
Kiera Dignam would love to see statue erected to honour late dad, Christy
The daughter of the late Christy Dignam has said she would be "honoured" if a statue was erected to remember her famous father ahead of his second anniversary on Friday.
Kiera told how the Dignam family were blown away when An Post put the late Aslan frontman on a stamp as part of a special commemorative set called "Iconic Irish Voices" on September 12, 2024.
The set also included stamps honouring Séamus Begley, Sinéad O'Connor and Shane MacGowan, all of whom passed away in 2023.
Kiera said it would be "lovely" to see her father, who died from a rare blood cancer when he was 63, honoured with a statue.
"When he died, we had people saying they wanted to talk to the local authorities."
She told us: "It's weird but it would be lovely. It was the same when An Post brought out the stamp. When they approached us about it, I thought it was mad, but it was an amazing nod to him. It's lovely to have and my kids to have.
"It's in the archives now so it's really special in that way but it was something he would never expect. We're normal people. It's not something we'd expect.
"That would be an honour though," she said of a statue.
Speaking ahead of her father's second anniversary today, Kiera opened up about how tough it is not to have her father's opinion when she writes new songs for her album.
And the Dubliner said she was finding feathers everywhere she went after he died.
"For a while afterwards, I was finding feathers everywhere.
"I think the first year, you'd find yourself saying, 'this time last year' but then you get beyond that and you 'oh my God this time last year he wasn't here.'
"Then that kind of freaks you out a little bit because you feel your memories are starting to get further and further out into the distance.
"Then people say 'you have to just move on' but that nearly offends you. Like I don't want to move on. I lost someone I loved. I don't want to keep turning but unfortunately it does.
"These are the songs I either stood in the crowd listening to or stood on the stage and sang with him.
"It's a unique way to experience something in a crap way. It's bittersweet. It's nice to have those experiences but it also makes it very tough to be rehearsing on stage with a band and he's not here.
"My whole album – anything I wrote, I'd send him on the demo asking him what he thought. I don't have that counsel anymore," she added.

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