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Meet Jordan Lee and Madie Wilson-Walker, the talented couple with a shared Paralympic dream

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A chance meeting at the World Para Athletics Championships in Dubai brought Jordan Lee and Madie Wilson-Walker together. Now, two years on, the Irish high jumper and the Canadian sprinter/long jumper are plotting international glory as a couple. Lee, who was born with one hand, and Wilson-Walker, a bilateral amputee who runs with blades, are currently training out of Killarney.

This week Adam Moynihan caught up with the pair to chat about life in Kerry, dealing with the pandemic, and their shared Paralympic dream.

Adam Moynihan: Madie, you’ve relocated to Ireland. Is it a stupid question to ask why?

Madie Wilson-Walker: *smiles and points her thumb at Jordan, who is seated next to her*

AM: How is Killarney treating you so far?

MWW: I really like it. People here are really nice. The food tastes amazing - even the most simple things. Seeing all the little local and family-owned cafés around is great too, because we have some of them in Canada but it's not a huge thing. The views are amazing. And the weather's not too bad either. I don't mind rain because it snows a lot where I'm from.

AM: And you’re training with Killarney Valley. How has that been going for you?

MWW: Yeah, good. We're kind of coming out of base training a little bit now. So it's starting to be more events-specific training, which is nice. But I really like the team environment that's there, and Tomás (Griffin) is obviously an amazing coach.

AM: I want to talk about the future and both of your ambitions in sport, but first I’d like to take you back to the start. How did you meet?

Jordan Lee: We met at the World Championships in Dubai in November 2019. So, jeez, two years ago actually. I was at the track one day supporting one of my Irish teammates, and Madie just walked up the stairs and asked if she could sit beside me. At first I was really taken aback by the confidence she had. That’s kind of how it all started.

AM: Madie, what were your first impressions of Jordan?

MWW: I thought he was really nice, but I found it very hard to understand his accent! I'm half deaf as well so it was not good.

JL: You were just laughing constantly.

MWW: Yeah, it was nervous laughing. It was like, “I don't know what the hell this guy's talking about”! But he was really nice, really funny. He's very comfortable to be around.

AM: And how did things develop from there?

JL: We were in contact with each other through social media, I suppose mainly through Snapchat. Just asking each other how we were getting on after the World Championships. I was speaking to Tomás and I said, “look, man, I wouldn't mind going on holiday”, because I was stressed out after the competition. He asked if I had a plan on where I wanted to go and I was like, “maybe Canada…” He said, “I called it!” He knew.

I went over to Canada for a week-and-a-half and had a great time. We got up to lots of different touristy things, like Niagara Falls and going to hockey games and stuff. We said, look, we're gonna try this out and see how it goes. And as you can imagine, it was quite tricky, because then COVID happened.

AM: So, no international travel. You were separated again. How difficult was that for you both?

MWW: At first, it wasn't super hard because we knew we probably would have had a few months where we didn’t see each other anyways. And then, when the travel restrictions came in, we were like, “I'll see you next month”, and then, “I'll see you next month”… And then, finally, after over a year-and-a-half, we were able to reunite again. He came to Canada, and then I came back over with him. So that was nice. But in the meantime we just FaceTimed every day. We had a movie night over FaceTime and stuff like that.

JL: It’s all coming out now!

AM: What was it like meeting up again after such a long time?

MWW: I'm a very emotional person but I said to Jordan, “I don't think I'm gonna cry when I see you - I think I'm just gonna be happy”. And when I saw him at the airport, I was fine for about 0.2 seconds and then I start bawling crying.

JL: Everyone was looking at us, I was worried they were going to think I said something to her! It was a bit strange initially when I first saw her because I hadn't seen her in a year-and-a-half - I had been speaking to and looking at her on a screen. But it has been great. It's nice to have that training partner on a consistent basis. Even being at home, when I wake up in the morning, I'm not the only person doing sit-ups! We are motivating each other to strive to be better all the time.

AM: Do you train together every day?

MWW: Pretty much every day. Sometimes he'll have something specific, like a high jump exercise, that I obviously won't have. But for the most part we'll train at the same time.

