Monthly Archives:

February 2013

News

First Parade Party Gives Fundraising a Big Kickstart

Why have one shamrock when you could have a dozen?

Why have one shamrock when you could have a dozen?

Judging by the crowd in the brand-new Fraternal Order of Police Heroes Ballroom in the Great Northeast on Sunday afternoon, fund-raising for the 2013 Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade is off with a bang.

“We think we’re between 600 and 700 people,” said Bob Gessler, president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association, as he looked out on a crowd that also crammed the FOP hall’s spacious lobby, where long lines of party-goers queued up for baked ziti, hot roast beef sandwiches, potato salad, and meatballs. When asked how much money the event might have raised toward the roughly $75,000 it costs to stage the Sunday, March 10, parade, Gessler wasn’t sure at that point, but he said: “I think it’s going to make a very large dent in it.”

Gessler also praised the FOP for its generosity. “We’re ecstatic that they’re working with us,” he said. “We’ve actively been trying to do something with them. They’ve just been fantastic, and this place is beautiful.”

Although the union did charge the association for the use of the hall at Comly and Caroline in the Normandy neighborhood—an impressive step up from the union’s former digs at Broad and Spring Garden—Gessler said the fundraiser benefited from what he referred to as “the grand marshal discount.” This year’s grand marshal is retired Philadelphia Police Officer Harry Marnie, longtime member of the FOP and president of the Emerald Society. Marnie was on hand to enjoy the party, too.

And what a swell party it was, with non-stop tunes from No Irish Need Apply, Jamison, and the Bogside Rogues, and entertainment by the Celtic Flame Irish Dancers.

We have a big photo essay, above. Check it out.

And don’t get complacent: the parade isn’t paid for yet. You can help put the parade on the street at the next huge fundraiser Sunday, March 3, at Cardinal O’Hara High School, 1701 Sproul Road in Springfield, Delaware County. The event runs from 3 to 7 p.m., with music by Sláinte and The Round Tower Band. and performances by McDade, Cara, & McHugh Schools of Irish Dance. The cost of admission is $25 for adults, and $10 for students. The price includes buffet and entertainment. There’s a cash bar. Details at the parade website.

News

First Parade Party Gives Fundraising a Big Kickstart

Why have one shamrock when you could have a dozen?

Why have one shamrock when you could have a dozen?

Judging by the crowd in the brand-new Fraternal Order of Police Heroes Ballroom in the Great Northeast on Sunday afternoon, fund-raising for the 2013 Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade is off with a bang.

“We think we’re between 600 and 700 people,” said Bob Gessler, president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association, as he looked out on a crowd that also crammed the FOP hall’s spacious lobby, where long lines of party-goers queued up for baked ziti, hot roast beef sandwiches, potato salad, and meatballs. When asked how much money the event might have raised toward the roughly $75,000 it costs to stage the Sunday, March 10, parade, Gessler wasn’t sure at that point, but he said: “I think it’s going to make a very large dent in it.”

Gessler also praised the FOP for its generosity. “We’re ecstatic that they’re working with us,” he said. “We’ve actively been trying to do something with them. They’ve just been fantastic, and this place is beautiful.”

Although the union did charge the association for the use of the hall at Comly and Caroline in the Normandy neighborhood—an impressive step up from the union’s former digs at Broad and Spring Garden—Gessler said the fundraiser benefited from what he referred to as “the grand marshal discount.” This year’s grand marshal is retired Philadelphia Police Officer Harry Marnie, longtime member of the FOP and president of the Emerald Society. Marnie was on hand to enjoy the party, too.

And what a swell party it was, with non-stop tunes from No Irish Need Apply, Jamison, and the Bogside Rogues, and entertainment by the Celtic Flame Irish Dancers.

We have a big photo essay, above. Check it out.

And don’t get complacent: the parade isn’t paid for yet. You can help put the parade on the street at the next huge fundraiser Sunday, March 3, at Cardinal O’Hara High School, 1701 Sproul Road in Springfield, Delaware County. The event runs from 3 to 7 p.m., with music by Sláinte and The Round Tower Band. and performances by McDade, Cara, & McHugh Schools of Irish Dance. The cost of admission is $25 for adults, and $10 for students. The price includes buffet and entertainment. There’s a cash bar. Details at the parade website.

News, People

“He Still Has Us Laughing:” Knute Bonner Remembered

Knute Bonner gets a hug from Bridie McCafferty, left, and her sister, Peggy.

Knute Bonner gets a hug from Bridie McCafferty, left, and her sister, Peggy.

When Knute Bonner died last week at the age of 87, Philadelphia’s Irish and Irish-American community lost one of its most colorful, kind and puckish characters. On Sunday, March 10, when the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade passes along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, it will be without its 2001 grand marshal. For those who knew Knute Bonner, it’s a moment of sadness, but also—as is the case with any Irish wake—it’s a moment to share stories.

