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Lelia Doolan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Irish producer
Lelia Doolan
Born1934 (age 90–91)
Cork
OccupationTelevision producer

Lelia Doolan (born 1934) is an Irish television producer.

Early life and education

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Doolan was born in Cork in 1934. She studied French and German atUniversity College Dublin, where she won a scholarship to study at theBrecht Theatre in Germany.[1]

Career

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Presenting, acting and producing

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She presented and acted in shows on the newly establishedRTÉ in 1961 and starred in a short entertainment called "The Ballad Singer" produced byTom McGrath, a program preserved in the station's archives.[2] She soon moved into a role as producer/director, after training in the United States. She was responsible for the establishment ofThe Riordans rural soap opera.[citation needed]

Shortly after being made head of light entertainment, Doolan resigned in protest at the political and commercial policies of RTÉ.[clarification needed] She became artistic director of theAbbey Theatre for two years before studying for her PhD in Anthropology atQueen's University. While she was there, she also worked in community video and adult education in Belfast. Her unpublished Ph.D. thesis at Belfast Queen's University in 1977 was titled "Elements of the Sacred and Dramatic in Some Belfast Urban Enclaves".[citation needed] Lelia Doolan's documentary in 2011Bernadette: Notes on a Political Journey about Bernadette Devlin screened at the 2011 BFI London Film Festival.[citation needed]

Teaching

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She taught at the College of Commerce, Rathmines (now part of theDIT) between 1979 and 1988, where she established and was head of the first Irish course in Media Communications, teachingBryan Dobson (news anchor), Fergus Tighe (film director),Anne Cassin (newsreader), and Ned O'Hanlon (U2 and Rolling Stones video director) amongst others.[citation needed]

In 1987 she producedReefer and the Model,[3] with director Joe Comerford. In April 1993 she was appointed chairperson of theIrish Film Board, a role she filled for three years before retiring.[4] She was also a founder and director of theGalway Film Fleadh.[5]

Personal life and views

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She was once described by ArchbishopJohn Charles McQuaid as "mad, bad, and dangerous".[6]She has been a prominent defender ofLGBT rights.[citation needed]

She was involved in opposing both theBurren Interpretative Centre and theCorrib Gas pipeline. She lives in Kilcolgan nearGalway where she tends a herb and vegetable garden.

References

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  1. ^"RTÉ Archives | Lelia Doolan".www.rte.ie. Retrieved30 January 2024.
  2. ^It started on the Late Late Show, page 7. Book by Pan Collins, published by Ward River Press, Dublin in 1981, ISBN 0 907085 02 4
  3. ^"REEFER AND THE MODEL".Trinity College Dublin.
  4. ^"On the Board". Archived fromthe original on 25 July 2008. Retrieved31 December 2010.
  5. ^"Eoghan Harris".
  6. ^"Lelia Doolan in Conversation | IFTA | Irish Film & Television Academy | Irish Film & Television Awards".

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lelia_Doolan&oldid=1203350649"
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