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September 2011

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Caber tossing at Celtic Classic in Bethlehem.

This is another jam-packed week because, of course, it’s halfway to St. Paddy’s Day.

There are other reasons. We’re heading into the two biggest Irish festivals in the region: the three-day Celtic Classic in Bethlehem and the four-day AOH Irish Fall Festival in North Wildwood. And there’s another, smaller festival this weekend in the very Irish Gloucester City, NJ (where you presumably can practice up).

The Irish Festival kicks off on Thursday with a golf tournament and the annual match up of amateur boxers from the Harrowgate Boxing Club in Philadelphia and the Holy Family Boxing Club from Belfast, Northern Ireland. Then the musical lineup is almost too long to mention: The Paul Moore Band, Belfast Connection, Sean Fleming Band, the Bogside Rogues, the Barley Boys, Secret Service, Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfetones, Bare Knuckle Boxers, Timmy Kelly, the Broken Shillelaghs and more will be performing in the Music Tent and the outdoor festival stage.

Also in town, Blackthorn at the Angelsea Pub and the Windrift Resort hotel; Jamison at Slainte at Keenan’s in North Wildwood and Casey’s in North Wildwood and the Broken Shillelaghs at Tucker’s Pub in Wildwood and Coconut Grove in North Wildwood. If you’re in the Wildwood area, you pretty much can’t escape Irish music; don’t try.

Solas will be making it happen on Sunday, September 24, at Foy Hall in Bethlehem, with McPeake opening. Other musical performers at Celtic Classic include Blackwater (and you thought they were just a security firm); the Paul McKenna Band, the Glengarry Bhoys, the Screaming Orphans (from Donegal), the Makem and Spain Brothers, and Timlin and Kane, among others. Making a different kind of music—highland athletes (they make Conan look like a wimpy barbarian), sheep dogs, and haggis-eating contests. Including the Scots makes everything more interesting.

But let’s back up a minute—or, a few days. Before the big festivals happen, there’s other stuff going on, including:

“Carthaginians: A Philly Fringe Festival Performance” in the unlikeliest of venues—Laurel Hill Cemetery in East Falls. The New York-based REV Theatre Company is presenting this Frank McGuinness play in a cemetery because it’s set in a cemetery. That’s one way to save on set decorating costs. Performances are Friday and Saturday.

On Saturday, hear Secret Service, the Broken Shillelaghs, Green Spell and Misty Dew’rs on the riverfront in Gloucester City, NJ, where they’re headlining the Gloucester City Shamrock Festival. You’ll also find a beer garden (wonder what they grow there), vendors, and kids’ activities including inflatables.

The Bogside Rogues will be performing at the Irish Festival in Sea Girt on Saturday afternoon and at the Dublin Square Irish Pub in Cherry Hill in the evening.

In nearby Haddon Township, hop on the “Halfway to St. Pattys Pub Crawl” at Cork Genuine Food and Drink, Brewers, and Irish Mile. Or, if you’re in Pennsylvania, join the crawlers at Marty Magee’s in Prospect Park. Both on Saturday.

Jamison is on stage at Kildare’s in West Chester on Saturday too, while The Broken Shillelaghs (fresh from Shamrock Fest) are on tap at the Dublin Square Pub in Sewell, NJ, on Saturday evening.

Timlin and Kane are performing at the Shanachie in Ambler on Saturday night, and Sunday is their big “Family Day” at the pub (reservations recommended).

The Dropkick Murphys are bringing their Shamrock-N-Roll Festival to the Electric Factory on Sunday night, featuring Street Dogs, The Mahones, and the Parkington Sisters.

On Monday, the annual Ciara Kelly Higgins Benefit for Cerebral Palsy, featuring golf tournament and fundraising dinner, will take place at Plymouth Country Club in Norristown. Read about this remarkable little girl.

Check out our calendar for all the details.

People, Sports

The Fighter Still Remains

John DiSanto at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Cheltenham, where boxer Eddie Cool is buried.

 

“I am just a poor boy though my story’s seldom told. . . .”

The Boxer, Simon & Garfunkel

When he was “right,” one of his admirers once said, Eddie Cool, “the pride of Tacony,” was “the greatest boxer ever to come out of Philadelphia.”

