Monica Loughman

Last updated

Monica Loughman is an Irish ballet dancer and teacher, writer, and television personality. She was the first Westerner to achieve solo status with the Perm State Theatre of Opera and Ballet of Russia, where she danced for 16 years. On her return to Ireland, she established a network of ballet schools. She was also featured on a television series, Ballet Chancers , and appeared in other TV shows such as The Panel , The Podge and Rodge Show , Tubridy Tonight and The Late Late Show. She is co-author of a book about her experiences.

Contents

Early life

Loughman is from Santry in Dublin, and attended Manor House School, Raheny. [1] Her parents are Edward and Monica Loughman. [2]

Ballet Career

Ballet career in Russia

Loughman left Ireland at the age of fourteen for Perm State Ballet in Russia, becoming one of the few Westerners to dance for the prestigious Perm State Theatre of Opera and Ballet. [3] She trained and danced for the company for 16 years.

Ballet career in Ireland

Back in Ireland, Loughman established a full-time training programme for professional ballet dancers, as well as a network of ballet schools. She created a ballet company by training indigenous dancers and hiring the support of Russian ballet figures. Starting with ballet schools taking children from age four and upwards, she built, over ten years, a progression to a youth company (Irish Youth Russian Ballet) and then the Monica Loughman Elite Ballet, as featured in Dance Europe magazine. Her company is now Ireland's largest structure of ballet training schools, and performs The Nutcracker, Vivaldi Seasons, Giselle and La Sylphide, The Monica Loughman Elite Ballet is committed to staging classical "main scale" ballet throughout Ireland and nurturing a new generation of dancers, choreographers and audiences. In a milestone decision, the Irish Arts Council funded a tour of The Nutcracker to theatres throughout Ireland in 2013.[ citation needed ]

Loughman currently trains dancers for professional careers in ballet, and for example, four young girls she trained were accepted for an apprenticeship with the Russian Ballet Theatre in St. Petersburg, Russia.[ citation needed ]

Media

On 21 September 2006, Loughman appeared on Dustin's Daily News . [4] Loughman appeared on the twenty-fourth episode of the third season of The Podge and Rodge Show, alongside the celebrity solicitor Gerald Kean on 11 February 2007. On 15 February 2007, she appeared on youth chat programme, The Cafe, alongside celebrity weatherman Dáithí Ó Sé and Luan Parle. [5] On 17 February 2007, Loughman appeared on the primetime chat show, Tubridy Tonight, alongside Bill O'Herlihy, Fionnula Flanagan and The Waterboys. [6] On 4 December 2008, Loughman resurrected her sequence of guest appearances when she appeared on The Panel alongside the journalist Niall Stanage. [7] She also appeared on The Late Late Show .

In a 2008 television series, Ballet Chancers, Loughman worked on training six young people, schooled in hip hop, to appreciate the art of ballet. [8]

In 2014 Loughman appeared in the Channel 4 series Big Ballet with Wayne Sleep, as she worked with a troupe of plus-size amateur dancers to realise their dream of dancing Swan Lake. [9]

Personal life

Loughman and her former partner, Robert Gabdullin, have one son, Damien (b.March 2010). [10]

Publication

"If a teacher hits you, it means they're paying attention to you. It was better to be hit than to be ignored."

Monica Loughman in The Irish Ballerina.

Loughman has co-written a book, The Irish Ballerina, with County Meath-based author, Jean Harrington, who helped the former Dublin prostitute Martina Keogh write her story in Survivor. Published in 2004 by Maverick House Publishers, the book discusses her childhood Russian experiences performing ballet. [11] The book was reviewed in The Meath Chronicle [12] and The Sunday Business Post [13] and Loughman was interviewed for the magazine Woman's Way in December 2004. [14]

She has also appeared in various magazines and newspapers, including the Meath Chronicle , The Sunday Business Post and Woman's Way

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Podge and Rodge</span> Fictional character

Pádraig Judas O'Leprosy and Rodraig Spartacus O'Leprosy are the central characters of Irish television series A Scare at Bedtime, created and performed by Ciaran Morrison and Mick O'Hara. More recently, the brothers have presented The Podge and Rodge Show, a chat show in the same vein, and Podge & Rodge's Stickit Inn, set in a pub. Morrison and O'Hara also created and perform the characters of Zig and Zag, Bronx Bunny, and Teddy T.

