Monthly Archives:

April 2010

People

Networking—Irish Style

IN-Philadelphia

Teacher Rosaleen McGill and Solas guitarist Eamon McElholm make newcomer Karen McCausland of Tyrone feel welcome.

If you thought of the inaugural meeting of the new Irish Network-Philadelphia organization as a treasure hunt, last night at Tir na Nog in Center City I collected:

  • Two members of the Celtic rock group Blackthorn
  • A guy whose company makes a mobile beer table for pubs
  • Six lawyers
  • The director of disability services at Temple University
  • Three old Dublin City University friends who came to the US on a lark because they could get green cards then wound up becoming Americans
  • Four college students
  • The creative director of a local theatre company
  • A Center City business owner
  • A house painter
  • The guitarist from Solas
  • The director of sweaters (yes, it’s a real job) at Anthropologie
  • An occupational therapist from Dublin who was only there because she couldn’t get home, thanks to an Icelandic volcano

Of course, I’m pretty chatty, but even if you traded fewer business cards than I did, your world would still be expanded dramatically. And that’s the idea behind IN-Philadelphia, the latest in a string of networking organizations aimed at bringing together a varied group of people “from suits to boots” with a common bond: They’re Irish-born or of Irish descent.

IN-USA grew out of the collaborative efforts of the Irish government and American organizers who spun the group from the template set by Bill Godwin, who was then Midwest territory director for IDA Ireland, the agency responsible for industrial development and foreign investment in Ireland. IN Chicago launched in 2003 as way for Irish-born immigrants to share business contacts, experience, and drive business to one another.

Attorney and Wexford native Laurence Banville is chairman of the committee that added IN-Philadelphia to the Irish Network’s growing list of participating cities (New York, San Francisco, San Diego, Boston, Chicago, and Washington, DC). In January, he met at the Irish Embassy in Washington with Irish officials and other IN groups and thought the concept could be a go in his new hometown.

While many of the other INs are heavy with professionals, Banville thought that welcoming “boots”—people in the trades—as well as “suits” would increase the group’s bandwidth.

“I thought we could bring together all sorts of individuals—landscapers, painters, lawyers, businessmen—to everyone’s benefit,” he says. After all, he points out, lawyers often need painters, and painters sometimes need lawyers. IN-USA is developing a national database of members that will “allow people in Philadelphia to expand outside of Philadelphia,” he says. A website will be up shortly that will let members link to other members all over the country.

Karen Boyce McCollum is a member of the IN-Philadelphia committee. “My favorite aspect of this group is our ‘from boots to suits’ motto,” she says. “This group is open to all people in Philadelphia with an Irish interest. People from all industries are welcome to be part–carpenters, lawyers, doctors, aspiring politicians, newly appointed software engineers, stay-at-home mothers, firefighters with an interest in the accordion, realtors, insurance agents with an interest in raising children, musicians, tour guides/radio hosts, future college graduates, teachers, roofers, etc. Diversity is a plus, especially when it comes to building a strong, well-rounded network.”

For Karen McCausland, IN-Philadelphia came just in time. The Tyrone native and director of sweaters for Philly-based Anthropologie has only been in Philadelphia for two weeks. Rosaleen McGill, a teaching assistant at The Caring Center and singer, introduced Karen to me as “my new friend.”

“This is such a good opportunity for me to meet people and make connections,” says McCausland, who has been an ex-pat—in places like Milan and Glasgow—for the last dozen years.

Noel Fleming, formerly from Dundalk, County Louth, now lives in Phoenixville. He’s a lawyer with Lundy & Flynn in Bala Cynwyd who joined the IN-Philadelphia committee to share his expertise. “I joined because of my friend, Kevin Kent, who is also on the committee. I’m not involved in a lot of Irish things at all—in fact, nothing—but I thought I could help because of the kind of law I practice. This is a nonprofit organization and I practice nonprofit tax exempt law. I wanted to help out.”

The next IN-Philadelphia event is on May 20 at Maggie O’Neill’s Pub, 1062 Pontiac Road in Drexel Hill.

If you ask Gordon Magee—and I did—the Irish Network is an idea whose time has come. The painting contractor from Belfast and Roxborough hasn’t gravitated toward other Irish organizations because, he says, “they seem to cater to an older clientele,” he says. “This was started by people more my age so I thought I’d give it a chance. I think it has a lot of potential.”

It does. I think I found a painter.

