Tony Cantwell – You Cry Weird

Pavilion Theatre, Thursday 28th May

If you didn’t laugh, he’d cry.

Tony Cantwell has cried for some wild reasons over the years. A TV show about dogs. A drunken run on a treadmill. Getting caught in the nip at school. They’re also all part of the chaos that unfolds in You Cry Weird, his brand new Fringe Award-nominated show from Hot Press’s “second-best comedian in Ireland”.

It’s got wildly personal stories, surreal perspectives and more tangents than a bronzed men’s beach. The show also has puns. From the star of Amazon's Last One Laughing, RTE's Good Boy and co-host of the Young Hot Guys podcast alongside Killian Sundermann and Shane Daniel Byrne.


Date:
Thursday 28th May
Time:
8.00pm
Price:
€26
Address:
Pavilion Theatre, Marine Road, Dún Laoghaire, Dublin, Ireland

Google Map of Pavilion Theatre, Marine Road, Dún Laoghaire, Dublin, Ireland

You might also like...

What's on

Bealtaine Festival

Various Locations

The 2026 Bealtaine Festival, Ireland’s national celebration of creativity in older age (run by Age & Opportunity), takes place throughout May with events nationwide. It features a diverse mix of arts, film, performance, and community engagement, promoting the artistic contributions of older people. Proudly funded by the Arts Council and the HSE, with the support of communities nationwide and a vast network of accomplished local and national bodies.

What's on

Dublin Dance Festival

Various Locations

Dublin Dance Festival brings artists and audiences together, live and virtually, to create and share exceptional, provocative and relevant dance experiences. The Dublin Dance Festival believes in the power of dance to move, connect and inspire change. With so much of Ireland’s culture tied up in language and the past, dance has a unique power to explore and express what it is to be human, right now.

What's on

A Summer Lunchtime at the Opera

National Concert Hall

Welcome to a lunchtime celebration of opera!!! An operatic gala which includes well-loved arias, duets, and ensembles from La Traviata, La Bohème, Carmen, Don Giovanni, Gianni Schicchi, L’Elisir d’Amore, The Tales of Hoffman, Così Fan Tutte, and The Merry Widow. Featuring established artists Sandra Oman soprano, Simon Morgan baritone, and David Wray piano, who have performed on both national and international operatic platforms, and TU Dublin Conservatoire emerging stars, who are commencing their careers at the Wexford Festival Opera and at the National Concert Hall Dublin. Bringing oper