Monthly Archives:

December 2008

Dance

Irish Step Dancing Even You Can Do

Dancer and documentarian Kieran Jordan.

Dancer and documentarian Kieran Jordan.

Before there were wigs of bouncing corkscrew curls, costumes that look like pages torn from the Book of Kells, and athletic aerial lifts that put Michael Jordan to shame, Irish step dancing was, like other folk dances, a joyous celebration of music that anyone, from toddling to doddering, could do.

And surprise—it still is. Old-time step dancing, like sean nos (the Irish phrase meaning “old style”), is alive and well.

“Just google ‘sean nos dancing’ and you’ll see hundreds of website come up,” says Kieran Jordan, a former competitive Irish step dancer from Glenside who now performs, choreographs, and teaches in Boston. “Sean nos is huge in Ireland right now. It’s a dance form that nearly died out because it was considered too wild or free form, compared to the structured, modest step-dancing where you keep your arms down and there are rules on what you wear and how you look.”

Jordan not only teaches sean nos and other, older forms of step dancing, she recently produced a documentary film, “Secrets of the Sole: Irish Dance Steps and Stories,” with two of her favorite old-time dancers, Kevin Doyle and Aidan Vaughan. Doyle, a Rhode Island native, does a form of solo step dancing that might remind you of the tap-dancing style of Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, or even Bill “Bojangles” Robinson—that seemingly effortless, percussive dance that turns the feet into virtual musical instruments. Vaughan dances the traditional sean nos style, his moves so close to the floor even Jordan admits she had to practically get down next to him to learn the steps.

“Sean nos style, was primarily danced in the far west of Ireland, a little more raw than competitive step dancing,” Jordan explains. “It’s very playful, but it can be loud and battering or floating and gliding.”

(Editor’s Note: You can see sean nos dancing live next Tuesday, December 9, at the Irish Center in Mount Airy, during the exciting “Irish Christmas in America” show, featuring Karan Casey and members of Teada.)

While “Riverdance” rekindled interest in competitive Irish step dancing with its codified style of dress and choreography—stiff upper body, arms down at the sides, aforementioned wigs and outfits–“old style dancing did almost die out in most parts of Ireland,” says Jordan. “But it’s something that even young people have latched on to lately. It’s very accessible; it brings the music to life because you’re able to move your upper body and you can improvise a little more. Your feet stay close to the floor, you’re not jumping a whole lot, and you’re standing in a more natural stance rather than in ballet turnout. It’s a dance form meant for people of all ages. People can continue to do this kind of dancing into their ‘80s and ‘90s, and I love that about it. I’ve been doing Irish dancing for more than 25 years, and it’s high impact. Anyone in their 30s and is still doing it has had injuries, big or small. Sean nos is low-impact so it doesn’t pose the same problems.”

Jordan was four years old when she told her parents that she wanted to learn to step dance. “The first time I saw Irish dancing was at the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, she recalls. “I asked my parents if I could learn to do that. Fortunately, Rosemarie Timoney was giving classes at our church, St. Luke’s in Glenside, so I went there every Saturday. I have a lot of great memories of those early classes with her. I remember taking to it right away. I loved learning new steps, I loved the music, and I made good friends.”

But she also decided to go the competitive route, which meant she had to move from school to school to work with certified teachers. “It was important to go to feis (competitions, pronounced “fesh”) and learn news steps, so I changed schools a couple of times to seek that out.”

That’s a list of familiar names to anyone interested in Irish dance in the Philadelphia area: De Noghla, Coyle, McHugh. Jordan competed nationally for 14 years, performing several times at Radio City Music Hall in Frank Patterson’s “St. Patrick’s Day Spectacular,’ which featured 100 champion step dancers in what must have felt and sounded like an earthquake of magnitude 8. When she was at the McHugh School, she joined teachers Sheila and Tara McHugh in performing with Mick Moloney, then folklore professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Moloney, now at New York University, was part of a musical trio with Seamus Eagan (of Solas) and Eugene O’Donnell, a fiddler and step dancer. Just as Moloney revived Philadelphia interest in Irish traditional music, O’Donnell helped bring about the renaissance of step dancing in the region when he arrived in the US from Derry in 1957.

While most teens were bagging at the Acme or asking people 1,000 times a day, “Do you want fries with that?” Jordan was performing professionally. “I remember getting to use my mom’s car to go off to gigs and Mick always paid me. It was wonderful,” she recalls.

When she graduated from high school she won the first college scholarship given by the Irish Dance Teachers of North America and attended Boston College. But she never expected to wind up with a career in dance. “I thought I was going to be a journalist or an English professor. I always wrote for the school newspaper. I wrote for the Irish Edition when I was a teenager and in Boston, I worked for the Boston Irish Reporter for four years, though I was never far from the Irish dance scene, because that’s what I was writing about.”

She explored other forms of expression too, taking classes in jazz, musical theater, and other percussive dance styles, such as Appalachian clogging, tap, and Cape Breton step dancing. She found she loved the close interplay between dancer and musician these other styles offered, allowing the dancer’s personality to emerge and shine. Through Boston College’s Irish Studies Program and at University College in Cork and Limerick University, where she got her master’s degree in contemporary dancer performance, she met and learned from a variety of instructors, including Joe O’Donovan, a master of the “old style” Irish dancing. That’s where she also met Aidan Vaughan–while working on independent projects on sean nos dance that focused on his County Clare style. Jordan also won second place for her sean nos jig dancing at the Comortas Choilin Sheain Dharach, a sean nos dance festival in Connemara.

