Róisín Mullins
Róisín Mullins (born 6 July 1982) is a TV presenter, TV talent show judge, professional Irish dancer, stage show owner and choreographer.
Róisín Mullins | |||||||||||||||||||
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Mullins at Pinewood studios | |||||||||||||||||||
Born |
West Sussex | July 6, 1982||||||||||||||||||
High school | BRIT School | ||||||||||||||||||
College | University of Surrey | ||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Biography
Róisín was born in West Sussex, England, and is of English Romany and Irish Romany Gypsy descent.[1] Her paternal family originally hail from Castletownroche, County Cork, Ireland.[2] In July 2016 Róisín married Irish stageshow producer Jack Jacobs in Cork (city).[3]
Dance career
Róisín began dancing at the age of four. She entered her first Irish dance competition and won her first open title on the same day, at the age of five.[4] Róisín competed at both a National and World level for over fifteen years, as a solo and team dancer. In 2002 she represented England at the An Coimisiún le Rincí Gaelacha World Irish Dancing Championships, achieving a Bronze World Medal, and is also a former An Coimisiún UK Open Irish dance Champion.[5] Over her competitive career she won hundreds of first place awards.
Róisín trained in musical theatre, dance, singing and acting at the BRIT School from 1998 to 2000, along with the late Amy Winehouse.[6] In 2001 Róisín, as a trained Soprano, was selected to sing at the London Palladium.[7]
From 2005 to 2008 Róisín studied dance as a scholarship student at the University of Surrey, where she also lectured as an associate tutor in dance, and received tuition from Royal Ballet principal Jennifer Jackson, and Cats (musical) lead Patrick Wood.[8] Róisín was additionally trained in acting and presenting in London by former RADA principal and TV and Film acting coach Dee Cannon, and by BBC presenter and Film acting coach, Mel Churcher (coach to James Bond's Daniel Craig).[9]
Lord of the Dance
In 2004 Róisín joined the cast of the Michael Flatley show Lord of the Dance[10] for a world tour, performing alongside many of the original cast, including Bernadette Flynn and Helen Egan. She was initially placed in troupe four, but after just a few weeks in the show was promoted to Flatley's own troupe one.[11]
Raven
Whilst studying at the University of Surrey in 2007 Róisín, with her partner Jack, founded the all-female Irish dance troupe 'Raven', and began rehearsing at Dance Attic studios in London.[12] The troupe was founded with the aim of forefronting the female in the traditionally male dominated world of Irish show dance, and to offer professional Irish dancers performance opportunities between touring shows [13] Raven have since performed at hundreds of celebrity events, balls and TV shows throughout the UK and Ireland, and featured on dozens of TV shows for Sky, ITV, and the BBC. They have performed at prestigious venues such as ExCel London, London Olympia, Fountain studios (Wembley), Pinewood Studios (Teddington and Shepperton), Birmingham NEC, O2 Arena, and throughout London's Park Lane.[14] For one of their first performances in 2008 they were chosen to perform alongside Des O'Connor and Bobby Davro at a celebrity event. In 2009 they performed at the Macmillan 'In Their Shoes' ball, alongside Strictly Come Dancing professional Kristina Rihanoff. In 2010 they joined 'Strictly' professionals Vincent Simone and Flavia Cacace on their 'Fantasia Tour'.[15] In 2011 Raven were selected by Michael Flatley to promote the London release of 'Lord of the Dance 3D' on St. Patrick's week.[16] In March 2011 Róisín began touring her own Irish dance stage show with Raven in London, entitled ‘Raven Dance’, premiering at the ‘Broadway Theatre’ London.[17] In June 2016 Róisín Mullins established a second branch of the Raven Irish Dance troupe, permanently based in Cork (city), Republic of Ireland, and began rehearsals at the Firkin Crane dance centre. The troupe have represented national charities such as Macmillan Cancer Support and Cancer Research UK, and have featured in magazines such as The Big Issue, Dance Dynamic Magazine, Dancing in the UK, Closer, Irish Dancing Magazine and in national newspapers such as the Independent, Irish Post, Express and The Sun.[18]
The X Factor and the Xtra Factor
In November 2016 Róisín and eighteen professional Irish dancers from Raven performed for the opening of a Louis Walsh themed special episode of the X Factor, entitled Louis Loves.[19] The troupe performed a Riverdance themed routine with Róisín partnering judge Louis, whilst on stage with judges Simon Cowell, Sharon Osborne, and Nicole Scherzinger. Filming took place at Fountain Studios in Wembley. Later in the episode Róisín, accompanied by presenter Dermot O'Leary and backed by four Raven dancers, also presents Louis with a lifetime achievement award for judging the greatest number of X Factor shows, beating Simon Cowell by 356 to 291.[20] Both routines were choreographed by Róisín Mullins, in collaboration with members of the X Factor choreography team led by Brian Friedman. The dance costume for Mullins featured on the show was designed and created by X Factor costume stylist Laury Smith, who has designed for stars such as Lady GaGa and Britney Spears. Róisín also co-choreographed, with Xtra Factor's chief choreographer James Collins, an Irish dance inspired routine for the Xtra Factor. The piece was aired live on the same day, filmed at Fountain Studios, and performed by presenters Rylan Clark and Matt Edmondson to a live rendition of C'est la Vie provided by Keavy Lynch from girl band B*Witched.