But this Irish-American fighter, born in 1912, wasn’t “right” very much. He was an alcoholic who hated training and loved the ladies who, because of his matinee idol good looks, loved him back. All his life, Cool was shadowed by the death of his father who was killed in a grisly accident when Eddie was 15. He used to say “My old man died a drunk at a young age and I guess I will die the same way.”

And he did. Washed out of the ring at 27, Eddie Cool was dead at 35. The number one contender for the lightweight championship in 1936 and a counter-punching master with 95 wins and 29 losses, died from alcohol-related causes and was buried in an unmarked grave in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Cheltenham.

Today, only hardcore Philly boxing fans—and only those with a penchant for history—remember ‘the Tacony flash.” One of them is John DiSanto of Mantua, NJ, a man so passionate about boxing he has spent the last few years—and his own money—chasing down the ghosts of Philly boxing and giving them a taste of immortality on his website www.phillyboxinghistory.com. There, you can read about South Philly’s own Thomas Patrick “Tommy” Loughran, the “Phantom of Philly,” pride of St. Monica’s parish and light heavyweight champion of the world who lost the heavyweight crown to Primo Carnera by a decision in 1934. And Tommy O’Toole, “the Pride of Port Richmond,” who, after failing in his title bid in 1909, became a popular Vaudeville dancer. And Jack O’Brien, “Philadelphia Jack”,” another South Philly light heavyweight champion who changed his name from Hagen, probably because McBrien sounded more Irish.

“Different eras produced boxers from different ethnic groups,” explains DiSanto. During McBrien’s era—the late 1890s and early 20th century—many boxers were Irish. “Some people said that whoever was the most oppressed found success in boxing,” says Di Santo, who is a sliver Irish himself (there’s a Mahiggins on his mother’s side). “So there were a lot of Irish and a lot of Italian boxers of that era in Philly. You could say ethnicity was part of their marketing plan.”

But DiSanto found himself unsatisfied with providing the city’s generations of forgotten yet superlative boxers with a virtual memorial. As he researched their lives, he found that, like Cool, many were in unmarked graves. That’s when the Philly Boxing Gravestone Program was born—out of a fight fan’s determination to make sure that no boxer would ever pass entirely out of memory.

“About five years ago I was doing research on a young Philly fighter named Tyrone Everett,” explains DiSanto, as we sit in his car at Holy Sepulchre where he is finalizing plans for Eddie Cool’s gravestone, a flat marker that will be installed this fall in the Archdiocesan cemetery. Everett, who lost a world title in what’s widely considered one of the worst decisions in boxing history, died at 24—shot to death by a jealous girlfriend.

“I went out to Eden Cemetery in Collingdale, PA, to find his grave and couldn’t find a stone,” says DiSanto. “Wow, I said to myself, maybe there’s something I could do. He was a hero of mine, someone I really admired as a fighter.”

That’s when DiSanto learned that you can’t just plunk a headstone on an unmarked grave, no matter how heartfelt a gesture it is. Only a family member can do that. So DiSanto had to track down Everett’s family—and the families of Gypsy Joe Harris, Garnet “Sugar” Hart, and Eddie Cool, the first four boxers the program has memorialized.

The first three weren’t too tough. Family members still lived in the Philly area. He found the siblings of Gypsy Joe Harris in Camden. Harris, who was banned from fighting because it was discovered he was blind in one eye, died of heart failure—or, some might say, heartbreak—at 44 after a life marked by drug addiction. “They took away his license between they wanted to protect him but he probably would have had a fuller, safer life if he’d stayed in the ring,” says DiSanto. “He kicked his addiction at the end, but it was just too late.”

Sugar Hart’s brother was still alive as was Tyrone Everett’s mother. The response from the families was the same: Do it.

“They one thing I learned from this is that the family is extremely appreciative,” says DiSanto. “They like that their loved one is still remembered. I try to be an advocate for these fighters.”

Some families help raise money for the headstones. “One reason many of them are in unmarked graves is that the family couldn’t afford headstones,” DiSanto explains. “Money was short and precious and they had other needs for that money.”

