St Patrick’s GAA club host Gaelic games comedy show
The Pull, the popular comedy show by Liam Horan and John Corless of Half Solid Productions, has been confirmed
for Skreen‐Dromard Community Centre, Co. Sligo, on Saturday, March 21st, at 8.30pm.
The Pull was written by Mayo writers and actors Horan and Corless, and is currently enjoying a successful 40‐
night run all over Ireland.
The Pull is a lively comedy based on an “unreal real event that may or not have taken place in rural Ireland,”
according to Liam. It is set in the fictional town of Ballybore, where, bizarrely, the local GAA club claim to pre‐date
the foundation of the GAA by some 130 years.
“It’s about a GAA club that runs into some financial trouble, but it’s not nearly as big a deal as they think.
Basically, Ballybore GAA club are only €1,000 in debt but it feels like €1m to the main people involved in the club.
They set about trying to solve the problem and decide to pull a truck around their home town to raise money and
get themselves in the Guinness Book of Records. Chaos ensues and they end up getting in way over their heads”,
explained Liam.
Instead of the whole club rallying around the event, matters are left ‘to the usual one or two, really just one’.
Things don’t really go according to plan – in fact, it might be said that the actual plan itself is not the most
convincing document ever produced.
In the midst of the panic and the unconventional attempts at fundraising, there are a number of other sub‐
plots for the audience to enjoy. The Pull is suitable for all ages. Liam and John are looking forward to bringing the
comedy show to Skreen‐Dromard on March 21st. “We are touring all over Ireland and it will be great to stage it in conjunction with St Patrick’s GAA,” added
Liam.
The show starts at 8.30pm and admission is €10. Tickets can be purchased from club members and on the
door on the night. Paradoxically, the event will double as a fund‐raiser for St Patrick’s GAA, but the authors are
keen to emphasise that any similarities between Ballybore and St Patrick’s clubs are entirely accidental.
“St Patrick’s have been a very prominent club in Sligo GAA over many years. Ballybore can only dream of
such glory,” said Liam.
Liam is a former Gaelic games correspondent of the Irish Independent, and creator of the popular
Championship Man series on RTE Radio One. John is a well‐known poet who has performed a number of readings
in this region.
For more information, visit www.halfsolid.com/stpatricks