Tonie Walsh

Tonie Walsh (born 25 December 1960) in Dublin, Ireland, is an LGBT rights activist, journalist, disc jockey and founder of the Irish Queer Archive.[1]

Biography

Walsh spent most of his childhood in Clonmel, County Tipperary. His twenties were spent mainly in the gay civil rights movement in Dublin, during which time he was one of the prime movers behind Dublin's LGBT community space, the Hirschfeld Centre.

Walsh was president of the National LGBT Federation (NXF) from 1984 to 1988, at a time when it was co-litigant with Senator David Norris in his constitutional action (Norris v. Attorney General). During this period Walsh worked as a staff reporter with Ireland's first commercial gay magazine, OUT, which folded in 1988. Walsh along with gay activist Catherine Glendon founded Gay Community News,[2] an A3 newspaper which he also edited during its first two years. GCN is Ireland's longest running gay publication.

After ten years of activism, Walsh followed his boyfriend to London where he remained for a time, before returning to his native town and launching himself as a DJ and club promoter. Throughout the 1990s, Walsh played at well known club nights among them Horny Organ Tribe, Elevator, the fetish club GAG, Powderbubble, H.A.M., Cork's club Telefunkin and the HIV/AIDS fund-raising alternative beauty pageant Alternative Miss Ireland.[3]

In 1997, he reorganised NXF's archive holdings into what would later become the Irish Queer Archive (IQA). Drawing on materials from IQA's collection, Walsh curated both "Pride and Protest" at Belfast's Central Library (2005) and "Revolting Homosexuals" (Outhouse and GUBU, Dublin 2004).[4] On 16 June 2008, the Irish Queer Archive officially transferred its materials to the National Library of Ireland marking it as a significant and historical event.[5]

Walsh retired in 2006 as a professional DJ and club promoter to concentrate on a number of research and writing projects. He spent much of the following decade living at Clonmel, being a full-time carer to his mother, Sylvia, who suffered from Parkinson's and dementia.

In 2017, Dublin's much-celebrated theatre and performance group, thisispopbaby, signalled its plan to put Walsh on stage in a one-man show centred around his experience as a campaigner, as 'a witness to massive social upheaval in Ireland', entitled, "I Am Tonie Walsh". Presented in development at the Dublin Theatre Festival 2017, 'I Am Tonie Walsh' is listed as documentary theatre about "active citizenship, creativity over consumption, community; about standing up for what is right – and being fabulous while doing so".[6] This is due to premiere at Dublin's Project Arts Centre in Summer 2018, before touring other venues around Ireland. Walsh has described the show as "part catharsis, part entertainment...a reassessment".[7]

He is the brother of Paul Walsh, one-time lead singer of Dublin indie band, Royseven. Walsh is a great-grandson of Hector Hughes, former Labour MP for Aberdeen (UK), and Isa Hughes, suffragist and founding secretary/manager of Dublin's Gate Theatre. His great-uncle, Liam Ó Briain was a noted civil rights activist and instigator of the Galway theatre Taibhdhearc na Gaillimhe. [8]

References

  1. Bielenberg, Kim (25 January 2015). "Gay nation: Are gay people still living in the shadows in Ireland?". Irish Independent. Tonie Walsh, a long-time observer of the gay rights movement and founder of the Irish Queer Archive, says that in liberal Ireland, people tend to live in a cultural bubble.
  2. "About GCN". Gay Community News (Dublin). Archived from the original on 9 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
  3. "The Team". Alternative Miss Ireland. Archived from the original on 7 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
  4. "Irish Queer Archive". Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 10 July 2007.
  5. Cashin, Declan (2008-06-21). "Queer Times". Irish Independent. Retrieved 2009-09-29.
  6. https://www.dublintheatrefestival.com/Online/2017_In_Development
  7. https://www.dublininquirer.com/2017/08/15/being-tonie-walsh-2/
  8. Pierce, David. "Irish Writing in the 20th Century: A Reader".
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