Press Cuttings
IT’S TWENTY YEARS since unique entertainer Richie Kavanagh first hit the national airwaves
By: Lynda Connolly Tuesday May 11 2010
It’s twenty years since Carlow’s favourite entertainer Richie Kavanagh first hit the national airwaves singing about potholes.
Over the years he made a name for himself singing novelty songs about bucking asses, mobile phones and his morris minor and to date has had nine songs in the top thirty hits. Sitting at home at the kitchen table in Garyhill Richie looks back fondly on the past twenty years but is quick to point out that there’s still plenty of craic to be had.
After taking a break last winter from a bad case of psoriasis he has dusted off his cap and is ready to get back on the road entertaining crowds at vintage days, agricultural shows and street festivals.
‘I’d do anything from a palace to a tinkers camp,’ he laughed. ‘No crowd is too small or too big, I just love the buzz of it, it’s my dream.’
Richie travelled to Dublin on Thursday to say farewell to broadcaster Gerry Ryan whom he has always given credit to for his career.
‘The funeral was very sad,’ he said. ‘Everyone from the entertainment business was there and his wife and kids said a nice few words.
Joe Duffy and Dave Fanning were very upset.’
Richie bumped in to fellow comedian Brendan Grace at the funeral and even during the tragic event he was still inspired to come up with an idea.
‘Brendan Grace was wobbling around. I asked him how his foot was because he lost a toe and I told him that I was going to write a song about the man with nine toes.
‘I owe everything to Gerry. He was a man that you could easily approach. I often left here at 5 o’clock in the morning to be at the RTE studios by 7 o’clock to catch him on his way in to work and the lads at the security gate knew me, they’d say are you here to see Gerry.
‘No matter what new song I gave him he would always play it.’
Richie’s son and manager James had been speaking with Gerry shortly before he died. To mark his 20 years of recording the singer/songwriter is putting out a CD and DVD in time for Christmas and Gerry had promised to play it on his morning show.
‘He was always very willing to give us exposure,’ he said.
‘Just a few weeks before he died he hit a pot hole and broke the suspension on his car and he played the pothole song. It was great to hear it on the radio after so many years.
‘He was a big fan and I’ll miss him terrible.’
It is this great love of entertaining that keeps Richie on stage despite struggling with the skin ailment psoriasis. It crippled his hands at the age of 44 but instead of throwing in the towel he continued on and now attributes it to his colourful image.
‘My hands are so sore that I have to wear gloves and I have my hair long and I wear a cap to cover the psoriasis on my ears,’ he said.
‘I started wearing dungarees with the pothole song to look like the lads in the council and I kind of got my image that way.’
His psoriasis worsened last winter and he had to spend most of his time indoors but now in better health and he is ready to get back on the entertainment circuit.
‘It was a good time of the year for it to be bad though because the roads are slippy and it’s too dangerous to be out in the early hours travelling to shows.
‘I’m ready for the summer now.’
Richie was born in 1949 in Raheenwood, Fenagh at a time when the houses had no electricity or bathrooms but there was one thing that the Kavanagh household did have and held in high importance, an old battery pye radio.
‘At night we would sit around the open fire and listen to Maureen Potter, Dingo and Joe Lynch doing comedy sketches on the radio,’ said Richie.
Twice a year a travelling show would make its way to Garyhill and put up a great big tent in a field and locals would arrive in huge numbers to see the variety shows, sketches and song.
‘There were some great auld characters in it,’ said Richie.
He first got the buzz for entertaining in 1957 when the ESB brought electricity to this part of the country.
‘Tommy Hogan who lived in Garyhill had a cow house at the back of his place and he converted it in to a cinema. It was there at eight years of age that I would go every Sunday with a tanner in me hand, which was sixpence.’
The films that young Richie loved to see were Laurel and Hardy, Mother Reilly and Norman Wisdom.