Not surprisingly, there are a lot of them. We asked a few of his friends to share their thoughts.

Michael Bradley, Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director

“The Knute I Knew.” That would be a great title of a book written about him.  He would jump from how he didn’t feel good, to showing me the wound on his leg, to telling you one of his jokes, to singing a song and possibly back to how we miss so-and-so who just passed—all in the same five minutes. Knute had a great outlook on life. He was always positive, and always ended with a chuckle—like he knew something you didn’t.

He was an entertainer, and when the red light and spotlight came on, he came on, the crowd came on, and the crowd loved him, and he loved them!

He thought the Irish were the greatest race on earth, but he didn’t really talk to me about being Irish, it was more about St. Patrick’s Day. That day meant the world to him. I still get chills down the back of my neck when I think of him singing “It’s a great day for the Irish.”

He also started the Southwest St Patrick’s Club in 1950, before I was even born, and to see those men and women still march with their third-generation marchers is a real tribute to Knute, since most of them have moved out of Southwest Philly. He was also very proud of all the Irish in SW Philly and West Catholic.

My best best story about Knute is not an Irish one.  My son Colin was in fourth grade at St Pius X in Broomall. This was awhile ago since he now is a sophomore at Penn State with Knute’s grandson Shane. The teacher asked if any of the students knew anyone from World War II to share some stories. I told him, you have to bring Knute in—no one can tell better stories than Knute.

Well, it was a day I wasn’t going to miss. Knute started out by not seeing the chain in the schoolyard that separates the kids from the parking lot, and he drove right through it—starting the day off with a bang. He then tells me—kind of loud—when we get into class that “they sure didn’t make teachers who looked like this when I was in school”!

Paul Phillips and Knute Bonner

Paul Phillips and Knute Bonner

And for the next hour and a half—he was supposed to talk for 15 minutes or so—he had the teacher, myself and every kid in the class mesmerized!  He started out telling them about his best friend from Bartram High School who was killed right in front of him. He talked about how their helmets were protection against bullets, but how they also shaved in them, and ate beans they cooked out of them—sometimes, all in the same day! He mixed in so many funny, sad, memorable, and patriotic stories in one big run-on story, he held my attention—jumping from story to story to story without missing a beat!

He was almost 80 years old and there wasn’t a veteran in America who could hold a candle to Knute that day. He tried to pass around a huge German sword, which the teacher rightfully took off the first kid, but that never deterred Knute; he never missed a beat. He just kept on going.

At the end, he asked if he could sing the “Star Spangled Banner,” and he told all the kids how they should always stand up straight, look at the flag, and remember all the people who gave their lives for this country. He had tears flowing down his checks—me, too—but he switched gears in classic Knute style and told them if they ever saw ANYONE who was sitting at a game when our National Anthem was being played or sung, that is was OK to go up and kick them right in the ass, as the tears turn again in mid-story to that laugh of his. The teacher looked at me and said it was not alright to go kick anyone, but Knute said to listen to him!

Knute’s visit was in the month of January. Kids don’t remember what you taught them yesterday, but on the last week of school, the kids voted on the best day of school and there were 34 votes for Knute Bonner Day, and 0 for any other day of school.

Knute was on the parade board since the early ‘60s, so there wasn’t much he hadn’t seen, and I always respected that. At his last meeting he attended in January, an issue came up about us inviting all the veterans, and I suggested that they all march together with the 82nd Airborne, but I wanted to get Knute’s opinion. So I asked him to address the audience and he did so eloquently, and thoughtfully and told us how his group, the Battle of the Bulge, had too few members to march. His last public comments were that of a man who was 87 years old, but we hung on every word in deep respect for what that man did for our parade and our country.

Happy 84th Birthday

Happy 84th Birthday

Bob Gessler, President of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association

He was simply an omnipresent figure. From the very first time I became involved, there was Knute.

He served on the parade board for over 50 years, and was, if the not the longest-serving member, very near the longest. He was on the board longer than I’ve been around. Just imagine the love you must have for your heritage, your faith and your city to serve that long.

He was a person who always cared about every person in the parade. He thought about how we can eliminate delays, how we can make the parade better and more enjoyable for everyone.

He obviously lived his life caring and striving to make it better for everyone. He made it known to all that he served in the Battle of the Bulge, and it never was a “me” thing; rather a tribute to all those who served with him.

He was truly a remarkable, many-faceted man and one hell of an Irishman.

Mary Frances Fogg, St. Patrick’s Day Parade Board Member

Knute Bonner was always joking, and always good for a laugh. For years at the parade meetings Knute has been asking the board to purchase walkie-talkies, so we can talk to each other and to the marshals during the parade. So after years of Knute asking, a few weeks ago I purchased walkie-talkies, and I was going to present them to him at the Grand Marshal Annual Dinner this year. I knew he would get a kick out of it, and finally put this discussion to rest.