Music

A Rare Showing in Philadelphia: Liam Clancy’s story in “The Yellow Bittern”

Liam Clancy

Liam Clancy figures prominently in "The Yellow Bittern."

“That Volcano” may have been the cause of many a travel upheaval for folks around the globe recently, but it wasn’t only people who got delayed. Planes grounded by airborne ash also temporarily waylaid the arrival of the brilliant feature documentary “The Yellow Bittern” from arriving at its Philadelphia destination.

The film, the brainchild of director Alan Gilsenan, is a riveting feature-length portrait of Liam Clancy, culled in large part from rare archival footage (some that had been tucked away, forgotten, in Liam’s attic for years, the discovery of which, according to Gilsenan’s comments on the film’s Web site, surprised and thrilled the man himself), and intimate interviews done over the past several years. And the Philadelphia Ceili Group is one of only a few American outlets to be granted the rights to a stateside showing of the movie.

“One of the researchers from the film found us online, and contacted one of the board members at the PCG,” explained Beth Ann Bailey, the Ceili Group’s treasurer. “I took it on as my project to chair because my parents always had The Clancy Brothers albums playing in the house when I was growing up. As far as I know, the PCG is the first to host it in the Philadelphia area.”

There were just a few moments of worry for Bailey when the flight delays continued…but those worries are over now. The documentary arrived safe and sound this week, awaiting its one and only Philadelphia showing on Friday, May 7, at The Commodore Barry Center (aka The Irish Center) in Mount Airy.

“This is a different event for the Philadelphia Ceili Group to host…we haven’t done anything like this in a very long while, and the showing of “The Yellow Bittern” is a great way to re-introduce film premieres to the group’s events,” said Bailey.

The film is indeed a feast of music, biography and poignant insight into the lives of the Clancy Brothers. Liam, who was the last surviving member of the group, and who passed away this past December, figures most prominently. He’s the man that Bob Dylan once called “just the best ballad singer I’d ever heard in my whole life.”

Admission to the screening is $10, and seating will be limited. Tickets can be purchased online at www.philadelphiaceiligroup.org. The PCG recommends you purchase your tickets early.

“We hope people take advantage of the opportunity. It will be a great evening at the Irish Center…a brilliant movie showing at 7 p.m., and then immediately following the film, there will be a session happening as well!”

For a peek at the online preview of “The Yellow Bittern,” check out the official Web site of the film at www.liamclancyfilm.com.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Tempest

Tempest—Celtic with a Norwegian twist, in Phoenixville this week.

With any luck, the Irish will be bringing luck to the Phillies on Friday night as they face the Marlins and a bunch of Irish dancers and singers on the field for Irish Heritage Night. One thing is for sure—the Phanatic will be wearing green.

The rest of the week is no slouch. The California Celtic band with the Norwegian flavor, Tempest, is playing at the Colonial Theatre in Phoenixville on Saturday night, with Burning Bridget Cleary and Coyote Run opening. Sounds like quite an Irish evening with Norwegian undertones.

On Sunday, head over to the Shanachie in Ambler for Family Day with Timlin and Kane, an event so popular they’re doing it twice this year.

Also on Sunday, Scottish singer-songwriter Dougie MacLean is playing at World Café Live (this would be one for How to Be Scottish in Philly, except that a Celt’s a Celt as far as we’re concerned). And at the Keswick Theatre in Glenside, Gaelic Storm whips up a storm.

A little change of pace on Tuesday: The Irish Studies program at Villanova University is hosting a special evening with Irish poets Peter Fallon and Seamus Heaney to celebrate 10 years of the Charles A. Heimbold Jr. chair of Irish Studies. Heaney is a Nobel Prize-winning poet and playwright from Northern Ireland. Fallon was the inaugural Heimbold Professor of Irish studies at Villanova.

On Thursday, the inaugural meeting of Irish Network-Philadelphia, part of a larger nonprofit organization that aims to bring Irish and Irish-American professionals together, takes place at Tir na NoG on Arch Street in Philadelphia.

Also on Thursday night, you can hear the strong roots that Irish music has set down in the American Appalachian and bluegrass tradition at the Annenberg Center with “Music from the Crooked Road,” featuring Appalachian guitar master Wayne Henderson and banjo virtuoso Sammy Shelor in addition The White Top Mountain Band, hot, young Bluegrass band Amber Collins & No Speed Limit and other extraordinary musicians.