<i>Tubridy Tonight</i> Talk show on Irish TV

Tubridy Tonight is a talk show hosted by Ryan Tubridy that aired on RTÉ One for five seasons between 2004 and 2009. The programme featured guest interviews, audience participation and live music from both a guest music group and the house band. Tubridy Tonight aired every Saturday night, except during the summer months, directly after the main evening news. The show's house musical act was Clint Velour and the Camembert Quartet.

Donna and Joseph McCaul, also known as The McCauls, are a brother and sister musical duo who represented Ireland in the Eurovision Song Contest 2005 in Ukraine. They were not pre-qualified for the final, due to Ireland's result from the 2004 contest, which meant they took part in the semi-final on 19 May 2005.

<i>The Podge and Rodge Show</i>

The Podge and Rodge Show is a talk show, broadcast and produced by RTÉ. For the first three seasons Podge and Rodge were joined by Lucy Kennedy as a co-host but for the first half of the fourth season they were joined by guest hosts including Michelle Heaton, after Kennedy took insult to being called "every name under the sun from bisto to an ugly Gráinne Seoige". Following a mid-season hiatus, Caroline Morahan took on the role of permanent co-host in February 2009. The programme airs every Monday and Tuesday at 22:50 on RTÉ Two from February to April and from October to December with a hiatus during the summer months. The series came to an end on 27 April 2010, with Kennedy appearing as a guest on the final episode of the fifth series.

<i>A Scare at Bedtime</i> 1997 Irish TV series or program

A Scare at Bedtime is an Irish television show, produced by Double Z Enterprises and broadcast by RTÉ, featuring the two puppets Podge and Rodge as the hosts of a spooky tales and urban myths comedy show. It ran from November 24, 1997 until January 9, 2006.

Lucy Kennedy is an Irish television, radio presenter and children's book author.

Moscow Ballet has toured the United States and Canada during the holiday season since 1993 and is exclusively represented by Talmi Entertainment Inc for these tours. There are 70 to 80 Russian-trained classical dancers on the annual North American tour who fly in from the former republic of Russia. Stanislav Vlasov, a former principal artist of the Bolshoi Ballet, was the first artistic director on the North American tour in 1993. Vlasov's debut in the United States was at Carnegie Hall in 1957.

Caroline Morahan is an Irish actress and television host. In 2010, she was chosen as the face of Littlewoods Ireland.

Karl Spain is an Irish comedian from Limerick. He is from the Corbally area of the city and was educated at CBS Sexton Street.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maeve Higgins</span> Irish comedian

Maeve Anna Higgins is a comedian from Cobh, County Cork, Ireland and is based in New York. She was a principal actor and writer of the RTÉ television production Naked Camera, as well as for her own show Maeve Higgins' Fancy Vittles. Her book of essays We Have A Good Time, Don't We? was published by Hachette in 2012. She wrote for The Irish Times and produces radio documentaries. She previously appeared on The Ray D'Arcy Show on Today FM. She is a regular panelist on the NPR radio show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! Higgins appeared in her first starring film role in the 2019 Irish comedy Extra Ordinary.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katy French</span> Irish socialite and model (1983–2007)

Katy Ellen French was an Irish socialite, model, writer, television personality and charity worker. According to the BBC, "in the space of less than two years, she had become one of Ireland's best-known models and socialites." She collapsed at a friend's house on 2 December 2007 and died on 6 December. Her cause of death was given as hypoxic ischemic brain injury caused by cocaine and ephedrine.