So after hearing of Knute’s passing, I thought about the walkie-talkies, and I sent a few members of the board an email telling them about the purchase. Kathy McGee Burns suggested that we put one of the walkie-talkies in the coffin. I quickly responded that she would have to take possession of the other one just in case he calls! And knowing Knute, he will!

God Bless Knute, and his wonderful sense of humor. He still has us laughing. He will be greatly missed.

Bridie McCafferty, St. Patrick’s Day Parade Board Member

Knute Bonner was a sweetheart. He made you feel like you were the most important person in the world when he saw you.
He was not a politician or a celebrity, but you wouldn’t believe the crowds that came to pay tribute to him at his viewing and funeral Mass. This shows how he touched so many people.

Knute was the life of the party, made lifelong friends quickly, and was always up for a bit of fun. When he motioned you to come near him with that twinkle in his eye, and he changed his voice to a whisper, you knew you were going to hear a joke or funny story.

But it was his quiet and humble way of doing charitable work for those less fortunate that I will also remember. For many years, Knute put on Irish Cabaret shows for the elderly at local nursing homes. The joy he brought to his audiences was, as they say, priceless. His life was one of loving service to his family, the church, the Irish community, and veteran causes. You couldn’t meet anyone more generous than Knute.

Knute’s love of God created a joy of life which he richly shared with others, and a sense of service and duty to others that extended to risking his own life in WWII.

We are all the better for knowing Knute.

And I can only imagine what March 17th will be like in heaven this year, with Knute singing ‘When Irish Eyes are Smiling’ with St. Patrick himself.

God bless you Knute, and God bless your wonderful family.

Kathy McGee Burns, Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Board Member

I can never remember a funeral as big and beautiful as Knute’s. It was a tribute to a great man. In his death, he was remembered as he lived—not in a maudlin way, but in a happy way.

Knute was buried dressed in his emerald green high-top sneakers, with a shillelagh, his WWII cap, his service decorations,a grand marshal’s sash, a walkie-talkie,an Irish shamrock tie, a book titled “Irish Philadelphia,” a rose in his pocket , a CD playing songs from his string band days, and his Green Top Hat.

I watched the people lean over and kiss him, or rub his hand. I bet there were 1,000 people who came to say goodbye to Knute. The eulogy by a family friend, John Delaney, was nothing short of a vaudeville show, filled with Knute jokes. Pat (Bonner) told me that they closed I-95 for the procession of a “Fallen Hero”as they went to the cemetery.What a farewell party!

People

“He Still Has Us Laughing:” Knute Bonner Remembered

Knute, remembered

Knute, remembered

When Knute Bonner died last week at the age of 87, Philadelphia’s Irish and Irish-American community lost one of its most colorful, kind and puckish characters. On Sunday, March 10, when the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade passes along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, it will be without its 2001 grand marshal. For those who knew Knute Bonner, it’s a moment of sadness, but also—as is the case with any Irish wake—it’s a moment to share stories.

Not surprisingly, there are a lot of them. We asked a few of his friends to share their thoughts.

Michael Bradley, Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director

“The Knute I Knew.” That would be a great title of a book written about him.  He would jump from how he didn’t feel good, to showing me the wound on his leg, to telling you one of his jokes, to singing a song and possibly back to how we miss so-and-so who just passed—all in the same five minutes. Knute had a great outlook on life. He was always positive, and always ended with a chuckle—like he knew something you didn’t.

He was an entertainer, and when the red light and spotlight came on, he came on, the crowd came on, and the crowd loved him, and he loved them!

He thought the Irish were the greatest race on earth, but he didn’t really talk to me about being Irish, it was more about St. Patrick’s Day. That day meant the world to him. I still get chills down the back of my neck when I think of him singing “It’s a great day for the Irish.”

He also started the Southwest St Patrick’s Club in 1950, before I was even born, and to see those men and women still march with their third-generation marchers is a real tribute to Knute, since most of them have moved out of Southwest Philly. He was also very proud of all the Irish in SW Philly and West Catholic.

My best best story about Knute is not an Irish one.  My son Colin was in fourth grade at St Pius X in Broomall. This was awhile ago since he now is a sophomore at Penn State with Knute’s grandson Shane. The teacher asked if any of the students knew anyone from World War II to share some stories. I told him, you have to bring Knute in—no one can tell better stories than Knute.

Well, it was a day I wasn’t going to miss. Knute started out by not seeing the chain in the schoolyard that separates the kids from the parking lot, and he drove right through it—starting the day off with a bang. He then tells me—kind of loud—when we get into class that “they sure didn’t make teachers who looked like this when I was in school”!