Irish Catholic boxer Eddie Cool, the "Pride of Tacony."

In Eddie Cool’s case, there may have been something else, maybe some resentment that he’d thrown his life away, DiSanto says. “I don’t really know. He left a wife and daughter but I wasn’t able to find them.” After months of looking, he contacted a distant cousin of Cool’s who gave him permission to erect the flat memorial for Eddie and his brother, Jimmy, also a fighter who died young, who is buried next to him, in what is now just a grassy spot between Andreoli and Flaherty.

DiSanto is aware that what he’s doing may sound odd. People do understand the reason for, say, erecting a statue to Philadelphia’s greatest middleweight boxer, Joey Giardello, something DiSanto did this year with the help of the Veteran Boxers Association-Ring One, and the Harrowgate Boxing Club and hundreds of donations. He presided over the unveiling of the monument in May, near the site of the late lamented Passyunk Gym on Passyunk Avenue in South Philadelphia.

Statues honoring the great are easy to understand. Gravestones for the forgotten?

It all comes down to how you define the word “great.”

For DiSanto, there’s not a lot of difference between Eddie Cool, who died an alcoholic and whose name has faded from history, and Giardello, middleweight champion of the world from 1963 to 1965, who was invited to attend the inauguration of President John F. Kennedy and distinguished himself as a businessman and humanitarian under his real name, Carmine Tilelli. It’s all about what went on in the ring.

“I’m a boxing fan,” says DiSanto. “My Dad is a fight fan. I grew up in South Jersey and went to all the fights in Philly and got hooked. I watched fights on TV and then I read about them. I got into the history. When I hit 40 or so, I found myself becoming extremely sentimental about the Philadelphia fight scene. I thought about writing a history of it as a book, but decided to do a website . I could work on it while still doing my day job (marketing) and do a little at a time, keep adding to it. . .I can go to a fight, take pictures, write about it, and have it on the website that night.”

Since he started the Gravestone Program and launched the Giardelli statue project, DiSanto has gotten some media attention, which sometimes leaves him feeling a little uncomfortable. (When I asked him to pose for a photo pointing to Eddie Cool’s grave, he laughed. “This is how I’m usually photographed,” he quipped, “hovering over a gravestone like the Angel of Death.”)

But he’s not going to stop.

“At the end of the day I know what I’m doing doesn’t really change anything,” he says. “These guys have been dead a long time and a lot of the families are surprised that there’s anyone out there who even remembers them. But I like to think this gives me a personal bond with the fighter. In many cases I’ve become like extended family to their survivors and vice versa. . .And these fighters deserve to be remembered. Guys like Eddie Cool are worthy of remembrance. They’re an important chapter in the history of Philadelphia boxing.”

And DiSanto will make sure that it’s written. In stone.

*************************************************************

Along with his website, DiSanto every year presents the “Briscoe Awards”—named for Philly fighter Bennie Briscoe—to the “Philly Fighter of the Year” and to the participants—winner and loser—of the “Philly Fight of the Year.” This year’s Briscoe Awards will be given to IBF cruiserweight champion Steve Cunningham (his second win) and to Derek Ennis and Gabriel Rosada for their USBA junior middleweight title fight at Asylum Arena in South Philadelphia. The event will be held October 10 at the Veteran Boxers Association Club, 2733 Clearfield Street in the Port Richmond section of Philadelphia. For more information, contact John DiSanto at 609-377-6413.

If you’re also a fight fan, head down to North Wildwood on Thursday, September 24, for the annual match-up between the Harrowgate Boxing Club of Philadelphia and the Holy Family Boxing Club of Belfast, Ireland, at the Music Tent at Olde New Jersey and Spruce Avenues, a traditional kick-off to the AOH Irish Fall Festival. There are 10 bouts scheduled and the first fight starts at 7 PM. Cost: $25.

People

Singin’ in the Rain: The Philadelphia Ceili Group’s Festival Kicks Off

Singers Night 2011

Singers Night 2011

Epic rain, wide-spread flooding, rockslides on the Schuylkill Expressway…none of these things could keep the Irish community away from the opening night of the PCG’s 37th Annual Irish Music and Dance Festival.

