling). My father was an early riser and would be up at that time; he had to be. He worked in the creamery and he had to get the steam up for the creamery with timber and turf. Some years there was damn bad turf and that was no easy task.

“My brother Jerry, sister Marie and I were well used to going to the fairs early in the mornings, driving cattle and pigs to Castle Island. They’re all dead now, God be good to them. We lived one mile north of Castle Island on the main road to Dublin. There’s nothing there now.”

He wrote everything long hand for the newspapers, but told me he turned to the laptop in modern times. “Sure, you can learn anything.”

REMEMBERED

“Castle Island hasn’t forgotten you, Con, and neither has Kerry County Council,” I told him. “When they built that spanking new road and roundabout to bypass the town, they gave it your name.” The eyes danced, the chest rose visibly. No need for words, the body language said it all. Pride, satisfaction, and the realisation that his own people cherished him, loved him for what he is, and has been; it defied that dictum that no man is a prophet in his own land. He savoured the honour. Also of course his bust is in the main street in the town he loves so well. The sculptor captured well his eccentricities. You can see his habit of covering his hand over his mouth.

“I was very shy growing up, conscious of my size, and that was how that came about.”

Time for a little ‘sos’ and then we’re both away on the magic carpet, with the wind beneath our feet. He’s away in a hack.

“I wasn’t great at the football myself, but I did play senior colleges football at midfield when I was only 14. I went to school in Castlemartyr and to Tralee CBS. Sport is very important in the lives of people and never more so than now. With all the bad news and such negativity, sport can be the great escape. Not just for the hour of the game, or the short minutes of the greyhounds rounding the final bend in Shelbourne Park, but all the talk before and after the events.

“Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh is right: sport is life itself, a great escape when we need to escape and then there is the unpredictability of it all, just like life. His eclectic range of sports provides the artist with a wide canvas to explore and the gentlest of hints is enough.”

RACING

“I spent one year in England and spent many short stays there to visit Anfield, Epsom, Aintree, Cheltenham and other places covering great sporting occasions. The English are very fine people and I have fine memories of that country.

“Arkle was a mighty champion. I can still recall those great moments in the Gold Cup with Arkle and Mill House. They both fought a great battle up that hill in the closing stages. Ireland v England. The Irish contingent went stone mad when Pat Taaffe brought Arkle past the winning post. Arkle was great and was so consistent. He never ran in the Grand National because his owner was too fond of him and was afraid he would get injured. I knew Pat very well.

“Then there was Dawn Run and John Joe O’Neill, how he battled back from so many jumping mistakes and beat them all. Shergar, of course, was also great. I patted him on the way in after winning in Epsom. What happened him at the end we will never know. The strange thing about him for a thoroughbred horse was that he had four common looking feet like a plough horse, but he had a great heart.

I suppose Jackie Kyle was the best I saw in rugby. I played rugby myself with Castle Island, Currow and Killarney and I found it great. In rugby you are involved in the game all the time, whereas in football you could be out of the play for long periods.”

FOOTBALL GREATS

And that leads us nicely into the greats of football. Jog the memory.

“Mick O’Connell was supreme, a wonderful stylist. Jack O’Shea of course. What a man, you could play him everywhere and anywhere. When the team was struggling Jacko would turn up anywhere and lift the siege. He had a strong engine and heart to burn. Still in Iveragh and you have to mention your own name sake, Maurice Fitzgerald. He was a classy player, a real stylist, a great forward and you could play him at midfield also.

“Colm Cooper is the best forward I have seen. He’s a genius; he sees things and opportunities that no one else sees. He operates by instinct and often he gives the impression that even he himself doesn’t know what he will do next. He sees things no one foresees; just a quick shimmy and he is away.

“He is very brave and has a wonderful left leg. Great players who are ‘ciotógs’ have a big advantage. It is very hard to hook a great left-handed hurler. Same in tennis with McEnroe and Connors.

“It broke my heart that such a great player was denied the honour of captaining a winning Kerry All-Ireland team.”

 

Above: Journalist and author Con Houlihan in November of 1996. Pic: Ray McManus/Sportsfile.

Advertisement

News

Killarney Looking Good competition celebrates community pride

Published

on

By

The annual Killarney Looking Good competition took place at the Great Southern Hotel on Wednesday night where Kerry GAA captain Gavin White presented the awards to the deserving recipients.

Killarney Park Hotel came out on top with the overall prize being awarded to the newly refurbished five-star hotel.

The judges were impressed by the stylish new entrance and driveway and their spectacular display of flowers and window boxes. Killarney Park won the same award back in 1992.

The best large commercial premises award went to Killarney Racecourse, and the best small commercial premises was awarded to Sheahan’s Pharmacy.

Charlie Foley’s won the best public house; best restaurant was 40 Main and Walsh Bros Shoes was named best retail.

In the residential categories, the best private residence was Tomies View, Ross Road, best large estate went to Countess Grove, and best small estate was won by Coolgreane Park.

The winner of the 2025 Fr Michael Murphy Memorial Pride of Place Award was presented to the Killarney Asylum Seekers Initiative while the Yvonne Quill Memorial Volunteer of the Year Award winner went to Margaret Curtin.

