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'Now let's go live to the Mullingar one-legged race': Whatever happened to the RTÉ People in Need Telethon?

We take a look at the good, bad and the bizarrre of Ireland’s TV past every Wednesday in The Tube.

0011e224-642 Gay Byrne hosting the 1989 People in Need Telethon. RTÉ Archives RTÉ Archives

WITH RTÉ SET to air a Comic Relief special on Friday 26 June, we thought we’d take you back to 1989 when Late Late Show host Gay Byrne donned his trademark sweater for the first ever People in Need Telethon. 

The Telethon, which raised millions of pounds for charities across Ireland between ’89 and 2007, aired live from RTÉ studios and became a staple, broadcast every two years throughout the ’90s. 

The Late Late set was transformed into a hub of activity for the night, gathering together talent from across Irish broadcasting to raise much-needed funds for Ireland’s charity sector. 

An RTÉ report from the first ever Telethon remarked it was the single biggest operation the broadcaster had ever mounted on its own at that time with three hundred people committed to work on the broadcast. 

Telethons had been in existence in the United States and the UK before Ireland held its first event.

The concept was simple; RTÉ staff and volunteers would man phones throughout the Telethon and take donations from people across Ireland. 

Yet the undertaking for each Telethon, recalls People in Need Trust Chairman David Harvey, was mammoth. 

“It started up at 4pm, then a break for the Six One News. And then after ther Six One it would really get going,” says Harvey. “Then there was usually a break for Nine O’Clock News and then it just ploughed on. 

“It was a live show, the Late Late-turned-Telethon and it would go on until 2 o’clock, sometime 3 o’clock in the morning depending on how much momentum was behind it.”

To keep that momentum going, and the donations flowing, Harvey says it had to be entertaining. Anyone for ‘Guess the news presenter’s knees’ or a four-legged race in Co Offaly? 

The Monitors Are Glowing

“Studio One in the television building, home to the Late Late Show and, tonight for seven and a half hours, for the People in Need Telethon,” reported Alasdair Jackson in 1989. 

“In the broadcasting room, the links to units in Dublin, the regions and London are glowing on the monitors,” said Jackson. “Six million pounds of equipment ready to meet the Telethon challenge.”

In those early days, People in Need’s Harvey acted as liaison between corporate sponsors and RTÉ, later becoming Chairman of the People in Need Trust. 

The driving force behind People in Need ahead of the first Telethon was Dunnes Stores’ Margaret Heffernan and businessman Dermot Desmond, he recalls. 

Many charities in Ireland back then operated on an ad-hoc basis in small, local communities around Ireland. 

The idea, says Harvey, was to give smaller charities and groups around Ireland a fair whack of the stick. For example, Cavan Wheelchair Association, Kerry Women’s Refuge, Tipperary Day Care Centre. 

“These were all organisations for whom €5,000 to €20,000 would make a huge difference,” says Harvey. 

Broadcaster Richard Crowley stepped in as Director of the first RTÉ Telethon, which aired on 21 April 1989, promising a “a great night of razzmatazz and entertainment.”

Host Gay Byrne remarked at the time that “if everything works, it will go like a dream and if not, the whole night will end in tears.”

It did not. 

The first event was a success, raising £2.3 million for charity and prompting a further seven live Telethons.  

Bog-Snorkelling 

The 1990 Telethon saw Byrne joined by Gerry Ryan and Dave Fanning as co-hosts and the event continued until 2007.  

Local organisations and clubs got involved, holding events in their own county to raise money. 

On the night, recalls Harvey, “you’d say ‘Let’s go to Anne Doyle who’s in Mullingar and the Mullingar one-legged race has raised €5,000. Let’s go to them’ and everyone would hold up their cheques and cheer.”

The concept was to engage the nation for the evening, get them to pick up the phone and donate. 

“One of the key things we had to do was reporting quite how much money we’d raised each year,” says Harvey.

“This all predates credit card donations, with the exception of the last two [Telethons]. The majority of the donations between 1989 and 1998 were done by pledge.”

“So we were really relying on people to actually follow up on their promise,” says Harvey, who’d then work with his team to gather money from around Ireland to be paid out through a grants application system for charities. 

The atmosphere on set at RTÉ during each Telethon was “great”, says Harvey. “It was really great to see people getting involved around the country. Like, crazy stuff. People organising bog-snorkelling, sponsored swims, line dancing.”

“And Gay Byrne would always wear a specific sweater which would always be auctioned off at the end of the night,” he says. 

‘Like running the Olympics’ 

As the financial crash of 2008 loomed, the final People in Need Telethon was held in 2007. 

Hosted by Bláthnaid Ní Chofaigh and Ryan Tubridy, the final Telethon raised €7.5 million, bringing the total raised across 9 Telethons to €35 million. 

It wasn’t just Ireland’s nosedive in to austerity that put paid to future People in Need Telethons, says Harvey. By that stage, many charities around Ireland had become professional, well-structured organisations. And, he says, the logistics of hosting an event like Telethon are considerable.

“It’s like running the Olympics, it’s a very expensive thing for a broadcaster,” says Harvey. “You’ve outside broadcast in 10 places, you’ve got to set up a big studio. You’ve got to devote an entire team for a period of time to develop a Telethon.”

In 2016, People in Need wound down, donating its last €1 million to Saint Vincent De Paul.

Says Harvey: “It was a fantastic thing really. I have to say, there was a great deal of really hard-working people on an operational side and the trust side for years.”