Dedicated to the late Frank Malley, who was a long-time driving force behind the Festival, the evening showcased some of the talented local Irish singers that call the Philadelphia area home. From the Sean-nós stylings of Terry Kane, Matt Ward, Rosaleen McGill and Marian Makins to the rousing up-tempo songs of Vince Gallagher and his band, it was several hours of pure entertainment for the good-sized crowd that made their way to the Irish Center in Mt. Airy.

There were a few performers who couldn’t make it due to weather-related emergencies, including the scheduled emcee, Gerry Timlin, whose pub The Shanachie in Ambler experienced flooding. Terry Kane stepped in and took over the role beautifully.

[We are happy to report that The Shanachie is recovered from the flood waters, and were actually able to open at 5PM on Thursday for dinner. “We’ve fared better than some of the other places in Ambler,” bartender Meg Herrmann told me when I stopped in today. “The water came in under the front door. We all worked together yesterday and got it cleaned up.”]

The Festival continues Friday night and Saturday all day and evening with music, dancing, workshops, food and fun for the entire family. This year’s event also marks the kick-off to a year-long series of concerts funded by a grant provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. Titled “Irish Traditional Music: Influences from the West of Ireland,” the series is bringing some of the most highly regarded Irish musicians to Philadelphia beginning in October with Kevin Burke and Cal Scott, followed by Mick Moloney & Friends in November, Grainne Hambly & William Jackson in February, 2012, Niamh Parsons & Graham Dunne in June, 2012 and concluding with a performance by the legendary De Danann at the 2012 Festival. Tickets to all the concerts are being raffled off through Saturday, along with CDs and books from all of the artists, as well as other items.

Check out our videos in case you missed last night’s songfest, or if you were there and want to see it again: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL73E8269571E5A7FD&feature=viewall

Further information on the rest of this weekend’s festivities can be found at the PCG website: http://www.philadelphiaceiligroup.org/philadelphia_ceili_group/2011-annual-irish-traditional-music-and-dance-festival-information-.html

Sports

Up the Mairead Farrells

Maireads in Frisco

Sinead Fegan, Niamh McGowan, Laura McGillion, Adele Gallagher and Orla Fegan. (Photo by Peter McDermott)

It was a tougher fight this time around, but Philadelphia’s own Mairead Farrells are back from the North American Gaelic Athletic Association finals with their second-in-a-row ladies senior football championship.

The locals beat Boston’s talented Tir na nOg team 3-9 to 3-7 in the Labor Day weekend finals, having previously edged out San Francisco’s home team, the Fog City Harps, in the semi-finals.

Angela Mohan, the Mairead Farrells’ coach and manager, said she wasn’t surprised at the tight margin of success in the city by the bay. “The teams knew we ran away with it last year,” she said, “so it was very close this year.”

In the semi-finals, the outcome hinged on the outcome of a penalty shot in the final five minutes of the game. “Ciara Moore (the team captain) nailed it,” said Mohan. She converted the penalty, which helped us to go on and win that game.”

In the finals, Mohan acknowledges that the win was truly a group effort, but she credits goalkeeper Desiree DeBaldo for her fierce defense. DeBaldo is a longtime soccer player (she played for the University of Scranton), and Mohan says her mental toughness helped win the day. “She’s outstanding. I mean, everybody was outstanding, but she’s an American girl who learned the game and is very good in the net. She’s your typical soccer player who is not afraid to dive.”

Mohan says she was thinking about retiring, but she is so excited by the possibility of a hat trick that she’s going to hang around. And next year’s North American games will be fought here in Philadelphia, which would make a three-peat especially sweet.

And who knows, Mohan says. The Maireads might even go on to beat another record–that of Philadelphia’s celebrated Emerald Eagles, who won four senior titles in a row. “I played for the Emerald Eagles back then in the ’90s, and that record has never been broken,” she says. “My goal is to beat my own record. We’ll see what happens. One year at a time.”

News

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

What, do we have to draw you pictures?

What, do we have to draw you pictures? There's fun for everybody at the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival.

This week starts with a bang.