Norman Wisdon was his hero and three years ago he had the thrill of his life when he was invited to the home of the comedian in the Isle of Man for tea.
The meeting was set up by Richie’s daughter-in-law Aoife Kavanagh who was asked by Norman when he agreed to the visit, ‘how old is the child?’
‘Well the child was 58,’ laughed Richie. ‘I had the time of my life. At 94 years of age Norman Wisdom was still jumping about all over the place singing and dancing.’
The first time the Carlow man ever went on stage was when he was eight years old. His school teacher at Garyhill NS Mrs Ryan ran a concert in the village hall and Richie stood up in front of everyone and sang ‘Silver Threads Among the Gold’.
‘I got the buzz then and it became my hobby after that,’ he said.
In the 1960s he really took to this hobby and became involved in to tops of the parish and local parish concerts and writing sketches for the ICA women and Macra groups who were putting on performances in the local hall.
In the 1970s he took part in the Scór putting on novelty shows and managed to make it to four or five All Ireland finals and by the 1980s he started doing stand up comedy at charity shows.
‘I was asked to take part in the John Player Tops of the Town as a guest star and I did stand up comedy, this helped me develop my own one man show,’ he recalled.
It was in the 1990s that things really started to kick off for Richie when local radio started.
‘I got the idea that if I could get on to the radio I might get a few gigs,’ he said.
‘I went to the boss man of CKR at the time Michael Moriarty and told him about what I was doing and asked him if there was any way that I could get on the radio doing comedy.
‘He said he had seen my act but for the radio it would be better if I recorded a song, so that’s what I did.’
His singing career started when he wrote a song about well known DJ on the station Christy Walsh. Michael Moriarty was true to his word and the song got massive air play on the station.
Richie was enjoying this new found fame so he decided to write another song that would appeal to national radio stations.
‘There were load of potholes in the roads at the time so I wrote the pothole song,’ he said. ‘It turned out to be very popular and got me for the first time a gold disc.’
Hazel Records approached Richie about making a record and he recorded the Pothole album which got received huge airplay in Ireland and England.
In 1995 he released The Travelling Man which included Aon Focal Eile and his career was taken to new heights.
‘People in the recording studio said it would never be played on radio but thankfully everyone seen the humour in it.
‘Some DJs were a bit shy to play it but Tony Kehoe from South East radio was the first to give it a go and then Gerry Ryan got hold of it and started playing it.’
The song became a runaway hit and stayed at No.1 in the Irish charts for 7 weeks.knocking Take That off the top spot.
Richie received an Irma award in 1996 for having the Top Single of the Year and a triple platinum disc for sales.
‘That’s when my dream came true. In 1996 a became a full time entertainer and I thank Gerry Ryan for this.’
These days Richie spends his time doing a lot of open air festivals, agricultural shows, vintage rallys, street fairs, theatres, hotels and race ‘I do a lot of colleges too like UCD and the Its in Dublin and Athlone.
‘The students were only seven or eight when Aon Focal Eile was out but they still know the words. I’ll start the chorus and they’ll sing it back to me. I’m like their Norman Wisdom I suppose,’ he added laughing.
‘It’s still all about having the craic.’
After 20 years he still has no shortage of ideas for songs and carries a dictaphone with him on car journeys or out walking in case something pops in to his head.
‘I could be driving home from a gig at night when something would pop in to my head. You would think that there couldn’t be any more but they still just keep coming together.
‘You know you have something when you have a good chorus.
‘Like Aon Focal Eile, I had no idea how big that would be. I was afraid I’d get a slagging from the Irish speaking people but the boss man in Glór na Gael wrote me a very nice letter thanking me for having a song with a full Irish title in the charts. It was a long time since that happened.’
Still very much a family man Richie never travels to a show without his family by his side. He married his wife Nancy in 1971 and they had five children Pat, Olivia, John and twins James and Richard.
The family are involved in all aspects of his career and have often featured in his videos.
