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Celtic Steps Reels In The Years With Sensational Celebration Event

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This year marks ten years of Celtic Steps The Show and the Irish Music and Dance Show kicked off their season in style with a sensational Launch Party on Friday last at their home of the Killarney Racecourse.

Cathaoirleach Killarney Municipal District Cllr Niall Kelleher David Rea Director Celtic Steps Brenda Doyle and Toddy Doyle Muckross Traditional Farms at Celtic Steps the Show at a special launch to celebrate their 10th anniversary and opening of their opening season 2023 at Killarney Racecourse on Friday night. Photo: Valerie O'Sullivan

Members of Celtic Steps the Show celebrating their 10th anniversary at a special launch of their opening season 2023 at Killarney Racecourse on Friday night. Included are Shannon Flanagan Holly Duffy Erin Grace Cooke Sean Slemon David Pyke and Peig O'Connor. Photo: Valerie O'Sullivan

Terrence Mulcahy Director Killarney Racecourse Ailish Mulcahy Bridie Brosnan Niall Brosnan at Celtic Steps the Show at a special launch to celebrate their 10th anniversary and opening of their opening season 2023 at Killarney Racecourse on Friday night. Photo: Valerie O'Sullivan

The event was attended by a variety of local businesspeople and politicians as well as media and some of Kerry’s most popular personalities.
Their Guests were treated to a lively trad set by the Celtic Steps Band while mingling and enjoying some drinks and canapes.
The Pre-Show Celebration was concluded with a heartfelt speech from David Rea & Sean Murphy, Co-Directors who took a walk down memory lane and talked about the Show’s humble beginnings and inspiring journey.
Sean Murphy remembered how Celtic Steps commenced in the summer of 2012, in the Mangerton Suite of The Gleneagle Hotel “in more hope than certainty that there was space for another Irish Dance and Music Show”. What transpired was a show that combined the best of Kerry’s culture and folklore through song and embodied a strong belief in displaying all styles of Irish dance, not just the more commonly accepted examples in many shows
nowadays.
It quickly became apparent that both locals and tourists were engaged by the natural, raw and live synergy that the dancers and musicians brought to the stage.
With its core ethos firmly honed on employing local talent, currently numbering 40-50 employees, Celtic Steps exploded through its first few very successful seasons in its new home at the INEC, Gleneagle.
As tourism grew even bigger up to 2019, the Show kept up its side of the bargain and
partnering with some of the world’s biggest inbound operators continued to trend upwards in audience numbers to where it regularly plays to four hundred people nightly in the high season, in a state-of-the-art theatre at Killarney Racecourse which has been home since 2017.
In 2019, the Show opened a second nightly performance at the Brandon Hotel Conference Centre, where now Celtic Steps runs both during the period from May to October, doubling staff numbers and offering visitors to Kerry, an experience unsurpassed in visitor attractions.
Post pandemic, the Show has now re-positioned itself as one of the top visitor and local night-time entertainment options throughout a long season performing just under three hundred concerts in County Kerry and now travelling internationally, back to Holland for a full month of Christmas shows in December 2023 on the back of a hugely successful 2022 tour.
Throughout the 21 shows in The Netherlands this year, they will personally sell to over 15,000 Dutch attendees nightly, playing in twenty-one different venues across the country.
“It has been an amazing journey to do something that you love nightly, however it would have been impossible without the local support of businesses in Kerry and special mention at this juncture to The Gleneagle Group (our home still for Killarney Race days!).

The Killarney Oaks, The Great Southern Hotel and The Board of Directors and Staff at our current home, The beautiful Killarney Racecourse in what is now The Celtic Steps Theatre” said David Rea.

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KILLARNEY ADVERTISER OPINION: A manhunt needs a description

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KILARNEY ADVERTISER OPINION:

A manhunt needs a description

A manhunt needs a description

Gardaí are searching for a man in connection with the murder investigation into Jamey Carney.