Her fate, it seems, was sealed. Today, she’s a fulltime performer and dance instructor, teaching her “Beyond the Feis” workshop in Boston, Cambridge, and wherever in the country she’s invited to teach (like Irish Week in the Catskills, where her daily classes are filled and her husband, artist Vincent Crotty, teaches painting). She also tours frequently. “A couple of weeks a month, I’m somewhere,” she laughs.

For the next few weeks, she’s working as choreographer for WGBH-TV’s annual Christmas Celtic Sojourn show (her old friend, Seamus Eagan, is music director), something she’s done for the past five years. “We even have a PBS special, a DVD and CDs, though it hasn’t left New England yet,” she says.

And her writing skills aren’t getting rusty. She’s using them wto market her dance DVD (while working on another instructional video). “I can write my own PR releases, so I’m grateful to have those skills,” she laughs. But she’s doesn’t regret choosing dance over journalism. While she’s happy to use her writing and dancing talents to help broaden the audience for Irish folk dance, it’s still the dancing, she says, “that’s where my heart is.”

Music

Christmas Comes Early to the Shanachie

Guitarist John Doyle in a pensive moment.

Guitarist John Doyle in a pensive moment.

It was billed as a Christmas show. Think of it as a Christmas present.

Mick Moloney, with fiddler Athena Tergis and guitar great John Doyle, headlined at the Shanachie Pub in Ambler Thursday night. They were joined onstage, from time to time, by special guests, local fiddler Caitlin Finley and old-timey fiddle whiz Rafe Stefanini.  

There were just enough Christmas tunes along the lines of “The Holly and the Ivy,” to satisfy those who were looking for an early dose of holiday merriment. Mixed in were some of the vintage tunes Mick Moloney typically champions—including a great little song about some fairly lethal Christmas cake—and, between Tergis and Doyle, there were enough musical pyrotechnics to rouse the denizens of the jammed dining room and bar.

We’ve posted some photos from this wonderful concert, which Shanachie co-owner Gerry Timlin suggested might become a tradition.

Check them out.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

It’s “kick up your heels” Saturday as the Martin Family Band plays Celtic tunes at the Willow Creek Orchard’s 5th annual open house in Collegeville and Canadian fiddler and singer April Verch performs at Calvary Church in Philadelphia.

But save some toe-tapping strength for Tuesday’s “Irish Christmas in America” at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy, featuring Karan Casey and Teada and some incredible musicians and dancers. And get your tickets now. In many cities where this show is touring, it’s playing to sold-out crowds. This year you can purchase performance CDs or you can win a copy in our “help irishphiladelphia.com hit 1,000 subscribers to its newsletter” contest. All you have to do to be entered is to subscribe to our weekly informative email newsletter (we call it Mickmail) or, if you’re already a subscriber, forward your issue on to someone else who you think might subscribe. We’re only about 13 people away from achieving our goal for the year. Next year: world domination.

On Wednesday, our friends Dennis Gormley and Kathy DeAngelo, otherwise known as McDermott’s Handy, will be performing their own Christmas special at the Fox Chase Library in Philadelphia. Not only are they fine musicians, Dennis never fails to crack us up, so expect some great fun.

And if you’re not too Christmased out, Leahy—an astonishing family of eight talented brothers and sisters from Canada—will present their Christmas show at the Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts at the University of Pennsylvania on Friday, December 12. You may have seen their PBS special or heard their award-winning albums. They even stole some thunder from Shania Twain when they opened for her in her inaugural world tour.

If our calendar isn’t out Christmas shopping, you can check it for all the details.

News

Salute the 32 Counties on New Year’s Eve

Seven of these flags need bearers.

Seven of these flags need bearers.

The final celebration of the 50th anniversary of The Irish Center will be a 32-County Ball on New Year’s Eve at the Commodore Barry Club, Carpenter and Emlen Streets. Key to the event is a ceremonial parade of flags from each of Ireland’s counties, carried by someone with ties to the area.

Unfortunately, right now, says the Ball committee, they’re about seven counties short. So, if you or an ancestor comes from Carlow, Cork, Kilkenny, Meath, Offaly, Westmeath, or Wexford and don’t have any New Year’s Eve plans, raise your hand. Better yet, contact 32 County Ball chairperson Kathy McGee Burns at mcgeeburns@aol.com, or 215-872-1395, or Vince Gallagher at 610-220-4142.

The evening will start at 7 PM with a cocktail hour followed by a buffet dinner at 8 PM, catered by Mickey Kavanaugh, with music provided by the Vince Gallagher Band. Tickets are $50 per person and are available through Mc Gee Burns, Gallagher, or Brenda McDonald (609-841-4664) or Barney and Carmel Boyce (610-449-9374).

Dance

A Look Back at the 2008 Oireachtas

Here they are, the McAleer "Ghillies."

Here they are, the McAleer "Ghillies."

Many of the dance schools that competed in the Mid-Atlantic Oireachtas down at the Center City Marriott created custom T-shirts for their teams. One set of tees stood out above the rest—those worn by the McAleer School out of Claymont, Delaware.

You might have to be a dancer to get the joke, but emblazoned in baseball script across the McAleer pinstriped jerseys was the word “Ghillies.” (Ghillies, for you non-dancers, are dance shoes.)

To Tricia Beichner, who designed the shirt, it was a no-brainer: “”The Phillies won the World Series, and that’s why we did it.”

The shirts proved so popular that not only the bewigged dancers were wearing them. (And that’s a look, let me tell you.) “It’s beyond the team,” said Beichner. “The dads and the moms bought the shirt, too.”

You’ll find more pictures from this year’s Oireachtas, a huge competition for Irish dancers throughout the mid-Atlantic states, in our photo essay.