Yvonne Connolly Weds in Róisín Linnane Gown, Riding the Subway to Central Park
Irish model Yvonne Connolly, 52, took the subway in her Róisín Linnane gown to reach her Central Park wedding to cinematographer John Conroy.

When a public march ground Manhattan traffic to a halt on the morning of her Central Park ceremony, Yvonne Connolly did what any resourceful New Yorker would: she abandoned the car, gathered her bridal party, and ran for the subway.
Connolly, the 52-year-old Irish model and TV personality, married cinematographer John Conroy in an intimate Central Park ceremony after 14 years together. She chose to announce the news on social media with a carousel that ended on a selfie taken underground, white gown and all. "We had to get out of the car and run to the subway to make the ceremony in Central Park," she wrote. "It couldn't have been more NY!!"
The dress was an off-the-shoulder white gown from Irish luxury designer Róisín Linnane. Linnane builds her collections around a "less is more" philosophy and is known in Ireland for an alternative bridal aesthetic: clean silhouettes, unhurried construction, no excess flourish. Connolly paired the gown with earrings from Emporium Kalu; Conroy arrived in a suit by Dublin tailor Louis Copeland and Sons. She wore her blonde hair down in loose waves.
The ceremony brought together their nine children combined. Connolly's three, Jack, 27, Missy, 25, and Ali, 20, all of whom she shares with her former husband, Boyzone singer Ronan Keating, were present alongside Conroy's six children. It was Missy, who lives in New York, who organised the day from start to finish.

"I married the love of my life today in New York City enveloped by our 9 children. Tears of joy and happiness have been shed and our true love celebrated. 14 years together and I love you more and more everyday John Conroy," Connolly posted on Instagram.
The social media response was immediate, with fans noting the timing of Ronan Keating's activity that same day: the Boyzone star posted an unrelated photograph from Sydney with his current wife, Storm Keating, just hours after the wedding announcement went live.
What the day demonstrated was a quietly compelling template for modern destination weddings: a city elopement over an elaborate venue, a guest list built entirely from family, and an Irish designer chosen not for a bridal portfolio but for the precision of her craft. Connolly's own verdict on the Róisín Linnane gown was unambiguous. "I felt a million dollars, bursting with happiness!
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