Tens of thousands of rugby fans are being asked to help a Welsh charity set up by the singer and broadcaster Shan Cothi to raise money for the battle against pancreatic cancer. A bucket collection will be held around the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on Saturday, 20th of March when Wales take on Italy in their final game of the RBS 6 Nations tournament. Sixty volunteers will be stationed on walkways around the stadium asking for contributions to the charity called Amser Justin Time. The collection has been arranged with the support of the Welsh Rugby Union to achieve the dual aims of raising the charitys profile and cash for the cause. Shan Cothi launched the Amser Justin Time charity in honour of her husband Justin Smith whose life was cut short by pancreatic cancer at the age of 42. He was well known in Wales as a successful TV director, editor and musician with the Tigertailz glam rock band (aka Pepsi Tate). The charity in his name raises money for pancreatic cancer care in Wales and helps fund a specialist nurse who supports patients suffering from pancreatic cancer. Shan recently attended a Wales squad training session along with the actor Steffan Rhodri who is an active supporter of the charity. Steffan has appeared in an impressive list of films and television roles and most recently is perhaps best known for playing Dave Coaches in hit TV series Gavin and Stacey. At the Millennium Stadium training session they joined squad members and Wales Head Coach Warren Gatland who pulled on Amser Justin Time T shirts to be pictured supporting the charitys work. Shan Cothi said: I am very grateful to the WRU and to Warren and his players for the support they have given us. It was great to meet up with them at the training session and they were all so determined to show their support for Amser Justin Time. The bucket collection is a great opportunity for us both to raise money and the profile of the work we do here in Wales to fight pancreatic cancer. We work hard to make Amser Justin Time a success and this support from the national sport of Wales will certainly help us a great deal. WRU Chairman, David Pickering, said: Amser Justin Time is an extremely worthwhile cause and we are delighted to be able to help. I know how hard Shan works for the charity and I am sure the Welsh and Italian fans who attend the game will give generously. The WRU knows the devastating impact pancreatic cancer can have because our Head of Legal Affairs, Mike Jefferies, suffered from the disease and died last year." Amser Justin Time holds regular events throughout Wales to collect funds for the charity and details of its events and work are featured on its dedicated website. The WRU delivers its core support to the Welsh Rugby Charitable Trust which raises money to help seriously injured former players in Wales. For more information on the charity, please visit www.amserjustintime.org For donations, please visit www.justgiving.com/amser
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Welsh bands @ South by Southwest in Austin, Texas next week: Welsh algorithmic rock quartet 'Truckers of Husk' @ SXSW - http://my.sxsw.com/events/event/6609 Chicago/Newport's Jon Langford & The Waco Brothers at SXSW - Saturday, March 20 at 11:00pm - http://my.sxsw.com/search/event_results?q=waco Wednesday March 17th, 7:15pm Straight Lines Austin Music Hall 208 Nueces S, Austin, Texas http://my.sxsw.com/events/eid/10500 http://www.myspace.com/straightlines Wednesday March 17, 09:00pm Toy Horses Galaxy Room 508 E 6th St, Austin, Texas http://my.sxsw.com/events/eid/10592 http://www.myspace.com/toyhorses Wednesday March 17, 9:00pm Christopher Rees Opal Divine's Freehouse 700 W 6th St, Austin, Texas http://my.sxsw.com/events/eid/6975 http://www.christopherrees.co.uk Music from Wales Showcase Thursday March 18, 03:00pm Latitude 30 512 San Jacinto St, Austin, Texas Thanks to its rich history, cultural diversity, cosmopolitan city life and breathtaking scenery, Wales definitely punches above its weight in the world. Proudly, we have our own ancient living language, and one of the most thriving, cutting-edge, creative and international music scenes. Performances by Polly Mackey, Cate Le Bon, Race Horses, and Straight Lines. http://my.sxsw.com/events/event/830 Thursday March 18, 12:00am Marina & The Diamonds Lamberts 401 W 2nd St, Austin, Texas http://my.sxsw.com/events/eid/7191 http://www.marinaandthediamonds.com/ Thursday March 18, 12:00am Straight Lines Opal Divine's Freehouse 700 W 6th St, Austin, Texas http://my.sxsw.com/events/eid/8502 http://www.myspace.com/straightlines Wednesday March 18th, 1:00am Polly Mackey & the Pleasure Principle The Ale House 310 E 6th St, Austin, Texas http://my.sxsw.com/events/eid/7265 http://www.pollymackey.com/ Cate Le Bon Saturday March 20, 09:00pm Latitude 30 512 San Jacinto St, Austin, Texas http://my.sxsw.com/events/event/7448 http://www.catelebon.com/
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We will shortly be posting details of the first 2010 Left Coast Eisteddfod live competition. This will take place at the Buffalo Gap on Thurs October 7th between 5pm and Midnight. It will consist of a live narrative competition for which we will be looking to recruit 20 contestants. There will be no restrictions on narrative style or
content although competitiors must tell a story of some kind. Each contestant will have 8 minutes at the mic and there will be a first prize of $250 and a second prize of $100. There will be no registration fee although all competitiors will be required to pay the standard $6 dollar admission fee. You need not be a member of Americymru to attend or compete. We may also include a movie and some musical entertainment on the program. Watch this space for further details. The competition will be judged by authors Niall Griffiths and Chris Keil ( and others to be announced ) . Highlights will be recorded for posterity and hosted on the Americymru website. Full details will be announced shortly on this site and tickets will be available from this weekend.