‘RTÉ does Comic Relief’ airs on Friday 28 June at 8pm and will be hosted by will be hosted by Deirdre O’Kane, Nicky Byrne, Jennifer Zamperelli, and Eoghan McDermott.

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    Mute Tony Daly
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    Sep 29th 2014, 6:25 PM

    The husband did his very best and ut must have been awful seeing his wife deteriorate but the hosputal unable to cope. Appalling.

    146
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    Mute cosmological
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    Sep 29th 2014, 5:54 PM

    Makes me mad that hospital excellence isn’t the prior government priority.

    142
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    Mute Tony Skillington
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    Sep 29th 2014, 9:31 PM

    The only priority of this government is to try and fool us all in a couple of years and get back into power

    74
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    Mute Joseph O'Regan
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    Sep 29th 2014, 6:13 PM

    The Government is destroying the public health care system or letting it self destruct. They want the health care for profit. The people should be under no illusion that this will mean even less care for more money. Look at what privation has done to the system in the Netherlands. …..it destroyed it, the country went from one of the most humane efficient systems to one where people are paying enormous sums to private companies for the least cover required by law.

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    Mute Colm Byrne
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:43 PM

    “Dr Peter Boylan says it’s well recognised that Ireland has the lowest number of consultants per head of population in the OECD”. I’d hazard a guess earnings are at the very top levels of the OECD. Pay less, employ more?

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    Mute Colm Byrne
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:48 PM

    Shock horror. Yup, top 2/3 well paid in the OECD even after recent cuts, and twice the pay of uk equivalents. http://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/irish-hospital-consultants-among-highest-paid-in-the-world-1.1850847

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    Mute Andrew
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:42 PM

    Hospitals are on five day week. Go in Friday wait till Monday for attention.

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    Mute Sean Macc
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:56 PM

    Consultant salaries have already been cut drastically. The result? There’s a mass shortage as consultants emigrate to North America and Australia for far better pay and conditions.

    57
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    Mute C Dav
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    Sep 30th 2014, 6:48 AM

    Not a very smart comment about reducing pay when they can’t recruit consultants (or registrars) to work in these jobs in the first place.

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    Mute Tony Daly
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    Sep 29th 2014, 6:04 PM

    If we could only have centres of fully resourced barely adequate competence instead of centres of excellence that would be a good start. Clearly much more could have been done if the resources were there but we have other priorities in Ireland.

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    Mute Sinead Dolan
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:39 PM

    She died because she was in the wrong place from day one, a regional hospital without the expertise, in form of consultants, to recognise and treat her condition effectively before it became irreversible. Shocking.

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    Mute Daniel Dudek Corrigan
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    Sep 29th 2014, 5:55 PM

    No, it’s a consequence of hundreds of years of religious oppression and lack of a proper, full abortion legislation.

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    Mute Joan Murphy
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:59 PM

    Daniel with a comment like that you must be trolling

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    Mute Mike O Neill
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:59 PM

    This tragic case had nothing to do with abortion.

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    Mute Maggie
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    Sep 29th 2014, 9:41 PM

    You knob.wrong case

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    Mute TheLoneHurler
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    Sep 30th 2014, 12:02 AM

    Pro-choice think has reached a new high.

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    Mute Mary Lyons
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    Sep 29th 2014, 7:49 PM

    And around and around and around we go.! We know whats wrong but we do not know how to fix it. And women die and will continue to die,,,,,,

    56
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    Mute Joan Featherstone
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:24 PM

    And men Mary, lack of resources etc is not gender specific.

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    Mute CMac59
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    Sep 29th 2014, 8:10 PM

    Bad nursing and medical oversight has more to do with it. This new excuse, which may be valid, seems however to be designed to protect the staff on duty in the ward at the time of the lady’s fatal illness and excuse the HSE management.

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    Mute Maggie
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    Sep 29th 2014, 9:40 PM

    That nurse tried her best to say patient needed icu but doctors dont care bout nurses opinions

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    Mute Carina Clarke
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:50 PM

    Not to worry, thaw case will probably be used as an excuse to move maternity services out of Sligo hospital now to Galway or Derry or the moon.

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    Mute TheLoneHurler
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    Sep 30th 2014, 12:05 AM

    Sad but true Carina.

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    Mute Hairy lemon
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    Sep 30th 2014, 7:21 AM

    I think using this case to make a point for more consultants is insensitive in the extreme. Our doctors are highly trained and should have been able to make the calls here. It shouldn’t have needed a consultant (who decided to go off to a clinic…).

    A better call would be for the consultants to work in line with a 24x7x365 health service rather than suiting themselves to short days, long weekends and private appointments using public infrastructure. The outcome of those changes would not be ‘debatable’.

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    Mute Fintan Doyle
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    Sep 30th 2014, 7:55 AM

    Lemon,
    It’s strange that you think a consultant who is rostered to work in a clinic outside the hospital is in some way ‘suiting himself’

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    Mute significantrisk
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    Sep 30th 2014, 8:32 AM

    There aren’t enough consultants to staff a 24/7 roster.

    There aren’t enough registrars, or SHOs, or interns either for that matter.

    All doctors in ireland work far and away in excess of our contracted hours, in underresourced services stretched too thinly to provide the level of care we would like.

    Nonsense about people suiting themselves (who exactly would have covered that clinic?) is unhelpful, and that antagonistic attitude is a big part of why the shortage of medical manpower exists.

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    Mute tractor1000
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    Sep 29th 2014, 10:14 PM

    Corrigan you dope!

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