TAVARN TY ELISE & BYN'S PHOTOS (Byn's view)

Mae'n bont rhwng Llydaw (Plouie) a Chymru (Merthyr Tudful)/ A bridge between Brittany (Plouye) and Wales (Merthyr).

My co-ordinates

Pub/Bar info.

Degemer Mat, Bienvenu(e), Welcome, Croeso i Lydaw ag i 'Tavarn Ty Elise'. Ambiance positive acçeptée, ambiance negative rejetée.
An hent /Route de Collorec
Bro Gerne/Cornouaille
29690 Plouie/Plouye
Penn ar Bed/Finistere
Breizh/Llydaw/Bretagne/Brittany
Twinned with Carrog in North Wales
All times are negotiable between 6am. & 1am., but
generally is as follows:
Llun/Lun/Mon: Fermé
Maw/Meu/Mar/Tue: Fermé
Mer/Wed: 15h > 23h
Iau/Yaou/Jeu/Thu: 15h > 23h
Gwe/Ven/Fri: 15h > 23h
Sad/Sam/Sat: 12:30h > 23h
Sul/Sun/Dim: 12:30h > ?
(33)(0)229250115 (pub) leave message.
Mobile: 0699724935
bynwalters@libertysurf.fr
http://bynbrynman.ning.com/
http://www.facebook.com/bynwalters.tavarntyelise
http://www.facebook.com/tavarntyelise/
http://www.myspace.com/bynwalters/
http://picasaweb.google.fr/www.tyelise.com
http://taffawrnantmorlais.blogspot.com/
http://mymiscellaneous-bynbrynman.blogspot.com/
http://patrimoinebreton.blogspot.com/

A little bar lost in the Breton countryside with a clay floor, wood burner, an eclectic music collection, Welsh, Irish, Breton, World, & pop/rock we don't have hip-hop/rap/techno, no juke-box or pool table. We do have real ale, organic artisanal beers and local farm cider, malt whiskies(Scotch, Irish, Breton & Welsh) and bourbons. Priority given to live music; wifi.
Coreff Ambrée: Pint = 5 euros, demi = 2 euros 50
Coreff Blonde Bio: Pint = 5 euros, demi = 2,50e
Coreff Blanche: Pint = 5 euros, demi = 2,50e
Coreff I.P.A.: Pint = 5euros, demi = 2,50e
Coreff Stout: Pint = 5 euros, demi = 2,50e
Pint of cider = Pint = 4euros, demi= 2e
My photos of Brittany taken when I was out of work on sale for 2,50euros each.
T(ee)-shirts: 15e au bar; 20e p+p.
Bar games: draughts; chess; dominoes; cards; solitaire; backgammon. Extensive parking & large beer garden opposite.


PLOUIE/PLOUYE, Breizh/Llydaw/Brittany/Bretagne:


(The original premise: "Mainly banter, slightly rambling reminiscences, a little bit political, slightly cultural and a touch of publicity for my bar in Brittany".)

Ambiance positive acceptée, ambiance negative rejetée.
(Positive ambience accepted, negative ambience rejected).
Le mot clé est 'convivialité' - 'Conviviality' is the key word.
Degustation, appreciation, conversation, tout en écoutant la musique.

Up in smoke

Regrettably my Pub 'Tavarn Ty Elise', a little bar in the Breton countryside between Uhelgoad (Huelgoat) & Karaez (Carhaix), (Bro Gerne) Finistere, Breizh/Llydaw/Brittany/Bretagne burned down in the early hours of friday February 19, 2010. Thirty years of my life up in smoke, but in spite of that the phoenix has risen again and the red dragon is back.
Red Dragon Pictures, Images and Photos

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Thursday, 5 November 2009

[From: Byn Walters] National Theatre of Wales: by the people, for the people

Byn Walters spotted this on the guardian.co.uk site and thought you should see it.