Pritchards Nose , the debut novel of Sam Adams, tells the tale of a man who lost his nose in strange circumstances. Intrigued by the mysterious legend of the man with a hole where his nose should be, Martin, a literary researcher, goes on the trail of a long-lost manuscript belonging to Thomas Prichard, the 19th century author of the tales of the Welsh highwayman, Twm Sion Cati . Woven into this literary detective story is the fictional autobiography of Prichard himself, following him from his childhood in rural Wales, along the drovers' road to London and a career on the stage. The novel ends with the puzzle of how Prichard ended his days down and out in Swansea and without his nose.
In this revealing story, Sam Adamss nose for the Welsh past is combined with his poets eye to bring the nineteenth century alive to all our senses. Sam Adams said, This is a book that had to be written in order to satisfy an obsession with Prichard that has extended over thirty years. What I knew of Prichard when I began looking into his life was that he had written a novel called Twm Shn Catti about a remarkable, eccentric character well remembered still, especially in Tregaron, his home patch, who in real life, as Thomas Jones Esq., 400 years ago, had been a poet, antiquary and genealogist, but in legend became famous as a merry rogue who, by disguise, mimicry, trickery and wit, and no little courage, overcame his enemies and won at last the hand of a grand lady. The little we know for certain of the history of Prichard himself is almost as strange and fascinating as that of Twm Shn Catti, and I have not been able to let go of it. Prichards Nose is an attempt to fill in all those gaps in his life that research could not bridge. Why was his childhood spent in a remote farm high on the mountain above Sennybridge? How did he find his way to London as a boy? Why did he hate the Reverend Benjamin Jones of Builth? Why did he choose Jeffery Llewelyn as a pen name? How did he become an actor? And how did he lose his nose? Sam Adams comes from Gilfach Goch, Glamorgan and is a former editor of Poetry Wales and a former chairman of the English-language section of Yr Academi Gymreig. He edited the Collected Poems and Collected Stories of Roland Mathias, is the author of three monographs in the Writers of Wales series and is a frequent contributor of poems, criticism and essays to a number of magazines. He published his third collection of poems, Missed Chances in 2007. Pritchards Nose (9.95) will be published by Y Lolfa on the 16 March 2010
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Anyone who has the music should contact John T Jones via his profile page HERE . ( or email me at americymru@gmail.com and I'll arrange further contact )
We were pleased to receive the following communication from Paul Durden today ( reproduced below ). We believe he has a point! St. David's Day is a fitting occasion to remember the Welsh 'working class' heroes who suffered and in some cases died, fighting for social justice. Paul is sponsoring a petition to move the grave of Dic Penderyn to his home town of Merthyr Tydfil. Richard Lewis ( a.k.a Dic Penderyn ) was almost certainly the victim of a judicial murder by the English government for his part in the 'Merthyr Riots' of 1831. You can read more about him here and here . Paul Durden feels that his grave should be moved back to Merthyr Tydfil, "the town that loved him" . If you agree please sign the petition below:- http://www.gopetition.com/online/34380.html" Hi ya all over the pond, I went along to lay some flowers at the grave of Dic Penderyn last Monday afternoon (St Davids day) The church was closed, and there had not been anybody else there. So much for the Welsh patriots. I also lit a candle and some nice vanilla incense. Hope all is well in your neck of the woods. Paul Durden. P.S. I also dragged a film crew along with me, and I fired of a 21gun salute. Oh what fun we had. I think my next move is to get someform of petition together to have his body exhumed and re buried in Merthyr Tydfil, the town that loved him. This is the link for the petition. Please feel free to spread it about, if you get my drift." http://www.gopetition.com/online/34380.html( Reproduced with permission )
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‘Best television material lies forgotten in dusty vaults’, says top TV producer
By Ceri Shaw, 2010-03-05
Television producer and director Richard Lewis, whose autobiography Out of the Valley is published by Y Lolfa this week, cares little for the seamingly endless reality TV and soap opera offerings laid before television audiences these days. This self-proclaimed media man indeed watches very little television and his written reminiscences of a golden age in broadcasting give us clues as to why. With the Welsh television industry lurching from one crisis cut-back to another, Richard Lewis recollections are a timely reminder of an era long since gone, when the pioneering spirit spawned initiative, idealism and enterprise, with results which were obvious in the quality of programming on our television screens. But this is a man who is now rather disillusioned with the television industry. He says, I occasionally watch television, carefully pre-selected and, preferably, pre-recorded. I have come to the conclusion that television is very much a creature of its time and even the best archives tend to lie forgotten in dusty vaults. Richard Lewis, who was born in Ton Pentre, Rhondda trained with the BBC and in his book, he takes us on his and the BBCs journey of discovery in Wales during the 1960s and beyond, and through to the day in November 1988 when he walked out of the BBC as its Head of General Programmes after nearly 30 years of service. Amongst his many achievements at the Beeb were UK Network productions such as Dylan , Nye , The Extremist , Babylon Bypassed and The Fasting Girl . After then joining an independent television company, he oversaw the production of classic drama series such as Y Palmant Aur , Halen yn y Gwaed and the BAFTA award winning Nel on S4C. Now retired, Richard Lewis shares his time between Llandaff and the South of France. His autobiography Out of the Valley will be published on the 11 th of March 2010 by Y Lolfa, priced at 8.95.
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Gaynor Madoc Leonards first novel, 'The Carmarthen Underground' was recently published by Y Lolfa. On this page we are pleased to present both a review of the book and a short interview with the author.
Review of 'The Carmarthen Underground' |