On Friday, Blackthorn will be playing yet another benefit, this one for the Lions Club in Thornton, PA.

All next week you can see Inis Nua Theatre Company’s production of Enda Walsh’s powerful play, “Bedbound,” at the Adrienne in Philadelphia, and Theatre Exile’s “Shining City,” the critically acclaimed play by Conor McPherson, at Plays and Players.

Coming up in the next few weeks: Danny Quinn returns to the Irish Times in Philly; the Broken Shillelaghs play at the Bristol Borough AOH club; Jamison rocks out in a benefit at the Firefighter’s Union Hall in Philadelphia; the McDade School’s Four Provinces Feis (pronounced fesh, it’s a dance competition) is scheduled in Broomall, and the Derry Society Spring Social is on tap at the Irish Center. There’s even more on our calendar, so check it out.

Genealogy

Finding Where the Faerie Folks Hid Our Ancestors

Deborah Large Fox

Deborah Large Fox

As anyone who has ever started down the road to discovering their Irish ancestors knows, it’s a path that’s beaten, fraught with stones, at times narrow and crooked, never the one of least resistance. Aand every once in a while a black cat will cross it in front of you.

In other words, Irish genealogy is a challenge.

I, myself, have been known to muse on occasion that clearly my missing ancestors discovered the portal to hell in a cave in County Roscommon, and a few of them liked it so much they stayed.

Deborah Large Fox, former-prosecutor-turned-family-historian, has a kinder, gentler theory to explain the difficulty in locating her forefathers and mothers: this past January she began writing a blog titled “Help! The Faerie Folk Hid My Ancestors!”

The blog developed out of classes and talks that she’s been facilitating over a number of years. Fox explains that she‘s always “receiving new information and research tips…and blogging might be the best way to pass these tips to a larger audience.”

Interestingly, when Fox first began teaching genealogy classes, it was on the general topic of family research. But she noticed a trend developing: the majority of her attendees were focused specifically on their Irish ancestry. And, fortunately for all of us here in the Philadelphia area, that’s a road Fox has been traveling for years.

She started her own family research back in the days before the Internet, making several trips to Ireland in her quest. Her visits included trips to her family townlands, as well as time spent researching at The National Library of Ireland in Dublin.

Locally, she did a lot of investigating through the resources at the Family History Center in Cherry Hill. When they approached her about facilitating a monthly group for Irish researchers about a year and a half ago, she was happy to do so.

The group meets on the first Thursday of every month, and as I discovered for myself a few weeks ago, it’s a magical place where folks can go and share information, brainstorm together about brick walls, discover new avenues to research, and sometimes even chance upon relatives.

“I had cousins meet here a few months ago,” Fox told me. “I love the people that come.”

Each month, Fox introduces a different theme, “something out of the ordinary, like music.” April’s topic was “Irish Culture,” and it centered on how to pick out cultural clues. “Many Irish family history researchers become frustrated when they can’t find the county or townland of origin of their ancestors,” without realizing that things like special recipes passed down within the family, or childhood games taught to them as children, hold an association with a particular county or region of Ireland.

“People talking about songs and poems…these are cultural hints to rely on, any little clues you can grab onto, which sometimes in Irish research is all you have to work with,” says Fox.

One woman had an immigrant grandfather who wrote poetry, so she brought copies of two of his poems to pass around the group. Even though it didn’t lead back to Ireland, the knowledge shared that day gave her some new inspiration. One of the poems, when decoded by new eyes, appeared to be telling a tale from the days of Prohibition; she remembered that her grandfather had owned a pub in Philadelphia back during that era–a light bulb moment.

“It’s the hobby that never ends,” Fox laughed. “It’s just amazing. And I’m having so much fun with it.”

Fox’s blog has many fabulous resources linked into it, far too many to even begin to try to re-list here. You simply must check out her site for yourself. But, I have coerced a promise out her that as I stumble down my own path of research, she will ably assist me, so look forward to more genealogy articles at irishphiladelphia.com in the near future.

Arts

Review: “Bedbound” from the Inis Nua Theatre Company

Bedbound

Brian McCann and Melissa Lynch star in the Inis Nua play. (Photo by Katie Reing)

For an actor, playing a part in Enda Walsh’s “Bedbound” must be like running a marathon every night. For an hour and 10 minutes, its two players—a father and his crippled daughter, trying to sleep in the same cramped, filthy bedroom—are ranting, keening, or reacting silently to each other’s torrent of words with an intensity that seems ultimately unsustainable.