Keith Lemon's LemonAid
In 2012 Róisín and the Raven Irish dance troupe appeared dancing alongside Louis Walsh and Keith Lemon on ITV1's 'LemonAid', in a game entitled 'Lemon Drops', filmed at Pinewood studios, Teddington.[21]
Paddy McGuinness’s Walk the Line
In 2011 Róisín partnered Paddy McGuinness dancing in a pilot for his game show 'Walk the Line', backed by Raven, and filmed at the O2 Arena in London.[22]
Ant & Dec's Push the Button
In 2010 Róisín was partnered with Declan Donnelly dancing on Ant and Dec's ITV1 game show 'Push the Button', backed by Raven, and filmed at Pinewood Studios, Shepperton.[23]
Britain Does Variety
From 2011 to 2016 Róisín has annually been on the judging panel of Sky TV talent show 'Britain Does Variety', alongside judges such as Channel 5 presenter Dave Payne, CBBC's Naomi Wilkinson, and EastEnders' Emma Barton.[24]
A Gypsy Life for Me
In 2011 Róisín was selected to be a judge on the panel of 'Travellers Got Talent', a National Gypsy and Traveller talent contest, also judged by Romany pop star Jentina.[25] The competition was filmed for an eight part series for Sky entitled 'A Gypsy life for Me'. During the series Róisín was contracted to feature more prominently in the show, eventually leading to her being signed as a presenter and judge for a further eight part series for Sky.[26] 'A Gypsy Life for Me' season two was subsequently centred on Róisín, and her co-judges Jentina and singer David Essex, in a new competition searching England and the Republic of Ireland for the 'Gypsy and Traveller Face of the Year 2012'.[27] In 2012 Róisín was interviewed about the show in Dublin by Sinéad Desmond and Mark Cagney for TV3's 'Ireland AM'.[28] Season two of 'A Gypsy Life for Me' began airing on Sky from May 2013.[29]
World Gypsy Dance championships
In July 2014 Róisín was announced as the primary judge, founder and organiser for the inaugural World Gypsy Dance Championships, hosted in London.[30] The World Gypsy Dance Championships is open to dancers performing styles from the Gypsy, Roma and Traveller community, worldwide. Championship entrants compete in a variety of traditional and modern dance forms, including Stepdance, Irish dancing, and Flamenco. Podium finalists are awarded Gold, Silver or Bronze world medals, with the overall winner holding the title of World Gypsy Dance Champion for that year.[31] In July 2014 Róisín was interviewed about the competition at RTÉ studios in Dublin, by RTÉ presenter Derek Mooney and All Ireland Talent Show judge Bláthnaid Ní Chofaigh.[32]
Competitive titles
- Bronze World Medal, Oireachtas Rince Na Cruinne (World Irish Dancing Championships), An Coimisiún le Rincí Gaelacha, 2002
- Open Irish dance Champion, UK, An Coimisiún le Rincí Gaelacha, 2002
References
- ↑ Bowers, Jake. "Steps ahead – Róisín is inspired by her Gypsy roots". Travellers' Times magazine, winter 2010, issue 44, p6.