The Killarney Looking Good competition is organised by Killarney Municipal District Council and Killarney Chamber of Tourism and Commerce and sponsored by MD O’Shea’s & Sons and O’Mahony Media.

The competition aims to encourage residents and business owners to keep the town looking well through the use of flowers, hanging baskets, colour schemes.

Attachments

Continue Reading

News

From Woodlawn to the world stage: How Drag, Lizzo, the Eurovision and Mom’s crafty needle-work made ‘Liam Bee’, BPerfect!

Published

on

By

By Marie Carroll-O’Sullivan

Not every road leads to Dublin. Some lead from Killarney to Cork, then London, and back again with a stop to perform in front of Lizzo and Harry Styles along the way. I had the pleasure of photographing Liam Bee, at a recent local event. The art of make-up struck me before anything else. So, when I heard Liam Bee was one of our own, i.e. Liam Kelleher from Woodlawn, it was a must for me to talk drag, makeup, resilience, and how a quiet kid from a Kerry town ended up living their dream with a little help from RuPaul, BPerfect Cosmetics, and one very supportive Killarney family.

Tell me about young Liam growing up in Killarney?
Shy. Very shy. Like can’t-read-aloud-in-class shy. I was introverted, anxious, and definitely not out. But looking back, that quietness taught me how to observe, reflect, and eventually express myself. Killarney is beautiful, but when you’re growing up different, it can feel isolating. Still, it gave me resilience and a thick skin, which is helpful when you’re gluing rhinestones to your face at all hours.

So how did drag come into your life?
Believe it or not through my Mam! She was watching RuPaul’s Drag Race, and I remember walking in like, “What is this?!” It was weird to me at the time but clearly it stuck! Years later, when I went to art college in Cork, I started experimenting with looks inspired by the Blitz Kids of ‘80s London and the New York Club Kids.My first drag performance was in a competition. Mam sewed the costume from scratch. She still helps with my outfits but that one was special. I was terrified… and then I won. That was it. I was in love with drag.

What does drag mean to you now?
Drag is my art, my outlet and strangely enough, my career ladder. It’s the reason I was hired as the Irish representative for BPerfect Cosmetics. Now I travel all over Ireland and England as a makeup artist and educator. Painting faces has become my day job, and I am grateful that drag opened these doors I didn’t even know were in the building.

Considering the time and effort it takes many ladies to rock up at an event looking effortless, I’m struggling to imagine the prep at such an extravagant level AND hold down a jet setting 9?
90% of what happens is before the show even starts. Booking venues, coordinating tech, styling wigs, designing posters, managing socials and hot-gluing feathers to corsets at 2am. It’s a full production.

Drag taught me everything from event planning to public speaking. I also learned that “yes” isn’t always the right answer. Burnout is real. Living in London showed me that. It also made me fall in love with Ireland all over again, especially Killarney.

Has your family always been supportive?
They’re incredible. I suppose maybe not all sparkles at first, but they’ve always shown up. Mam makes my costumes. Dad’s helped build sets. My younger brother is my biggest fan. Even my grandmother in Abbeydorney follows my gigs!Recently, a whole gang of aunts, uncles, and cousins came to see me perform at the Everyman Theatre in Cork. That support means more than I’ll ever be able to put into words.

But it hasn’t all been sequins and standing ovations, has it?
No. Drag still attracts hate sometimes. I’ve had people share photos of me in school group chats, make awful comments, even threaten my life. I’ve been spat on, kicked, beaten. All because of a costume.But I’ve never wanted to stop. If anything, it’s made me more determined. Drag taught me what real resilience looks like. Glitter is more than decoration, it’s armour.

A little bird tells me you’ve performed in front of some big names.  Do tell…
I’ve had some pinch-me moments! I opened for Bambi Thug—our Eurovision star—at The Academy in Dublin. I’ve performed at ‘Mother Pride Block Party’ in front of thousands and taken the stage in Berlin.But the moment that still feels completely surreal? Performing in front of Lizzo and Harry Styles in London. I mean, these are artists I’ve idolised. I’ve belted out Good as Hell at the top of my lungs and danced like no one was watching to Treat People With Kindness. And suddenly, they were the ones watching me. I was thinking, “Enjoy this moment, keep breathing, and pretend this is totally normal.” It wasn’t. It was unreal.

What’s your vision for the future of Irish drag?
More visibility. More platforms. Not just in Dublin. There’s so much talent in smaller towns; it just needs the right space to grow. I’d love an Irish version of Drag Race (RTE2, I’m looking at you!). And more people like Annette Roche Clifford did recently in organising the Killarney event. She claims she was tired wearing out the road to Cork to see my friends and I perform. Her energy is the kind we need in more rural communities.

Some final words for young LGBTQ+ people growing up in rural Ireland Liam?
If I can go from being too anxious to speak in school to performing in front of thousands, you can too. Your path might look different and that’s the point. Different is where the magic lives.To the parents: You don’t need to understand everything right away. That comes later. What matters most is love and acceptance. Celebrate your child. That’s what my parents did, and it changed everything.

Liam’s journey proves that greatness doesn’t need a city skyline, it just needs courage, sequins, and sometimes, a mam with a sewing machine. From Woodlawn to the world stage, Liam’s story is a reminder that your most powerful path is the one where you get to be fully yourself, glue gun, glitter, and all.

Attachments

Continue Reading