“Bedbound,” a production of the Inis Nua Theatre Company now playing at the Adrienne in Philadelphia, is the story of a man whose ambition, formed when he is very young, is to be king of the furniture business in Cork and, later, in Dublin. And he is willing to do anything, including the most unspeakable acts of perversion and violence, to achieve his desires. He delivers the story of his life—the violence, calculated sex, even marriage in the service of his dream–in agitated monologues aimed at the audience while his daughter, bedbound by polio as the result of a freak fall into a sewage tank, acts them out, playing the roles of the boss and the underlings her father has killed. Or has he? The unbelievable is somehow believable in this brutal and, yes, often funny play.

He had been grooming her to follow in his footsteps when she contracted the disease that has left her with a still, twisted arm, a hunched back, and paralyzed legs. His shame led to his nightly ritual of remodeling his home so that her room has become progressively smaller and smaller, as though he were building her a coffin. In that room, her now dead mother once slept beside her and read to her from romance novels, hushing her fears that the walls are closing in on her by telling her that it was “all a fairy tale.”

For the young girl, played in the Inis Nua’s production by Melissa Lynch, the stories, as horrifying as they are, are life to her. “What am I if not words? I am empty space is what I am,” she says. And it’s the empty spaces, the rare moments of silence, that bring the most terror to these two tortured characters who, in the end, turn to talk to one another, ending this emotionally exhausting play with an unexpected and poignant note of redemption and hope.

Brian McCann, who plays the father, deftly draws a character who is both despicable and strangely endearing, a psychopath with a sense of humor and, as McCann subtly suggests, perhaps even a heart of gold. Melissa Lynch’s performance as the physically twisted daughter of an emotionally twisted man is a tour de force. She ranges from helpless cripple to crotchety boss to obsequious underling to angry daughter so seamlessly that it’s as if she has multiple personalities constantly jockeying for center stage. Even when the father is raving loudly, your eyes are riveted to her face for her reaction, as though everything you needed to know was there.

Director Tom Reing has done a masterful job in bringing a difficult and demanding play to the stage. “Bedbound” is an emotionally taxing play for both actors and theater-goers, but is ultimately touching, satisfying, and memorable in the best possible way.

“Bedbound,” by Enda Walsh, runs through April 25 at the Playground at the Adrienne, 2030 Sansom Street, Philadelphia, PA. For tickets, call 215-454-9776 or order online at the Inis Nua Theatre’s Web site.

People

Three New Honorees for AOH Joseph E. Montgomery Division 65

Kathy McGee Burns and Mickey Walsh

Kathy McGee Burns and her "date" Mickey Walsh.

As she received the third annual Joseph E. Montgomery Award from Ancient Order of Hibernians Div. 62 on Sunday—the first woman to be given the award—Kathy McGee Burns joked that the event was her “second date” with another award-winner, Mickey Walsh, former president of the division.

The two had actually met when she was 16 and he was 20 and a lifeguard at the Jersey shore. She explained that he had invited her to his 21st birthday party as his date, though because she had lied about her age, he didn’t know how young she was. They didn’t meet again for several decades when she saw him sitting on a stool in the bar at the Irish Center—a home away from home for McGee Burns, who was the first woman president of the Donegal Association and current president of the Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame, just two of the many organizations in which she takes a leadership role.

“I went up to him and asked him if he was Mickey Walsh,” she told the crowd at the Spring Valley Banquet Center in Springfield on Sunday, April 11. “He said, ‘Yep.’ Then I asked him, ‘Do you remember your date at your 21st birthday party. He said, ‘Nope.’”

The man of few words laughed heartily along with the rest of the audience.

The AOH—the Joseph E. Montgomery Division, the only AOH named for a living person—is in its third year of its Fleadh an Earraigh, honoring those who live the AOH motto of friendship, unity and Christian charity.

Also honored this year were James Feerick, a 43-year member of AOH Div. 65. The eldest of six children born to James and Anne Frank of County Mayo, Feerick, a lawyer and graduate of Villanova Law School, is also a musician who played with the All Ireland Orchestra and with local musicians Tommy Moffit and Joe Burke. He has served on the board of the Philadelphia Irish Center, and is a member of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick the Knights of Columbus Trinity Council in Upper Darby, the St. Thomas Moore Alumni Association, and the Mayo Association, for which his sister, Sister James Ann, serves as chaplain.