First and foremost, Saturday is the final day of the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival at the Irish Center/Commodore Barry Club in Mount Airy. And a full day it is, starting at 11 a.m. with the John Kelly Music Session in the club’s cozy Fireside Room, and plowing on throughout the afternoon with hands-on traditional Irish music workshops for all skill levels, vendors selling Irish merchandise, lectures in genealogy and the Irish language, dance demonstrations, storytelling for the kids, food and treats, and more. (There’s also a workshop on the ghosts of Duffy’s Cut, just added.)

Saturday night, the great local band Runa opens the festival’s closing concert, starting at 7, leading into this year’s headliners: Brian Conway, Billy McComiskey and Brendan Dolan from the world-class Pride of New York.

Full schedule and ticket info here: http://www.philadelphiaceiligroup.org/

Also on Saturday:

Attend the Gloucester County A.O.H. Commodore Barry Memorial Day, starting with a wreath laying at the Barry Monument at the Commodore Barry Bridge in Bridgeport, N.J., at 11 a.m. Mass follows at noon at the AOH Hall, 200 Columbia Boulevard in National Park. A free luncheon follows, with music by by the Broken Shillelaghs.

If you aren’t all festival-ed out, check out the first-ever Mercer Irish Festival, from 12 to 8 at Mercer County Park, 1638 Old Trenton Road in West Windsor, N.J. You’ll recognize many of the bands, including the Shanties and the Birmingham 6. Dance to “chunes” by the Moyvale Ceili Band. There are lessons from 12 to 2 for beginning dancers. There will be plenty of Irish food—how long since you last had bangers and mash?—rides and activities for the kiddies, and plenty of merch.

Full schedule and maps and directions here: http://www.merceririshfest.com/

Or, Saturday morning at 9, head down to the Irish Center (or maybe sleep in your car at the Carpenter Lane railroad station; this is early for Irish folks) for televised Irish football and hurling. Admission is 20 bucks. Check with the Irish Center for times and matchups: 215-843-8051. (More games the next morning at 11. It’s the camogie championship, Galway vs. Wexford. (Camogie is hurling for women. Not sure we’d call them “ladies.”)

If thou wish, sirs and mistresses, hie thee to the Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire at the Mount Hope Estate and Winery in Manheim on Saturday from 11 to 8. It’ll give you a chance to brush up your Shakespeare. You might even get to call somebody a “vile poltroon.” (We’re not sure what that is, but maybe it has something to do with chickens.)

For the rest of the week—aren’t you exhausted yet?—catch Scottish singer-songwriter Ian Bruce Wednesday night at 7:30 at Lower Brandywine Presbyterian Church in Wilmington. The concert is hosted by our friends at Green Willow: http://www.greenwillow.org/

On Thursday at 11 in the morning, the Irish American Genealogy Group meets at the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center, 7 Cedar Lane in Upper Darby.

If you’re not wiped yet, you should be. If you’re a glutton for punishment, there’s lots more on our calendar:

http://irishinphilly.com/calendar

Music, News, People

Brittingham’s Irish Festival 2011

Daddy-daughter dance

Daddy-daughter dance

The weather has been unpredictable and, at times, near catastrophic lately, but the sun shone brightly on Brittingham’s 2011 Irish Festival. And with all that sun, fans of Irish music, dance, food and merch made plenty of hay. Figuratively speaking.

Jamison is always a big hit with fans, but on this one gorgeous day on a big lot behind the Lafayette Hills pub they brought festival-goers to their feet. After all the rainy days, maybe we all just needed an afternoon of dancing.

And speaking of dancers, the kids of Celtic Flame performed frequently throughout the afternoon. A big hit, as always.

Later in the day, we caught former Blackthorn guitarist Seamus Kelleher’s act. He’s every bit as much fun as a solo.

Columns, Music, News, People

Aon Sceal?

Emmett Ruane will be at WTMR on Sunday to reminisce about Emmett's Place.

Last weekend, Hurricane Irene washed out the planned Emmett’s On-Air Reunion and Pledge Drive for “Come West Along the Road,” Marianne MacDonald’s Sunday Irish radio show on WTMR 800 AM. The waters have receded (well, here at least) and the electricity is on (well, here at least), so the show is going on this Sunday at noon. Special co-host is Emmett Ruane, former owner of Emmett’s Place in Philadelphia, a which was a popular watering hole and music venue for the city’s Irish set and ceili dancers.

