H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

‘Everyone will tune in – she’s one of our own’: Jessie Buckley’s home town abuzz before Oscars

about 13 hours ago
A picture


If Jessie Buckley wins the Oscar for best actress on Sunday night, County Kerry will need no further proof of a cherished truism: to be born in this corner of Ireland really is the greatest gift that God can bestow.The award would be for Buckley’s performance in Hamnet, but for Killarney, her home town in the county nicknamed the Kingdom, credit will stretch back to her childhood, when she acted in local plays.“Hollywood here we come!” proclaimed the newspaper Kerry’s Eye, underlining a sense that Buckley’s path to Hollywood for the 98th Academy Awards has been a collective journey propelled by her talent, determination and roots.It was the writer John B Keane who, tongue in cheek, described Kerry heritage as a divine gift with “awesome responsibility” – an opinion that will appear validated if Buckley becomes the first Irish woman to win the award.“Everyone will tune in – she’s one of our own,” said Sinead Van Bladel, a supermarket worker who had made Buckley masks for her colleagues.

Bookies rate Buckley as the runaway favourite – ahead of Rose Byrne, Emma Stone, Kate Hudson and Renate Reinsve – for her depiction of William Shakespeare’s wife, Agnes Hathaway, in the film version of Maggie O’Farrell’s novel.The only Irish women to have won acting Oscars are Brenda Fricker in 1990, for best supporting actress in My Left Foot, and Maureen O’Hara, who received an honorary Oscar in 2014.For Buckley’s family and friends, an unspoken question haunts the excitement: what if she doesn’t win? “Oh God, the disappointment.We’d of course still be proud but can you imagine the anticlimax?” said one.She declined to be named.

“I don’t want to be blamed for putting a hex on it,”Radio Kerry offered a €1,000 (£864) prize for the most creative good luck messages, prompting a wave of songs, iced buns, plaques, poems, sand art, coffee foam and crocheted wall hangings,A group of children with special needs each chose a word to express how Buckley made them feel,“Brave,” said one,“Inspired,” said another.

“Seen,” said a third,Micheál Martin, the taoiseach, recorded a message,The result will fuel or dampen St Patrick’s Day celebrations,If an Oscar completes Buckley’s sweep of acting awards, some in Killarney think Ireland should declare a new bank holiday,Others suggest she should receive the freedom of Kerry, plus free beer in every bar.

Well-wishers and TV crews have flocked to the Arbutus hotel, established by Buckley’s great-grandparents and still owned by the family,“It’s all go, all week,” said Denis O’Connor, a bartender,“It’s great for Kerry and great for the young – she’s a role model,For all her movies, she never forgot her roots,”Carol Dempsey, an aunt of Buckley, said the adjacent Buckley’s bar would close to the public at 7pm on Sunday so relatives and close friends could gather inside and follow events in Los Angeles.

“This isn’t a media spectacle for us,” she said.“We want to celebrate the essence of Jessie and this moment.We want to enjoy the loveliness that it is.We’re not shouters, we like to whisper.”Dempsey said that, whether she won or lost, Buckley would continue to excel at and enjoy her craft.

“Accolades are important but they’re not everything,” she said,“We have a lovely phrase that I feel really encapsulates the essence of Jessie,While many feel that beauty is in the eye of the beholder, we feel that for Jessie it’s in the heart of the possessor,”At the tourist office, Finola White, who has created a gallery of Buckley images, marvelled at a Vogue photoessay of the star in baroque outfits,“The clothes are amazing, but she still looks like Jessie.

”Siblings and parents have joined Buckley in LA.Coming from a musical family, she may have been destined for the arts, but according to local lore, a production of Jesus Christ Superstar almost sabotaged that.Aged about seven, she believed the man on the cross had died and was so distraught she was taken backstage to meet the actor.Teachers at her school described her as “grámhar” – full of heart, always volunteering for sport, singing and dancing.Buckley performed at the local musical society, came second in a BBC talent show and trained at London’s Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, leading to TV and film roles.

John Fitzgerald, 65, sipping a pint at Buckley’s bar, said being from Kerry gave her an edge, but so, too, did dedication to her craft.“She’s been on the go for 20 years.”
cultureSee all
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Trump being gifted an Olympic medal: ‘Yet another award he didn’t win’

On Thursday night, late-night hosts discussed an odd White House women’s history month event, the fallout of the war on Iran and why Melania Trump is starting to sound an awful lot like her husband.Jimmy Kimmel spent a chunk of his Thursday night monologue on a White House women’s history month fundraiser hosted by Donald Trump. As part of the event, Melania Trump gave an extended introduction to the president.“You know how some couples as they get older start to sound alike?” asked Kimmel. “Well, while introducing her husband, Melania had an awful lot of nice things to say about herself

1 day ago
A picture

Seth Meyers on Pete Hegseth: ‘The face of a man war-fighting with his colon’