To see this story with its related links on the guardian.co.uk site, go to http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2009/nov/05/national-theatre-of-wales-online

National Theatre of Wales: by the people, for the people

From a play about the Bridgend suicides to a weather project in Snowdonia, the brand-new National Theatre of Wales proposes to put Welsh communities centre-stage. Artistic director John McGrath talks Lyn Gardner through his first ever programme ? and explains why it all started with a website

Lyn Gardner
Friday November 6 2009
guardian.co.uk


http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2009/nov/05/national-theatre-of-wales-online


Thirteen may be unlucky for some, but not for the National Theatre of Wales's artistic director, John McGrath, who has just announced a baker's dozen of productions to mark NTW's inaugural year-long season. It's an eclectic list, ranging from the first production for more than 50 years of The Devil Inside Him, a "lost" John Osborne play set in a Cardiff boarding house, written just before Look Back in Anger ? to a new show, Mundo Paralelo, from the brilliant Welsh-based No Fit State circus. The 13th show of the season, which will take place in Port Talbot in April 2011, is to be Passion, a contemporary version of the old community plays that used to be performed amid the steel town's smoking towers. Actor Michael Sheen, who grew up there, is creative director of the project and will also star in it.

Funded by a ?3m grant, the NTW's first season kicks off with A Good Night Out in the Valleys, which will be performed in the old mining institutes ? the social and educational centres that sprung up in the late 19th century and were kept running, a penny at a time, by subscription from miners. In their heyday, some even had their own opera companies. "The valleys were the obvious place for us to start," says McGrath. "It's all about building a sense of ownership in these communities, and putting the people who live there at the heart of it. We have to listen hard to them. When they see the show, I hope that they will recognise their own stories, hear their own language."

McGrath doesn't mean Welsh ? Wales already has a national Welsh-language theatre company, the splendid Theatr Genedlaethol. And though he was born in Mold, north Wales, just across the border from England, McGrath grew up in Liverpool. He's doing a crash course in the language (he jokes that he's "fluent between 8 and 10am every morning"), but, more importantly for the NTW, he comes with a reputation for pioneering work at Manchester's Contact Theatre, where he built a young and diverse audience through participatory initiatives.

The challenge for McGrath is to build an audience for the NTW in a country that has a long tradition of amateur performance, but one of the lowest attendance rates at professional theatre in the UK. McGrath thinks the answer is to make theatre in, and with, those communities. One such is The Soul Exchange, which will premiere in January 2011 at the old Butetown Coal Exchange in what used to be Tiger Bay, south of Cardiff ? the place where the UK's first million-pound cheque was signed, but which remains an impoverished area, home to one of the most ethnically diverse communities in Europe.

Another part of the NTW programme will be a work focusing on Bridgend, the small town in south Wales that became the subject of intense media scrutiny after a spate of suicides by young people. Instead of commissioning a traditional play and staging it in, say, Cardiff, McGrath has commissioned playwright Gary Owen, a local boy, to return home to live with his mother and talk to young people; the piece that will result, Love Steals From Loneliness, will be performed in Bridgend itself. McGrath sees his job as much more than simply producing plays: NTW will also be aiming to spark a debate about the issues. Everyone will be encouraged to have their say.

Already, they are. If the Royal National Theatre is a listed building, and the National Theatre of Scotland "a theatre without walls", then the new NTW sees itself as a community. NTW operates out of an anonymous-looking shopfront on a parade in Cardiff and has a staff of just nine; crucially, it maintains a thriving website, which is a beacon for debate about theatre in Wales and beyond. The programme reflects conversations that have been taking place not just inside the theatre world, but in cyberspace too.

"We're aiming to make people partners," says McGrath. "The National Theatre of Scotland has been a very useful model ? it shows that being a national theatre is not just about giving grants to people. But Wales is a different place, not least because there are far fewer producing theatres and more of an arts-centre tradition. So we've got to form relationships."

When McGrath put out a call requesting possible locations for performances, he was inundated with ideas. Many have been followed up. There will be outdoor theatre adventures made in collaboration with "pervasive gaming" experts Hide and Seek and played out on the beaches of North Wales. April 2010 will see a collaboration between Volcano Theatre and Welsh National Opera called Shelf Life, staged amid the book stacks of the old Swansea library, while performance artist Marc Rees will be taking over a chapel-turned-pound shop in the seaside town of Barmouth, curating a series of guided tours by Welsh and international performance artists. In the hills of Snowdonia, theatremaker David Harradine will create a project examining Welsh weather inside an aircraft-hangar-size space so vast it contains its own micro-climate. And in 2011, there will be the first-ever UK commission for the remarkable German company, Rimini Protokoll, who work with non-professional actors to create documentary theatre of astonishing intimacy.

