Sixmilebridge magician, Paddy Ward will show age is only a number when he appears on Ireland’s Got Talent this Saturday.

84 year old Paddy has picked up every single magic award there is to be got in Ireland, for five years running he won the International Brotherhood of Magician Ring 85 Shield as Ireland’s Top Magician, a feat that has yet to be matched. He was tempted to audition for the Virgin Media Television programme after watching the first series last year.

“I said to myself I might as well have a go at this. I got the forms and filled them in, the next thing I was called for audition. I love magic, I’ve been in magic all my life, my father was a magician, he died a young man at 44, I took up magic when I was 10. I performed in my first show in the Oriel Cinema in Dundalk for a week at ten years of age and I’ve been at magic ever since even during my apprenticeships. I was entering competitions during my apprenticeship and winning them, I won all the top awards in Ireland,” Paddy told The Clare Echo on Tuesday.

A native of Dundalk, Paddy moved to Sixmilebridge in 2004 having previously resided in Limerick for 35 years. Since appearing in promos for Saturday’s show, Ward has been receiving plenty of phone calls but has had to keep tight lipped on how his audition goes.

Saturday will not be the first time he has appeared on television screens. He was in high demand following his international success with slots on RTÉ’s Live at Three and Play the Game, the Gerry Kelly presented Kelly on UTV plus shows broadcast by the BBC.

Nicknamed, ‘The Great Padini’, Paddy explained its origin. “Years ago when the tourists were coming from Australia, they used to stop at the Ryan Hotel in Limerick, I was asked to do a couple of shows for them at night time, my name is Paddy and the famous Houdini, so I changed my name to Patini and it has stuck”.

Magic has been a family thing for the Wards, his father Benni was his biggest inspiration in the field while Paddy has passed on the tricks of the trade to his family. “My grandaughter Lisa Hogan was a brilliant magician, she followed in my footsteps and she won all the awards I ever won, she did a different type of act, mine was a patter act I brought the fun into magic, she performed magic to music”.

His daughter Michelle lives in Sixmilebridge while his son Nigel is further afield in Australia. The death of his wife Josie forced him to take a break from magic and he described her passing to producers of the show as “the hardest thing I’ve ever had to face in my life.”

Last Friday, he celebrated his 84th birthday and on Wednesday of this week he performed for visitors to Carrigoran Daycare Centre, such magic acts are among his most enjoyable. “I do an awful lot of charity work and I’m in Carrigoran every month. They love it. I’ve been going around to daycare centres, nursing homes, to disabled children all throughout my life”.

Related News

mary howard ken o'sullivan 1
Best of Ennis honoured at Mayoral reception
hogweed westbury 2
Hogweed making Westbury the perfect setting for tropical film quips South Clare Cllr
cannabis shannon 27-05-26 1
Cannabis worth €4.2m seized
ennis patricks day parade 17-03-26 joe cooney 1
CPO processing times delaying housing delivery
Latest News
lahinch golf club 1
Refurbished Lahinch clubhouse opens this weekend
éanna barry cian barron killian mcnamara dara walsh 1
Clare contingent bid for Nicky Rackard glory with New York
cork vs clare u20 29-04-26 conor shannon 1
Shannon's fingerprints all over Clare's canny ability to finish strong
clare vs waterford u20 25-03-26 tomás kelly paul rodgers 1
'Clare fans will back a team willing to fight' - Kelly geared for shot at All-Ireland glory
hogweed westbury 2
Hogweed making Westbury the perfect setting for tropical film quips South Clare Cllr
Premium
Terence & Clare U20s look to raise the banner once again
Andrew Fahey's sideline mileage brings him to tipping point of All-Ireland success
Minors must be consistent to prevail in All-Ireland quarter-final says O'Connell
Casey battling hamstring injury to make All-Ireland decider
Madden to have 'serious review' on Clare future

Annual Subscription!

The Clare Echo annual subscription for just €69.99 a year. 

Prefer to pay monthly? Click the monthly option and get the first six months for just €3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter €8 per month. 

Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.