JL: During the winter season our training will be pretty similar anyway because you're just trying to get into really good physical shape, just plenty of conditioning. We can do it together, which is nice.

AM: Are you competitive with one another, on the track and away from it?

MWW: Not super competitive, trying to one-up each other or anything, but we'll definitely try to battle it out in some workouts. We cheer each other on too. If I'm starting to slow down a bit and I’m getting tired, he will encourage me.

JL: Yeah, we’re competitive, but we wouldn't be doing it for our own ego. Like this morning as an example, at eight o'clock, I was just getting up and Madie was awake before me. I was chatting away, asking how her morning was. And she said, “I've already done my stretching routine, my core work and I was doing a bit of upper body, doing my push ups”. I was like, “already? I really have to up my game here”. It's funny to have that relationship with someone who really relates 100% to what it is that you're doing.

AM: Yeah, it's pretty unique, two top sportspeople in a relationship. If you experience a low in your sport, or you experience a high, the other person knows how you're feeling. Most people don't have that because they're going back to a person to whom sports is a different world. Do you find that helpful?

MWW: Yeah, I find that sometimes friends who aren't necessarily at the level of athletics that we are, they'll be like, “well, just skip the workout”. We can't just skip a workout. People don't realise how much of a time commitment it really is. So I think being able to relate on that level really helps because we know that we can't do anything until after practice, and we've done our recovery. Then we can chill out. Whereas if you are with people who aren’t very understanding they might say, “what's the point of even doing that?”

JL: It’s even more true for the sport that we’re in, because it's an individual event. I think I've mentioned this before in previous interviews: we can’t hide behind our teammates and let them pick up the slack for us. We can't miss a session because our partner or friends don’t understand. I think it helps massively [that we’re both athletes]. If I'm feeling a bit low after a session, or if I'm feeling a bit tired, Madie will notice that straight away. We can help each other on that front.

AM: Do you think para athletics is in a good place right now?

MWW: I think it's gotten a lot larger than when I first started, and a lot more competitive too. If you look back at a couple of performances of people that were medaling back in 2012, the standards now are way up.

AM: Why do you think that is?

JL: I think the power of social media has really helped things. It's really showing people across the world that there is this thing called Paralympic sport and the Paralympic Games for people to take part in, and see whether or not they have some potential. It's amazing, because there's a ton of people now in my category (T47 high jump). It's so competitive to the extent that the three people who medaled this year would have won the able-bodied National Senior Championships the last five years in a row. It’s great to see and I'm delighted that the sport is growing and everybody's continuing to get better. Ultimately, that's what we all want. And we want to have that respect that we're really good professional athletes and not just really good professional, disabled athletes.

AM: What does 2022 have in store for you?

MWW: Definitely, for the both of us, the World Championships would be the next big competition, which is in Japan in August of next year. And then the next Paralympic Games will be in Paris 2024. So, I think that'd obviously be a goal for both of us, because I didn't qualify for Tokyo this year. I definitely want to have a comeback season with Worlds and then hopefully make it to the Paralympic Games. After that, I just want to stay in the sport as long as my body will let me. I think we'll both be involved in sport once we retire, whether it's coaching kids with disabilities, or personal training, stuff like that. It's a really fun atmosphere to be around.

AM: And Jordan, you’re a coach with the local basketball team, Scotts Lakers. How is that going?

JL: Good, yeah. There's a pretty decent vibe amongst the group. We’re trying to bring this sense of togetherness. That's something that maybe they have struggled with in previous years. And I think it's important to really bring everybody together and highlight the goal for the season ahead. We've had a bumpy enough start but we've got plenty of time to turn that around.

I’m also coaching with Killarney Valley and we've got some really good up-and-coming young athletes there as well. We had a fantastic season, and it was only our first real season as a club considering that the track has only been built a year. In the space of 12 months, we had 10-plus national medals, which is fantastic - especially for a small town like Killarney. The quality of coaching, not just from Tomás, myself and Madie but the other coaches as well, is top class.

AM: Madie, what have you made of the facilities?

