It's time to rewrite history, and the future: Herstory on RTÉ is coming this February.
Herstory partnered with the RTÉ, Broadcasting Authority of Ireland, EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum, and Underground Films to bring the stories of Ireland's greatest female trailblazers to Irish screens.
Between St. Brigid’s Day on 1st February, and International Women’s Day on March 8th 2020, RTÉ celebrated the achievements of Irish women who broke new ground, and whose work changed the lives of others, and in many cases, the course of history. The season centred around a new, landmark, six-part documentary series on RTÉ One television, produced by award-winning production company Underground Films.
Beginning Monday February 3rd on RTÉ One Television, HERSTORY: Ireland’s EPIC Women tells the stories of some of Ireland’s most remarkable pioneers in the fields of business, politics, science, the arts, aviation and technology:
Lady Mary Heath
Record-setting and daredevil aviator Lady Mary Heath, a Limerick woman of many 'firsts' and one of the best known women in the world in the 1920s.
Kay McNulty
Groundbreaking computer programmer Kay McNulty, a Donegal Gaeilgeoir who was one of the six original programmers of the ENIAC, the first general-purpose electronic digital computer
Mother Jones
Cork-born activist and union leader Mother Jones ("the most dangerous woman in America") who founded the Social Democratic Party and helped establish the Industrial Workers of the World.
Oonah Keogh
Dubliner Oonah Keogh a successful trader and entrepreneur who became the world’s first female member of a Stock Exchange.
Ninette de Valois
Wicklow-born choreographer, director and founder of the Royal Ballet Ninette de Valois.
On digital, an 18-part podcast series, produced by Underground Films with Tall Tales, will bring to light the stories of 18 more Irish female pioneers from history. Discoverable on any platform where you download your podcasts, the HERSTORY: Ireland’s EPIC Women podcast will be published each week on RTÉ’s Herstory site - rte.ie/herstory – where you can also discover more biographies of remarkable Irish women, alongside Herstory lesson plans for primary and secondary schools and much, much more.
Listen to Herstory - Ireland's Epic Women Podcast - Eva Gore-Booth: A poet that mobilised the marginalised
In addition, RTÉ Young People’s Programmes have commissioned six original Irish animations, each telling the story of one inspiring Irish woman. The women featured in each animation were nominated by schoolchildren from across Ireland as part of RTÉ’s Who’s Your Heroine? campaign last Autumn – a callout to schoolchildren to nominate the living women and women from history who inspire them and whom they felt should be the subject of these new animations.
Who's Your Heroine? Máire Ní Chinnéide, animated...
The animations, made by six different Irish animation teams, tell the stories of: Laura Geraldine Lennox an Irish suffragette from Durrus, Co Cork who was nominated by her grand-niece; Citizen scientist- astronaut candidate Dr.Norah Patten; daredevil aviator Lilian Bland from Antrim; one of the founder of modern-day camogie Máire Ní Chinnéide; Mary Elmes, the Cork woman who saved the lives of hundreds of Jewish children during WWII and an ode to all our much-loved grannies in The Irish Granny.
Who's Your Heroine? The Irish Granny, animated...
Blazing a Trail: Lives and Legacies of Irish Diaspora Women, is an exhibition celebrating the lives and legacies of 21 pioneering Irish diaspora women of the 19th and 20th centuries who blazed a trail in a wide range of fields and is hosted by EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum in The CHQ Building, Dublin until March 2020. This exhibition is free and open to the public. In addition, EPIC hosted a number of family events, discussions, walking tours and workshops highlighting the lives and stories of Ireland’s epic women. Details of all these events can be found on epicchq.com.
And, to kick off the season, the annual International Herstory Light Festival, lit up buildings in towns and cities across Ireland, Northern Ireland and the world with specially-commissioned portraits of women, including 6 illustrations commissioned by RTÉ's Young People’s Department as part of RTÉ’s Who’s Your Heroine? project, across Brigid’s weekend. The festival programme also included storytelling events, theatre shows and creative workshops for all ages and interests.
These are the stories of the women who broke boundaries but whose stories never made the history books. It’s time to change that record.