‘James looks after me now,’ says Richie. ‘He also does all the camera work and Richard does the graphics. It’s great to have them around.’
By: Suzanne Pender
CARLOW’S favourite entertainer Richie Kavanagh will become a star of the small screen tonight (Wednesday March 29th 2007) when his unique story is featured on the RTÉ documentary series Townlands. The Garryhill raconteur who burst onto the Irish charts ten years ago with the smash hit Aon Focal Eile is the focus of the programme produced by Shay Healy.
Townlands charts the journey of how psoriasis crippled Richie’s hands at the age of 44 but instead of throwing in the towel, Richie harnessed his talents as a singer/songwriter and burst onto the national entertainment scene with the song Aon Focal Eile. Tony Keogh in Southeast Radio was the first man to play the CD and when Gerry Ryan began spinning it on his morning show, the song became a runaway hit and stayed at No.1 in the Irish charts for 7 weeks. and won Richie an IRMA award for Best Single of the Year in Ireland for 1996.
Ten years later, Richie, to his surprise and delight, is still topping the charts and still packing cabaret lounges and clubs in Ireland, England, America and Monte Carlo. His brand of humour is a mixture of nostalgic stories to “risqué” songs that certainly grab attention!
“Working with Richie was a joy,” recalls Shay. “He has a great gift as a songwriter and beguiling humility as a man. It was very instructional to be out on the streets with him. He generates goodwill effortlessly and people flock to him naturally. He has plugged straight into that part of Ireland that begins where the Naas carriageway ends,” Shay stated. As well as featuring the Kavanagh family, Townlands encounters many familiar faces and locations in county Carlow.
Townlands; Aon Focal Eile - The Richie Kavanagh Story will be broadcast tonight (Wednesday March 29th 2007) at 7pm.
Catch Richie at a venue near you - For A Mighty Craic!
The Star,
i.R.M.A. Award winning Artist, Richie Kavanagh is one of only a handful of artists around who is uniquely himself - instantly recognisable when you hear the very first bars of any of his songs. Richie has become one of the most sought after artists since he topped the charts with songs such as ”Aon Focal Eile”, ”The Mobile Phone”and ”Mickey’s Buckin Ass” etc. Now Ireland’s No. 1 Comedy Songwriter, he is one of the friendliest entertainers on Tour today - entertaining crowds of all ages.

The Mirror Friday, April 27th 2001
“My Little Pussy’s A Big Hit”
Ireland’s funniest pop star is at it again - Richie Kavanagh is No. 5 in the Irish top 30 charts and rising with his latest offering.
The cloth-capped culchies mischievious new song ”Pussy-Pussy-Cat” has climbed eight places in the Irish singles charts in a week. Most famous for his 1996 hit “Aon Focal Eile”, Richie from Garryhill, Co. Carlow says he is thrilled with his latest success.
The singer songwriter said last night: ” Sure, I’m amazed at how well it’s doing - it’s a great bit of fun.
Richie revealed he got the idea for his song from watching the BBC sitcom”Are you being served’ on TV that aired from 1972 to 1985. Mrs. Slocombe’s husband left her and she lived with her cat, Tiddles, which she referred to as ”my pussy” this was the source of many a double entendere, most of which Mrs. Slocombe herself completely misses.

RTE radio presenter Gerry Ryan said last night that he will still play the single despite the lyrics. He added; ” We would like to think that we were in fact partly responsible for Richie’s meteoric rise. We were the first to play “Aon Focal Eile” and we will continue to play his latest number. It has already been played on the show and as yet we have not had one complaint. And why would there be? Isn’t is a great classic.
Richie expects the single to climb even further up the charts. He said ” The reaction has been positive. The shops seem to think it’s doing very well. I might have another No. 1 hit on my hands”.
Summing it up, Richie Kavanagh loves his work. “I enjoy what I do. For years it was a hobby and when your hobby turns into a full time job, it’s a bonus” he concludes.