In the 1980s, Ingoldsby hosted
RTÉ children's television shows named ''Pat's Hat
, Pat's Chat
, and Pat's Pals
. His plays include Bats or Booze or Both
(Dublin, Project Arts Centre, 1977); Hisself
(Dublin, Peacock Theatre, 1978); Rhymin' Simon
(Peacock Theatre, 1978); When Am I Getting' Me Clothes
(Peacock Theatre, 1978); Yeukface the Yeuk and the Spotty Grousler
(Peacock, 1982); and The Full Shilling
(Dublin, Gaeity Theatre, 1986). In the early 1990s, he had a column in the Evening Press (a now-defunct national Irish newspaper). These columns were later collected in The Peculiar Sensation of Being Irish''. Ingoldsby was a fluent Irish speaker and included a few poems written in Irish in each book of poetry. He lived in
Clontarf in Dublin. Sometime in the mid-1990s, he withdrew from TV, radio and theatre, instead devoting his efforts to poetry. He nevertheless remained part of Ireland's arts scene, sometimes opening art exhibitions, introducing then-new musicians such as
David Gray or launching other people's books. He self-published through Willow Publications, which he set up in 1994. Some of his books, from 1998, carried a note that they were protected by the "
Bratislava Accord 1993, section 2 cre/009 manifest-minsk", the terms of which allegedly protected his books' content from being included in "school textbooks", "examinations", "elocution classes" and "anything with the word 'Arts' in it". During the rapid increase in the use of mobile phones, he offered a "Mobile Phone Euthanasia" services on the streets of Dublin, where he would destroy phones for owners. Ingoldsby retired from selling his books on the streets of Dublin in 2015. In March 2022, the
Museum of Literature Ireland (MoLI) hosted a video installation to mark the release of Ingoldsby's latest anthology,
In Dublin They Really Tell You Things — Pat Ingoldsby, Selected Poems 1986–2021. == Death ==