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Adèle King | |
|---|---|
| Born | Adèle Condron-King (1951-04-04)4 April 1951 (age 74) Dublin, Ireland |
| Occupation | Entertainer |
| Years active | 1956–present |
| Known for | Stage performances, television appearances, pantomime |
| Notable work | Twink, Play the Game, Celebrity Head Chef |
| Children | Chloë Agnew, Naomi Agnew |
| Awards | Jacob's Award (1981) |
Adèle King (born Adèle Condron-King, 4 April 1951) is an Irish entertainer better known asTwink.[1] She is from Dublin. She is the mother of singerChloë Agnew[2] from the groupCeltic Woman.
King began singing and acting at the age of five. She was aGaiety Kiddie[3] and worked inpantomime with performers such asJimmy O'Dea,Milo O'Shea andMaureen Potter. She was also a Young Dublin Singer, from which was formed the trioMaxi, Dick and Twink.[4][5]
She has spent more than 30 years in Dublin's theatres: 26 years in the Gaiety Theatre, two years in thePoint Theatre and five years in theOlympia Theatre. At the Olympia Theatre she co-produced and co-wrote much of the shows. She has been described as Ireland's 'Panto Queen'.[3][6]
King has had roles in a number of theatrical productions in Ireland, including:Dirty Dusting at the Gaiety Theatre[7] andMenopause: The Musical.[8]was a member of the Irish showband The Big 8 from 1971 to 1974
King has appeared on Irish television regularly since the late 1960s. She has starred in her own seriesTwink onRTÉ. She spent ten years onPlay the Game,[3] and has made many appearances as a guest on a wide range of programmes, including RTÉ'sThe Late Late Show, being the subject of a tribute on that show in 2005.[3] She also was the subject of a weekend visit by the television programmeLivin' with Lucy withLucy Kennedy.[citation needed]
In 1993 she was the guest act at a Christmas concert byPerry Como at Dublin'sPoint Theatre,[9] televised to a worldwide audience of 880 million.[10]
In 2003 she took part in RTÉ'sCelebrity Farm and in 2011, she won TV3'sCelebrity Head Chef, receiving €10,000 for charity as a result.[11]
She has written an agony aunt page for the Irish magazineTV Now.[12] In 2011, she was given an agony aunt programme onTV3 called "Give Adele a Bell".[13] However, after a delay,[14] the programme was cancelled in June 2012 without an episode being made.[15]
She won aJacob's Award for her performance in her 1981 Christmas Light Entertainment Special onRTÉ Two.[citation needed]
King established a performance school in summer 2002, the Adèle King Theatre School[3] inCastleknock andGreenhills. Pupils of the school have appeared on television, in films, and in commercials in Ireland and abroad. The school did not re-open for the 2008 autumn term.[16]
She was accused of a conflict of interest over her marks for a contestant, known to her, on the talent showClass Act. Her reaction[17] was: "IfOsama bin Laden's son was on the programme and he threatened to send a big squad to my house if I didn't put his child through, I wouldn't."
Twink marriedoboist David Agnew in 1983 and had two children, Chloë in 1989, who sings with the groupCeltic Woman,[2] and Naomi in 1993.
Twink's marriage ended after 21 years, in October 2004.[18] In February 2006, David Agnew (aged 46) had a baby with clarinetist Ruth Hickey (28). This prompted an infamous phone call from King (54) to ex-husband Agnew.[19] She recorded a hostile message on his answering machine[20] which appeared afterwards on the internet. The recording contained coarse and abusive language.[21]
Twink described the Irish singer, theLinda Martin, as a "cunt" during a tirade in May 2010. The two had been friends for 30 years but both said afterwards that they had no plans to speak to each other again.[22][23]
Twink has pet dogs, cats, birds, and a donkey.[18] She lives with her daughters inKnocklyon, Dublin.[10] In April 2015 it was reported that David Agnew and Adele King face a bid by the Bank of Scotland to repossess a house which is mortgaged in both their names. The application for possession against Ms King had already previously been adjourned by the court.[24]
In September 2014 it was widely reported across major Irish media outlets that Twink's dog, Teddy Bear, was kidnapped. Commenting on the events, Twink was distressed, and she noted positively on Linda Martin that she helps rescue dogs, and is "a very powerful woman in the dog world"[25] and that the kidnapping marked her own personal "Erin Brockovich moment".[26] On 24 September Twink was reunited with her dog after a public tip-off led to the police arrest of a man in Dublin.[27]