Harry “Mickey” Walsh, also the son of Irish immigrants, a Navy Reserve veteran, ran the family business, Walsh’s Classic Tavern in University City, until 1996 when the business was sold. He is a former Democratic ward leader in Philadelphia’s 27th Ward and worked as a liaison between the juvenile courts and parents of troubled teens to help keep families together. He was the first president of the Haverford Hawks Youth Ice Hockey Club and has volunteered at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby.

People

2010 Easter Rising Commemoration

Easter rising

An officer of the 69th Pa. Irish volunteers bows his head in prayer. (Click photo to view slideshow.)

It happened nearly a hundred years ago.

It lasted only seven days.

The good guys lost, and their leaders were imprisoned or executed.

It was the 1916 Easter Rising, a bloody, brave but unsuccessful attempt to expel the British from Ireland and to establish a sovereign republic.

Today, more than a few Delaware Valley Irish-Americans remember, and their goals are substantially unchanged from those of the patriots of 1916.

On Sunday, several Delaware Valley Irish groups gathered once again at Holy Cross Cemetery in Yeadon to commemorate the abortive (but successful in the long run) Rising. Led by the 69th Pennsylvania Volunteers and members of the Philadelphia Emerald Society Pipe Band, the group marched to the gravesite of Joseph McGarrity, the County Tyrone-born Philadelphia businessman and a leader of Clan na Gael. They reaffirmed the Easter proclamation’s “right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland.”

McGarrity holds a special place in the republican heart. The one-time successful entrepreneur was involved in efforts to arm the forces arrayed against Great Britain. He published a fiercely pro-republican newspaper called the Irish Press. He was a friend to Irish leader Eamon de Valera (with whom he later parted company). He never gave up on the armed struggle for independence and unity.

It was a brief ceremony, but moving, as always.

People

A Night of Celebration for St. Patrick’s Day Award Winners

St. Patrick's Day Parade awards

Tara Gael dancers relish their big win. (Click on photo for slideshow.)

It was an exciting night all ’round at Finnigan’s Wake as the Philadelphia Saint Patrick’s Day Observance Association finally put the 2010 parade to bed. (Not that parade planning and fund-raising ever really stops.)

Anyone who won was plainly pleased to have been chosen. But if there was a prize for over-the-top enthusiasm it would have to go to the Tara Gael Dancers, who won the Marie C. Burns Award for Outstanding Adult Dance Group. They also won in 2008 and 2007, but clearly, winning never gets old for this group.

There were several repeat winners as well. 2nd Street Irish Society was the winner of the Msgr. Thomas J. Rilley Award for Outstanding Fraternal Organization for the third year running. Rince Ri dance school won the Walter Garvin Award for Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group for the second year in a row. St. Katherine of Siena N.E. Philadelphia picked up the Father Kevin C. Trautner Award for Outstanding School or Religious Organization that displays their Irish Heritage while promoting Christian Values for the third year since the prize was established.

Here are this year’s award winners overall:

Honorable James H.J. Tate Award
Group that Best Exemplified the Spirit of the Parade
McDade / Cara Championship Dancers

Msgr. Thomas J. Rilley Award
Outstanding Fraternal Organization
2nd Street Irish Society

George Costello Award
Organization with the Outstanding Float in the Parade
Cavan Society

Hon. Vincent A. Carroll Award
Outstanding Musical Unit Excluding Grade School Bands
Philadelphia Police & Fire, Pipes & Drum Band

Anthony J. Ryan Award
Outstanding Grade School Band
Catholic Elementary Schools Marching Band

Walter Garvin Award
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group
Rince Ri School of Irish Dance

Marie C. Burns Award
Outstanding Adult Dance Group
Tara Gael Dancers

Joseph E. Montgomery Award
Outstanding AOH and/or LAOH Divisions
All AOH & LAOH Divisions

Joseph J. “Banjo” McCoy Award
Outstanding Fraternal Organization
Cairdeas Irish Brigade

James F. Cawley Parade Director’s Award
Outstanding Irish Performance or Display
2010 Cardinal O’Hara High School Marching Band

Father Kevin C. Trautner Award
Outstanding School or Religious Organization that displays their Irish Heritage while promoting Christian Values
St. Katherine of Siena N.E. Philadelphia

Maureen McDade McGrory Award
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group Exemplifying the Spirit of Irish Culture through Traditional Dance
Coyle School of Irish Dance