The Gardai say they are looking for a “person of significant interest’ and that “that his whereabouts are unknown”, and but they cannot comment in detail on his age, name, or nationality for legal reasons. 

That is not enough for the public.

No one is asking Gardaí to convict a man in the media. No one is asking them to publish speculation or damage a future trial. But if a person of significant interest is missing, and ports and airports are on alert, ordinary people need practical information.

A manhunt only works when people know who to look for.

Gardaí do not have to name the man. They do not have to publish nationality. They do not have to say he is guilty. They could release a limited description: age range, height, build, hair, clothing, last known area, possible route, or vehicle details.

That would protect the investigation while giving people something useful.

There is also a numbers problem.

Ireland had 14,529 sworn Gardaí at the end of February 2026. Even counting Garda staff and reserves, the total Garda workforce stood at just over 18,000. The population of the State is about 5.46 million.

Fourteen thousand Gardaí cannot see what 5.46 million people might see.

Gardaí have powers, training, and access to information. The public has eyes. People work in taxis, hotels, airports, ports, petrol stations, shops, bus stations, train stations, guesthouses, restaurants, and border areas.

A careful description turns the public into useful witnesses. Without it, people are left watching for “a man,” which means watching for nobody in particular.

There is also a public-safety question.

If a person being sought in a murder investigation is unaccounted for, people will ask whether he may pose a risk to others. That does not mean he is guilty. It does not mean the public should panic.

But it is a reasonable concern.

If Gardaí believe there is no wider risk, they should say so. If they believe there may be a risk, even a limited one, the public should have enough information to protect themselves and assist the search.

Media reports have described the man Gardaí are seeking as an asylum seeker who had been living in Killarney. Photos said to show him with Jamey Carney have also circulated through media reports and social media.

That leaves the public in a strange position. People are already seeing fragments of information, but not one clear official description.

Gardaí may have legal reasons for staying silent. They must protect the presumption of innocence, avoid prejudicing a trial, and avoid identifying the wrong person.

Those concerns matter.

But the public has concerns too. Some people may feel basic information is being withheld because the man is reported to be an asylum seeker. That concern should not be dismissed.

A crime is committed by an individual, not by a nationality, religion, or category of people. No community should be blamed for the alleged actions of one person.

But silence does not reduce fear. It feeds rumour.

The phrase “person of significant interest” may be legally safer than “suspect”.

 But it is not useful to a taxi driver, hotel receptionist, shop worker, bus passenger, ferry worker, neighbour, or member of the public.

If Gardaí have a specific operational reason for withholding a description, they should say so plainly. If they do not, they should release a careful description now.

Public fear grows in a vacuum.

A community cannot help find someone it cannot identify. 

If this man is innocent and help with the investigation he should have nothing to fear and come forward. 

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Champion jockey Oisín Murphy set for home debut in Killarney on Tuesday

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Champion jockey Oisín Murphy set for home debut

Ascot 18-October-2025 Oisin Murphy is crowned Champion Jockey for the 5th time. Healy Racing


Five-time British Champion Flat Jockey Oisín Murphy is scheduled to compete at his home track for the first time ever on Tuesday July 14.


The Killarney native grew up near the venue but has never ridden a professional race here. Since moving to England at 17, his Irish appearances have been rare, yielding just eight winners.
“Riding a winner at Killarney has always been a lifelong dream of mine,” Murphy said. “I grew up watching racing here, and to finally ride here in front of my family, friends, and the home crowd is going to be an incredibly special moment. I hope I can give everyone plenty to cheer about.”
Killarney Racecourse Manager Karl McCay commented: “We are absolutely thrilled to welcome Oisín Murphy back to his hometown. Having a world-class, champion jockey born right here in Killarney ride at our track for the very first time is a massive honour. It is a very proud day for our community and local racing fans and will really add to our July Festival.”
The appearance takes place on day two of the July Festival, which runs from Monday July 13 to Friday July 17.

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