We work with individuals, families, corporates and other trusts and foundations to enable strategic and impactful giving.We have been in existence since 2000 and last year we gave out €8.15 million to communities in Ireland and abroad.

The funds raised through RTÉ does Comic Relief will focus on the recovery and rebuilding of Ireland.

RTÉ and Comic Relief’s partner for the event is the Community Foundation for Ireland, which works with more than 4,000 nonprofit organisations around …

“I suspect I’ll be doing what I mainly did for eight years: sit in the middle and laugh, and occasionally act like a responsible parent and tell someone, ‘You can’t say that.’”Smith, who has more than 30 years of TV experience, had wanted to get Comic Relief off the ground for years.

To be fair, Dee is a brilliant hustler – she’s worked in theatre, movies, comedy and scripted TV, so she knows a lot of people.Five weeks ago the team moved into production. We in Ireland give ourselves a big clap on the back for being generous. The rich, full and cherished lives of the people behind the numbers The night of entertainment raised over €5.5million for the Community and Voluntary sector which will be distributed through a process of application and assessment.The funds raised through RTÉ does Comic Relief will focus on the recovery and rebuilding of Ireland. Since its inception in 1985, Comic Relief has raised over £1 billion to support people living incredibly tough lives both in the UK and internationally.

Curiosity and humor are underlying themes throughout Oliver’s practice as an artist and storyteller. RTÉ Does Comic Relief takes place on Friday, June 26 from 8pm RTÉ, in association with Comic Relief, will bring the cream of Irish comedy and entertainment together to raise a … This webinar goes through the different strands within the RTÉ Does Comic Relief Fund. This name will appear beside any comments you post. A separate Adapt and Respond strand “will allow groups to seek funding to ensure their work remains effective and continues to deliver for those who need support”, Ms Charlton said.She added that the funding mechanisms recognised “the way not-for-profits have had to adapt and change their work under HSE restrictions and guidelines”. The fund will focus on supporting non-profit organisations that provide key services and supports to vulnerable individuals who have been affected by COVID-19 across the whole of the Republic of Ireland. Under the Demand for Digital scheme, groups can seek funding to invest in software and hardware “to improve their ability to continue to work while keeping their staff, volunteers and people they support safe”. Comedian Deirdre O’Kane, a member of the Comic Relief in Ireland steering group, said it was a ‘key step for the project and brings us closer again to delivering help to where it’s needed’. “We’re in serious danger of getting high on our own supply over here. The technology allows them to take part. The fund will focus on supporting non-profit organisations that provide key services and supports to vulnerable individuals who have been affected by Covid-19 across the whole of the Republic of Ireland.

His seventeenth book as author and illustrator was released in September 2019, and he has illustrated several others. What happens now and what does it mean for Ireland? “My ambitions and RTÉ’s ambitions are different things, but I don’t want this to be a one-off.

“It was real shoulder-to-the-wheel time,” says Michael Hughes, the evening’s executive producer. RTÉ Comic Relief Fund Opens for Applications Posted on 4 Aug 2020 In response to the significant need of community and voluntary groups across Ireland, many of whom are working to support people affected by COVID-19, RTÉ and Kite Entertainment came together to host RTÉ does Comic Relief. Each will be doing something, in Smith’s words, “different, interesting or unlikely”.All told, it’s poised to be a celebration of what makes us distinctly Irish, with a hefty side dish of nostalgia. Through humour and stories of hope, we’ve shown that people can make a massive difference. A three-part series exploring the mystery of Peter Bergmann - the man who came to Sligo to disappearWhat of survivors deemed ‘too young’ to remember the Holocaust?How to be Nowhere: sharp, lyrical take on Central American violenceThe Yellow House: A dual heritage of belonging and dispossessionFrank McDonald: What’s not to like about Dublin’s new Kevin St development?