<i>Who Do You Think You Are?</i> (Irish TV series) 2008 Irish TV series or programme

Who Do You Think You Are? is an Irish genealogy documentary series that first aired on RTÉ One in 2008. It is made by the production company Mint. In each episode, a celebrity goes on a journey to trace his or her lineage through a family tree. The series is based on the original version of the franchise, broadcast by the BBC in the United Kingdom. A third series started on 9 September 2018 with six new episodes.

Pamela Ann Mary Flood is an Irish former tv host, former model and beauty pageant titleholder who was crowned Miss Ireland 1993.

<i>Ballet Chancers</i> 2008 Irish TV series or program

Ballet Chancers was an Irish television programme broadcast on RTÉ One in late 2008. Featuring the ballerina, Monica Loughman, it began on 16 November 2008. In the show Loughman attempts to turn six streetwise hip hop dancers into elegant ballet dancers over a period of four months. At the end of the show they may, if successful, partake in a performance of The Nutcracker with Loughman's own company, The Irish Youth Russian Ballet Company which took place in the 21 December finale.

Gerald Kean is an Irish solicitor from County Cork. He is regularly the subject of social columns, particularly in the Sunday newspapers which have reported his lavish spending sprees and sun holidays involving his wife and other people, with The Irish Times once describing him as having a "celestial odour". Mr. Kean has also appeared in numerous television shows including Prime Time, Tubridy Tonight, The Afternoon Show, The Podge and Rodge Show, The Restaurant and The Panel and on radio shows such as The Marian Finucane Show.

<i>TV Now</i> Awards

The TV Now Awards was an annual awards ceremony which took place in Ireland between 2006 and 2010. The awards celebrated television moments from the previous year, with their name being taken from the magazine TV Now which is published by Michael O'Doherty.

Maïa Conchita Dunphy is an Irish television producer, broadcaster and writer, known predominantly for television and radio work in Ireland and the UK. She began her career working with the creative team behind Zig and Zag and Podge & Rodge in 2001 before branching out and producing her own shows, mainly documentaries.

Aoibhín Garrihy, Ailbhe Garrihy and Doireann Garrihy are Irish social media influencers, having played different roles in the entertainment industry. Aoibhín is an actress, having played Neasa Dillon in RTÉ One's Fair City from 2010 to 2013. She was a finalist in the first series of the Irish version of Dancing with the Stars. Ailbhe is a publicist. Doireann is a comedy impressionist, known for two series of The Doireann Project, and radio and television presenter, hosting the revival in 2018 of RTÉ Two's The Podge and Rodge Show.

References

  1. O'Toole, Aileen (9 October 2013). "My old school photo". TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  2. O'Farrell, Michael (16 December 2002). "Dublin ballerina is centre of attention". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 22 September 2024.
  3. "Author Information". Maverick House. Accessed 14 December 2008.
  4. DDN 21 September 2006 Archived 2 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine . RTÉ. Accessed 14 November 2008.
  5. 15 February 2007. RTÉ. Accessed 7 November 2008.
  6. "Saturday, 17 February 2007". Tubridy Tonight on RTÉ . Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  7. "Thursday, 4 December 2008". The Panel on RTÉ. Accessed 18 November 2008.
  8. "Ballet Chancers". RTÉ. Accessed 14 December 2008.
  9. Independent - Channel 4's new 'Big Ballet': Defying ballet’s body politics (26 January, 2014)
  10. Dwyer, Ciara (19 December 2011). "Monica's turning point". Irish Independent. Retrieved 22 September 2024.
  11. "Irish Ballerina, The". Maverick House. Accessed 14 December 2008.
  12. "Meath writer tells Russian tale of an Irish ballerina". The Meath Chronicle. 27 November 2004. Retrieved 14 December 2008.
  13. "Story dances off the page". The Sunday Business Post . 5 December 2004. Retrieved 14 December 2008.
  14. "Celeb Chat". Woman's Way. 14 December 2004. Retrieved 14 December 2008.