John D Ruddy

John Ruddy
John D Ruddy in 2015
Born Letterkenny, Ireland
Occupation Actor

John D Ruddy is an Irish actor and artist.

Personal life

Ruddy was born in Letterkenny, County Donegal.[1]

Career

Acting

Ruddy has been involved in many theatre productions in his native Ireland. His first notable role was in the multi-award winning production of The 39 Steps directed by Pluincead Ó Fearraigh which toured across Ireland in September 2012.[2]

He went on to play Billy McKeague in The Rising by Joe O'Byrne, a two-man play of a Protestant and a Catholic telling the story of the 1916 Easter Rising. The play premiered in the Powerscourt Theatre, Dublin in June 2012 and toured Ireland in 2013 and 2014.[3]

Ruddy's performance was widely praised with The Irish Times stating "Ruddy's characterisations – particularly his inner-city Concepta and, at times, his Pádraig Pearse – are so funny that they divert us guiltily from the weight of the lesson."[4] Irish culture magazine Vulgo described Ruddy and his co-star Nick O'Connell as "exciting new talent" and "say that you saw the electric O'Connell and Ruddy here first" in their review of the show.[5]

YouTube

Ruddy created the webcomic Manny Man 2010.[6] The weekly strip poked fun at pop culture including Star Wars, Pokemon, Doctor Who and Game of Thrones.

He made his first historical animation, Irish History in 6 Minutes, in 2013 which went viral in his homeland.[7] [8] [9] While his subsequent videos tackling World War I, World War II have each amassed over a million views on YouTube.[10] [11]

Ruddy's animations have since been inducted into the Donegal County Museum.[12]

Artwork

In addition to his animations, Ruddy is also an illustrator, and recently provided illustrations for Kieran Kelly's book, Letterkenny: Where the Winding Swilly Flows.[13]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 31, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.