Sunday’s show will feature local music, a few trips back in time, and live, in-studio performances. If you were a fan of Emmett’s, call or email Marianne at 856-236-2717 or rinceseit@msn.com to join the crowd in the studio.

If It’s Tuesday, I Must Be with Amos Lee

Andrew Jay Keenan, possibly the workingest musician in Philly, plays with The John Byrne Band (Irish folk), Citizens Band Radio (country-rock), and Amos Lee (folk, rock, and soul). If you’re a fan of any of those bands, you’ve seen Keenan at World Café Live. Or maybe the Ellen Show, David Letterman, Jay Leno, and Jimmy Kimmel Live. That’s with the Amos Lee band. You can catch Keenan (to the right of Amos) in this clip from their recent Jimmy Kimmel appearance. You can catch him live wherever those three bands are playing in Philly (try September 25 at the Philly F/M Fest at World Café Live with The John Byrne Band).

Happy Birthday, Baby!

One of the things we like best about Facebook is that it reminds us of birthdays. So we’re going to steal a page from Mark Zuckerberg and wish a happy September birthday to our Irish Philly peeps.

Happy Birthday to Patti Byrd (9/4), Cara Anderson Boiler (9/4), Oliver Mcelhone (9/6), Helen Henry Degrand (9/8), Kathleen Trainor (9/9), Maria Gallagher (9/13), Paddy O’Brien (9/13), Trish O’Donnell Jenkins (9/15), Thomas Staunton (9/18), Patricia Burke (9/19), Carol Swanson (9/20), Frances O’Donnell Duffy (9/20), Michael Callahan (9/20), John Egan (9/23), John Boyce (9/25), Kiera McDonagh (9/26), Fil Campbell (9/27), and Mairead Timoney Wink (9/28).

Good Luck to the Mairead Farrells

Our own Mairead Farrell Ladies Gaelic Football Club is headed to San Francisco this weekend to defend their title as national senior champs. Keep the cup, ladies!

 

Aon Sceal means “what’s the story?” in Irish. If you have a story you want us to tell, email denise.foley@comcast.net. Don’t make me come after you.

News

My Big Fat Irish-American Family

Firecracker Films' "My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding" is a major hit in the UK and on The Learning Channel in the US.

The international production company that’s behind TLC’s hit series “My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding” and the documentary “Mermaid Girl” is casting in Philadelphia and several other cities for a series pilot about a “strong” Irish-American family or business.

“We’re looking for fun, loveable families, the kind you want to tune in with, kick back and go along for the ride,” explains Alice Sharp, director of Development for Firecracker Films, a Santa Monica, CA-based company that specializes in the kinds of can’t-look-away documentaries you see on TLC, A&E, National Geographic, Animal Planet and the Oprah Network (where some of its work has appeared).

While Sharp couldn’t elaborate on the type of documentary they want to film in Philadelphia, she was clear about one thing. “It will be nothing Jersey Shore-esque,” she told us this week. They’re not looking for the Irish equivalent of Snooki and The Situation. Nor will the “stars” be whisked away to another location to interact. They want a real family. “It will be more of an insight into Irish-American culture,” Sharp explains.

Along with “My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding,” which looks at the shrouded world of Irish gypsy weddings in England (a US version is in the works) and “Mermaid Girl,” about a child born with a condition in which her legs are fused, Firecracker Films has produced what they aptly call “irresistible content.”

That includes “Three Weddings and an Execution,” about women drawn to men behind bars; “The Autistic Me,” which looks at the lives of three young men with autism; “The Man Whose Arms Exploded,” which focuses on the world of extreme bodybuilding; and “Alone Among Grizzlies,” an Animal Planet special on the work of Swiss biologist David Bitner who studies the bears at close range in Alaska.

If you have a fun, loving, loveable multi-generational family filled with “characters,” and don’t mind letting it all hang out for the camera, Sharp wants to talk to you. You can reach her at phillycasting@hotmail.com.