Late-night hosts dug into the Trump administration’s vague intentions for the war in Iran, the conflict’s oil-price effect and a Maga rally in Kentucky with Jake Paul.On Late Night, Seth Meyers checked in on Donald Trump’s now two-week-old war in Iran. “The president is maybe sort of threatening/teasing that he might put boots on the ground in Iran? But Republicans can’t seem to agree on whether they support that idea, or for how long, or why,” he explained.The confusion comes from the top: Pete Hegseth, the “defense secretary/morning show host/fifth-year senior who just found out that yeah, he’s gonna need to do a sixth year” who made a big deal about turning the defense department into “the department of war” and “refocusing on the core mission: war fighting”.“And before we go any further: was there a problem with the term ‘warfare’?” Meyers wondered

2 days ago
A picture

Sydney Biennale 2026: politics is everywhere – but with nuance, beauty and heart

According to its critics, this year’s Biennale of Sydney, under the leadership of Emirati artistic director Hoor Al Qasimi (the first Arab appointed to the role in the festival’s 53-year history) was destined to be a “hate Israel jamboree” at worst; a hotbed of pro-Palestinian politics at best. These fears – which appear to have originated from pro-Palestine statements Al Qasimi and her parents made in the past – are not borne out by the festival itself, which opens this weekend across five key venues, spanning from the inner city out to Penrith and Campbelltown.In an unusual move for the biennale, Al Qasimi wasn’t present at the vernissage – but with or without her, the resulting festival, the event’s 25th, is complex and nuanced. It’s light on spectacle and slogans; not a political chant but rather a polyphony of voices – more than 80 artists from 37 countries – singing their own songs. The theme, “Rememory” – taken from Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved – is reflected in works that look to the past to find answers to present dilemmas and envision better futures

2 days ago
A picture

Naples museum to allow visually impaired visitors to experience art through touch

The Sansevero Chapel Museum in Naples will allow dozens of visually impaired visitors to take part in a rare tactile experience, letting them touch celebrated works of art including the Veiled Christ, which is widely regarded as one of the most striking masterpieces in the history of sculpture.On 17 March, the museum will host an initiative called La meraviglia a portata di mano – Wonder within reach – organised in partnership with the Italian Union of the Blind and Visually Impaired of Naples, offering about 80 blind and partially sighted visitors a chance to encounter the marble masterpieces.Visitors will be guided through the chapel by guides who are also visually impaired in a programme designed to place accessibility at the centre of the museum experience.The protective barrier surrounding the sculptures will be removed, allowing participants, wearing latex gloves, to explore by touch the intricate marble surface of the sculptures including Giuseppe Sanmartino’s Veiled Christ, which depicts Jesus covered by a transparent shroud made from the same block as the statue. The tactile route will also extend to the reliefs at the feet of the sculptures La Pudicizia and Il Disinganno

2 days ago
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Pentagon splurging on doughnuts: ‘Is this My 600lb Defense Department?’

On late-night shows, hosts poked fun at the Trump administration’s inconsistent messaging on the Iran war, Pete Hegseth splurging on high-end food at the Pentagon and New York’s John F Kennedy Jr lookalike contest.On what Jimmy Kimmel called “day 11 of Jabba the Hutt’s war on Iran”, the host focused on Trump’s mixed messages over the Middle East conflict.“Trump said yesterday that the war could end very soon, which would be encouraging, had be not also told us he’d end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours,” said Kimmel.“He’s going to make a huge mess and walk away like it’s the new toilet in the Lincoln bathroom.”Kimmel then turned to reports that Pete Hegseth, the US defense secretary, spent $93bn of US taxpayer money last year, including millions of dollars in September on luxury food items: “$2m on Alaskan king crab, $6

3 days ago
A picture

Stephen Colbert on US war in Iran: ‘We’re still no closer to learning what the goal is’

Late-night hosts looked into the murky goals, economic impact and disrespect for military protocol of Donald Trump’s war in Iran.“We’re on day 10 of the Iran war,” said Stephen Colbert on Monday evening, “and we’re still no closer to learning what the goal is. Is it regime change? Is it ending a nuclear program? Is it changing the name to Donald Trump’s Iran-a-Lago?”“But we are learning more about the cost,” he noted, as the first week of the war alone is estimated to have cost about $6bn. “Do you know what you could buy with $6bn? Twenty-seven Kristi Noem horsey commercials!” he joked before clips of the very expensive, controversial ad campaign that likely ended Noem’s tenure as secretary of homeland security.Despite the exorbitant cost, Trump said over the weekend that this new surprise war would stop only after Iran’s “unconditional surrender”, to which Iran replied: “That’s a dream that they should take to their grave

4 days ago
businessSee all
A picture

NHS and MoD will be urged to buy British tech to drive growth amid Iran crisis

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Judge blocks justice department from subpoenaing Fed chair Jerome Powell

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Oil price shock likely to ‘push the UK economy into recession’; US growth revised down – as it happened

1 day ago
A picture

Miliband reveals plans that could mean nuclear power plants built near homes

1 day ago
A picture

Bailiffs board Ryanair plane after airline refuses to pay delayed flight compensation

1 day ago
A picture

Bleak economic data shows UK plc in trouble well before Middle East crisis

1 day ago