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Fassbender set to star in new film

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By Michelle Crean

Local Hollywood actor Michael Fassbender is preparing for a role in new film 'Night Boat to Tangier'.

The film, set in Spain and Ireland, is an adaptation of a book of the same name which was longlisted for the Booker Prize, and was one of the New York Times Book Review's 10 Best Books of 2019.

In the film Fassbender will star alongside fellow Irish actors Domhnall Gleeson and Ruth Negga in a story about two Cork gangsters and partners-in crime who not only have a personal history but also a violent past together.

Fassbender, who has been nominated twice for an Oscar, had three Golden Golden Award nominations and four BAFTA nominations will also be an Executive Producer for the project.

He'll play Maurice Hearne while Gleeson portrays his partner Charlie Redmond.

They flee to southern Spain to meet up with old associates and search for one's estranged daughter Dilly. As they wait for her to arrive on a boat from Tangier in Morocco their past begins to unfold.

The script for the film was written by the book's author Kevin Barry and directed by James Marsh (Man on Wire, The Theory of Everything).

Oscar, Golden Globe, BAFTA and Tony nominee Negga, who plays Cynthia, offers light relief through comedy.

Fassbender also has two projects, David Fincher’s thriller, 'The Killer' for Netflix, and Taika Waititi’s comedy for Fox Searchlight, 'Next Goal Wins' which will be released later this year.

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Fassbender ready for second Le Mans appearance

Local Hollywood A-lister Michael Fassbender is in the final preparation stages for his second appearance at the legendary 24 Hours of Le Mans. The iconic endurance race is celebrating its […]

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Local Hollywood A-lister Michael Fassbender is in the final preparation stages for his second appearance at the legendary 24 Hours of Le Mans.

The iconic endurance race is celebrating its 100th edition next weekend.

The Fossa star has already arrived in the famous French twon where he is involved in a week-long series of engagements including drivers’ parades, autograph sessions and more serious appointments like car safety checks, practice and qualifying.

Like last year, when he finished 16th in the LMGTE Am class, Fassbender has been entered in to the event by the German Proton Competition team with Estonian Martin Rump and the Austrian Richard Lietz.

Fassbender dreams of following the trajectory of fellow Hollywood actors Patrick Dempsey who was second in LMGTE Am class in 2016 and Paul Newman who finished second overall in 1979.

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Ireland’s oldest citizen has Killarney connections

Ireland’s oldest woman met with President Michael D. Higgins at Áras an Uachtaráin this week. Máirín Hughes, who turned 109 on May 22 has strong Killarney connections. The previous record […]

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Ireland’s oldest woman met with President Michael D. Higgins at Áras an Uachtaráin this week.

Máirín Hughes, who turned 109 on May 22 has strong Killarney connections.

The previous record was held by 107-year-old Nancy Stewart who died on September 10 2021.

Although born in Belfast, Máirín went to school in the Mercy Convent. Her father was a customs and excise officer and the family moved around a lot eventually coming to Killarney after spells in County Down and Dublin.

Her mother came from the Rathmore area and her father was from Newmarket in County Cork.

She attended the Mercy Convent and has, in previous interviews, recalled growing up on the shores of Lough Lein.

“Neighbours who had three children were given the job of taking me to school,” she said. “They were annoyed because the children were going to school for two or three years but I was put in to the same class as them – my mother had taught me.”

In 2021 she featured in the book ‘Independence Memories: A People’s Portrait of the Early Days of the Irish Nation’, sharing stories of being kept in school in Killarney during an attack on the RIC barracks down the road.

In 1924 she started a degree in science and a diploma in education at University College Cork, before working in the pathology lab in University College Cork’s Department of Medicine for 16 years.

last year she recalled her story on the podcast: ‘Living History – Irish Life and Lore’.

During the broadcast she talked about her parents’ membership of the Gaelic League in 1910; the Spanish Flu in Ireland in 1918; The Black and Tans in Killarney in 1921; the early days of the new Free State; Eucharistic Congress in Dublin in 1932, visiting the Basket Islands in 1929; and working in the UCC medical laboratory from 1932 until 1948.

This week President Michael D. Higgins hosted an afternoon tea event to celebrate the important role that a variety of people have and can play in different communities and Máirín was among the guests of honour.

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