It's not so much a programme as a map ? one that charts the psyche of Wales as well as its past and present, but which also looks outwards. One performance even takes place right off the map: Aeschylus' The Persians, a hymn to the bitterness of defeat in war, which will be staged by Mike Pearson, founder of the legendary Welsh company, Brith Gof, on an army range in the Brecon Beacons normally out-of-bounds to civilians.

It all adds up to a year of work that is both radical but inviting, risk-taking but popular, and which places Welsh communities at its very heart. "We couldn't do it without them," says McGrath. "We wouldn't want to do it without them."


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Jean-Claude Dreyfus, & Merzhin au bar Ty Elise

Post-cards sent to pub/bar

The discoloration on certain cards is from the cigarette smoke and open fire due to having been pinned to the ceiling for many years.

Bro Gozh ma Zadou

Meic Stevens - Rue St. Michel (leaning against my bar)

Glenn Devant le Pub/Bar Eté 2009

Those with an advanced musical aptitude who have trodden the clay floor

Jim O' Rourke; An Triskell; Glenmor; Youenn Gwernig; George Jouin; Liam Weldon; Jean-Yves le Roux; Alan Stivell: Dan ar Bras; Yann Tiersen; Davy Spillane; Meic Stevens; Paddy Keenan; Patrick Molard; Les Freres Morvan; Alan Simon; Tornaod; Lleuwen Steffan; Soig Siberil; Nolwenn Corbell; Steve Eaves (& Cerys Matthews, according to Steve's daughter Lleuwen Steffan); Gwennyn Mammen; Jackie Molard; Glenn le Merdy; Youenn Bihan; Twm Morris; Gilles le Bigot; Laurent Jouin; Eric Marchand; Pierre Crepillon; Les Freres Quere; Jean-Jacques Milteau; Rhys Harries(Trwynau Coch); Jean-Claude Dreyfuss (o.k. so he doesn't sing); Gweltaz ar Fur; Siân James; Derek Smith (Mabon); Gareth Westacott & Guy (Toreth); Plethyn; Yr Hwntws; Bernez Tangi; Gaby Kergoncuff; Louis (Lulu) Roujon; Louise Ebrell; Annie Ebrell; Jean-Claude Lalanne; Bernie Smyth; The Halby Brothers; Brian McNeill; Jamie McMenemy; Jean-Michel Veillon; Patrick LeFebvre; Fanch Landreau; Linda Thompson, from Fairport Convention; Mick Tems & Pat Smith; Peter Meazey, Susanne George and Stuart Brown (Mabsant); Dom Duff; Dedé Hellec; Michel Caous; Michel Clec'h; Ti Jaz; Anweledig; Kristen Nikolaz; Kern; Christian LeMaitre; Dezzie Wilkinson; Sean Corcoran; Jim Rowlands; Gazman; Maffia Mr Huws; Yvon Etienne; Iestyn ap Rhobert; Gafin Morgan; Côr Caron, Tregaron; Côr Seren Burma Star Choir, Abertawe/Swansea; Hastan; Fanch le Marrec; Katell Uguen; Katell Kloareg; Brigitte Kloareg; Fran May; Jamie Bevan; E.V.; Laurent Bigot; George Cadoudal; Re An Are; Mona Jaouen; Denez Abernot; Pat Kilbride; Aelodau'r Anweledig; Aelodau'r Mim Twm Llai; Aymeric; Matteo Cargnelutti; Jean Baron; Katelsong; Dik Banovich; not forgetting the Peruvian native American who made a point of calling in to play 'en route' to concerts in Paris, Berlin and London: Would those of you with better memories than myself please be kind enough to let me know who I've inadvertently left out.

Americymru

Americymru

Independence Cymru

Owain Glyndwr

Pan anwyd fi,

'Roedd gwyneb nef yn llawn o ffurfiau tanllyd,

A rhedai'r geifr o'r bryniau; a'r diadelloedd

Ddieithr frefent yn y meusydd dychrynadwy:

'R arwyddion hyn a'm hynodasant i,

A holl droellau'm bywyd a ddangosant

Fy mod uwchlaw cyffredin ddyn.

(Shakespeare: Henry IV)

Wales - W. Watkin Davies

Wales - W. Watkin Davies

Destiny of the Britons - Taliesin

 
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Wales United

 
"If they decide to unite," he said, "they would be completely invincible. This nation would be fortunate....if they could accept one prince, and he a good one." - Gerallt Cymro (Giraldus Cambrensis)
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The result was that the king, Henry II, with his mighty army, was forced to retreat, and in his anger he blinded his hostages and burned the churches.