MWW: The track is amazing. And the fact that Jordan and Sam (Griffin) and Tomás actually laid down the track, that's really cool. All the gyms that we've gone to are really nice too.

JL: The track is a game-changer. I think it's important to have such an amazing track facility in the town. People who may have been involved in other sports might see athletics and they might want to try it knowing that there's a facility that they can actually train on. Whereas before, if somebody was to offer a chance to another athlete to take part, they probably would have declined. Now, you can visit, you can properly, physically go to a track in your hometown, try it out, see how you're getting on, and then be facilitated by really top class coaches who are versatile towards people of all abilities. It doesn’t matter if you're trying to participate in the sport at a really high standard or just taking part because you enjoy it. We've got coaches there that are very versatile. We've got a couple of members of the club who happen to have intellectual disabilities, and everybody's being treated fairly and equally, which is very important.

AM: That’s great to hear. So, looking to ahead to 2024, what would it mean to you both to appear side-by-side at the next Paralympics?

MWW: That'd be really cool – it would be such a cool story to tell down the line, if we both ended up going. [To Jordan] And I'd be, like, cheering you on and you’d be cheering me on? I feel like it would create a great atmosphere for both of us.

JL: Yeah, I mean, it's kind of hard to put into words really, how cool that would be. To be at the biggest event in the entire world, to be able to call yourself an Olympian, and to do it alongside your partner. I don't think many couples can say that. So that would be really cool. That's definitely a goal that we both have. 100%.

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

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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.

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Rising football star Luke Doolan talks life at Kerry FC

This week, our Transition Year student Luke Mangan caught up with one of Kerry FC’s young talents, Luke Doolan. The pair discussed Doolan’s journey in football so far, including his early days with Killarney Athletic to now playing for Kerry FC.

When you were growing up, who was your football or soccer idol, and why?

Messi, because he’s the greatest player to play the game.

Who was your childhood hero?

I’d say my father. He helped me a lot throughout my career.

If you weren’t a footballer, what would your dream career be?

I wanted to be an astronaut. I wanted to go to space, but somehow, I don’t think that’ll happen now.

What does it feel like to be part of a great team with good support every week?

It’s great. The support every week is brilliant. We work hard; the training is very good. We play well every week for a very good club.

What’s it like to have been with your local club, Killarney Athletic, to now being with the green of Kerry?

Killarney Athletic were very good to me. When I was starting off coaches like JP Mullins were fantastic. Then when I went into the seniors, it was great to have Brendan Moloney and Joe Hurley, who both have a lot of experience.

In a county known for GAA, how does it feel to be such an icon for Kerry soccer?

It feels good. Obviously, Kerry has a big association with the GAA and Kerry FC is new. Soccer is gaining more momentum in the county, which is great to see.

Do you ever see yourself playing in a football game like FIFA sometime?

Yeah, it would be cool to be honest because I play it at home. So yeah, it would be nice to see myself in the game sometime.

Tell me more about your time with Athletic.

I played with great players when I was young, those in my Athletics team and the youths’ team. We had some great players there, some of the best in the county. It’s a great team with fantastic coaches involved. Then with my move to Kerry FC, obviously you have Colin [Healy], Conor [McCarthy], Chris [Collopy]. Brilliant coaches who really help me to push my game and get further in my career.

How did it feel to finally get your first minutes for Kerry?

Nerve-wracking but glad to finally get onto the pitch. It took me a while but I’m glad to get minutes. I’ve only been there for a few months now and I’m just grateful to be involved in the squad and to get some minutes in.

You mentioned Brendan Moloney. How did it feel being coached by him?

He’s class to be fair. He had some bad injuries which knocked him back in his career. Obviously, he is still a class player. He came back to Athletic, his home club, and he’s still there now. Great for the club and great for the team to keep going on with their history and what they do, so yeah, he’s a great coach.

Luke Doolan will be travelling with the Kingdom when they go to Dublin at the weekend ahead of their FAI cup semi-final clash with Shamrock Rovers at Tallaght Stadium on Sunday at 6pm.

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