- ↑ Bannon, Aoife. "Gypsy life doesn't revolve around big, fat weddings". The Sun. Sunday 17 June 2012. http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/4377131/Gypsy-life-doesnt-revolve-around-big-fat-weddings.html
- ↑ Breatnach, Siobhan. "Don’t tell the bride but everyone’s wearing white – Irish Gypsy dancer Róisín Mullins ties the knot". The Irish Post. August 31, 2016. http://irishpost.co.uk/dont-tell-bride-everyones-wearing-white-irish-gypsy-dancer-roisin-mullins-ties-knot-cork/
- ↑ Ruston-Thorpe, Tracy. "Centre Stage – Irish inspiration". Dance Review magazine, March 2011. p25.
- ↑ Cattrall, Chris. "The rise of Raven". Dance dynamic magazine. January 2010. p30.
- ↑ Mullins, Róisín. "Letter to my Younger Self", Ireland's Big Issue Magazine, Issue 135 Vol 9, 8 February 2012, p5.
- ↑ "West End girl". The Crawley Observer. Wednesday 2 May 2001. p2.
- ↑ Marsden, Shelley. "Lady of the Dance". The Irish World. 26 February 2011. p34.
- ↑ Róisín Mullins official website biography. http://www.roisinmullins.co.uk/biography/
- ↑ Kelleher, Lynne. "Travellers got talent in abundance". The Irish Examiner. Monday 14 November 2011. p5.
- ↑ Ruston-Thorpe, Tracy. "Centre Stage – Irish inspiration". Dance Review magazine, March 2011. p25.
- ↑ Audley, Fiona. "Revitalising Irish Dance with Raven". The Irish Post. p1. Ri-Ra. p1. 11 October 2008.
- ↑ http://www.ravenirishdancetroupe.com/about-us
- ↑ http://www.ravenirishdancetroupe.com/about-us
- ↑ Marsden, Shelley. "Raven in Fantasia". The Irish World. 20 March 2010. p18.
- ↑ Róisín Mullins official website biography. http://www.roisinmullins.co.uk/biography/
- ↑ Marsden, Shelley. "Raven on Broadway". The Irish World. 9 April 2011. Issue 1256. p16..
- ↑ http://www.ravenirishdancetroupe.com/about-us
- ↑ https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/tvandshowbiz/226319/x-factor-judge-louis-walsh-debuts-amazing-dance-moves-as-the-show-finally-pays-tribute-to-him/
- ↑ http://www.digitalspy.com/tv/the-x-factor/news/a815253/louis-walsh-longest-serving-x-factor-judge/
- ↑ Marsden, Shelley. "Raven join Louis for Lemonaid". The Irish World. 19 May 2012. p15
- ↑ Róisín Mullins official website biography. http://www.roisinmullins.co.uk/biography/
- ↑ Marsden, Shelley. "Raven get TV's Dec reeling!". The Irish World. 3 April 2010. Issue 1203. p8.
- ↑ Marsden, Shelley. "The Irish Do Variety". The Irish World. 4 June 2011. Issue 1246. p11.
- ↑ Stephenson, David. "Big Fat Gypsy Talent Show". The Sunday Express. 9 October 2013. p46.
- ↑ O'Connor, Madeline. "Sky TV searching for 2012 Face of Travellers". The Irish World. 23 June 2012. p9.
- ↑ Welsh, Sarah. "We're not ALL big fat brides". The Daily Star. Saturday 4 May 2013. p35.
- ↑ O'Connor, Madeline. "Sky TV searching for 2012 Face of Travellers". The Irish World. 23 June 2012. p9.
- ↑ Welsh, Sarah. "We're not ALL big fat brides". The Daily Star. Saturday 4 May 2013. p35.
- ↑ Mitchell, Laura. "Gypsy Come Dancing! New sequin clad competition set to waltz on to TV". The Daily Star. 16 July 2014. http://www.dailystar.co.uk/real-life/389299/Gypsy-dancing-competition
- ↑ Falconer, Daniel. "World Gypsy Dance Championships to come to UK screens in new television series". www.femalefirst.co.uk . 16 July 2014. http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/tv/news/world-gypsy-dance-championships-coming-soon-503639.html
- ↑ The Mooney Show, http://www.rte.ie/radio1/mooney/