Putting the Record Straight

At a time when the vast majority of the French abandoned their fate into the hands of Marshall Pétin, many Bretons chose, and that as early as 1940, to go to England to continue the fight. At the end of 1940 the Bretons made up 70% of the resistance while Brittany only comprises 7% of the French population. The resistance went on to attract more and more men and women, yet at the end of 1943, only six months before the Normandy landings, the Bretons still represented 40% of the Free French. This is not to forget the resistance in Brittany itself, a vast uprising of the whole people, which retained many German troops in the peninsula, for these, had they been allowed to reach the Normandy front, would have pushed the Allies back to sea. It is also thanks to the Bretons that France, whose authorities had massively collaborated with Nazi Germany from 1940 to 1944, could recover her honour. The brutal repression which was triggered after D-Day against all forms of Bretonness, seems all the more disgraceful. Bernard Le Nail

Bethesda Chapel, Georgetown, Merthyr Tydfil

Bethesda Chapel, Georgetown, Merthyr Tydfil
Joseph Parry worshipped in this chapel as a young boy before going "off to Philadelphia in the morning". One day I received a note from Margaret Roberts, Emrys's wife asking me to volunteer to help to clean it out, which I was happy to do. Later on John Jenkins had an office there and I used to go down to see him for a chat at lunch time."

W.H.I.P.P.E.T.

W.H.I.P.P.E.T.

Richard Trevithithick Commemorative Plate

Richard Trevithithick Commemorative Plate
2004 Bi- Centenary Limited Edition No. 110 out of 200, a gift to me from Llinos Davis representing the school

The first steam locomotive to run on rails in the world, Feb. 1804

The first steam locomotive to run on rails in the world, Feb. 1804
Designed by the children of Ysgol Santes Tudful, Merthyr Ty(u)dfi(u)l

Football Results, Surprise, Even The Welsh Championship

Online Encyclopaedia


Profile (1)

Born Merthyr Tydfil, Cymru/Wales/Galles
Georgetown Infants,Queen's Rd.Infants, Penydarren Juniors, Cyfarthfa Grammar, Merthyr Tydfil
Sold ice-cream in Billy Smart's Circus, Merthyr Tydfil
Records clerk, Ebbw Vale Steelworks
Turner, Moss Gears, Merthyr Tydfil
Insurance salesman, Prudential, Merthyr Tydfil
Handyman, Castle Hotel, Merthyr Tydfil
Asst. Costermonger around the streets of Rhymni, Merthyr & Cwm Cynon Valley
Industrial painter, Mid-Glam C.C.
Storeman;night watchman;refuse collector;street cleaner;toilet attendant;brickie's,plasterer's,fitter's,
roofer's mate;Town Hall caretaker;General handyman, Rhydycar Leisure Centre,all with Merthyr Borough Council
Shop Steward;Political Ward Branch Secretary;Constituency Membership Secretary;National Delegate;Area Organiser Welsh Language;County Council Candidate;Election Agent, Borough Council;member of Merthyr Tydfil and Ebbw Vale Rugby Clubs;member of Gellifaelog Bowls Club;life-long supporter of Merthyr Tydfil F.C., founder member of extra mural Welsh classes; signed Merthyr's 'Visitors' Book' after Charles and Di; moved to Brittany in 1979, landlord of 'Tavarn Ty Elise';
voted in newspaper, person who comes to mind when one thinks of Brittany; more than one guide book refers to my Pub as an 'institution'; largest open air music festival in France conceived in my Bar. Helped to establish first 'Real Ale' micro-brewery in Brittany. Alan Stivell is my niece's godfather and my daughter's godmother is a daughter one of the 'Soeurs Gouadec';Yann Tiersen played in the pub;Jean-Claude Dreyfuss drank and acted in the pub for a video-clip.
For my Wedding, the Merthyr Express sent over its Chief Reporter Melanie Doel and her photographer boyfriend Robert Haines. Best Man to George & Marilyn Quirk; Usher to Mike & Rhiannon Jones. Pall-bearer to Erwan Kervella. Grandfather to Goulwen, Glen & Awena.

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