Paul Phillips and Knute Bonner

And for the next hour and a half—he was supposed to talk for 15 minutes or so—he had the teacher, myself and every kid in the class mesmerized!  He started out telling them about his best friend from Bartram High School who was killed right in front of him. He talked about how their helmets were protection against bullets, but how they also shaved in them, and ate beans they cooked out of them—sometimes, all in the same day! He mixed in so many funny, sad, memorable, and patriotic stories in one big run-on story, he held my attention—jumping from story to story to story without missing a beat!

He was almost 80 years old and there wasn’t a veteran in America who could hold a candle to Knute that day. He tried to pass around a huge German sword, which the teacher rightfully took off the first kid, but that never deterred Knute; he never missed a beat. He just kept on going.

At the end, he asked if he could sing the “Star Spangled Banner,” and he told all the kids how they should always stand up straight, look at the flag, and remember all the people who gave their lives for this country. He had tears flowing down his checks—me, too—but he switched gears in classic Knute style and told them if they ever saw ANYONE who was sitting at a game when our National Anthem was being played or sung, that is was OK to go up and kick them right in the ass, as the tears turn again in mid-story to that laugh of his. The teacher looked at me and said it was not alright to go kick anyone, but Knute said to listen to him!

Knute’s visit was in the month of January. Kids don’t remember what you taught them yesterday, but on the last week of school, the kids voted on the best day of school and there were 34 votes for Knute Bonner Day, and 0 for any other day of school.

Knute was on the parade board since the early ‘60s, so there wasn’t much he hadn’t seen, and I always respected that. At his last meeting he attended in January, an issue came up about us inviting all the veterans, and I suggested that they all march together with the 82nd Airborne, but I wanted to get Knute’s opinion. So I asked him to address the audience and he did so eloquently, and thoughtfully and told us how his group, the Battle of the Bulge, had too few members to march. His last public comments were that of a man who was 87 years old, but we hung on every word in deep respect for what that man did for our parade and our country.

Happy 84th Birthday

Bob Gessler, President of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association

He was simply an omnipresent figure. From the very first time I became involved, there was Knute.

He served on the parade board for over 50 years, and was, if the not the longest-serving member, very near the longest. He was on the board longer than I’ve been around. Just imagine the love you must have for your heritage, your faith and your city to serve that long.

He was a person who always cared about every person in the parade. He thought about how we can eliminate delays, how we can make the parade better and more enjoyable for everyone.

He obviously lived his life caring and striving to make it better for everyone. He made it known to all that he served in the Battle of the Bulge, and it never was a “me” thing; rather a tribute to all those who served with him.

He was truly a remarkable, many-faceted man and one hell of an Irishman.

Mary Frances Fogg, St. Patrick’s Day Parade Board Member

Knute Bonner was always joking, and always good for a laugh. For years at the parade meetings Knute has been asking the board to purchase walkie-talkies, so we can talk to each other and to the marshals during the parade. So after years of Knute asking, a few weeks ago I purchased walkie-talkies, and I was going to present them to him at the Grand Marshal Annual Dinner this year. I knew he would get a kick out of it, and finally put this discussion to rest.

So after hearing of Knute’s passing, I thought about the walkie-talkies, and I sent a few members of the board an email telling them about the purchase. Kathy McGee Burns suggested that we put one of the walkie-talkies in the coffin. I quickly responded that she would have to take possession of the other one just in case he calls! And knowing Knute, he will!

God Bless Knute, and his wonderful sense of humor. He still has us laughing. He will be greatly missed.

Bridie McCafferty, St. Patrick’s Day Parade Board Member

Knute Bonner was a sweetheart. He made you feel like you were the most important person in the world when he saw you.
He was not a politician or a celebrity, but you wouldn’t believe the crowds that came to pay tribute to him at his viewing and funeral Mass. This shows how he touched so many people.

Knute was the life of the party, made lifelong friends quickly, and was always up for a bit of fun. When he motioned you to come near him with that twinkle in his eye, and he changed his voice to a whisper, you knew you were going to hear a joke or funny story.

But it was his quiet and humble way of doing charitable work for those less fortunate that I will also remember. For many years, Knute put on Irish Cabaret shows for the elderly at local nursing homes. The joy he brought to his audiences was, as they say, priceless. His life was one of loving service to his family, the church, the Irish community, and veteran causes. You couldn’t meet anyone more generous than Knute.

Knute’s love of God created a joy of life which he richly shared with others, and a sense of service and duty to others that extended to risking his own life in WWII.

We are all the better for knowing Knute.

And I can only imagine what March 17th will be like in heaven this year, with Knute singing ‘When Irish Eyes are Smiling’ with St. Patrick himself.

God bless you Knute, and God bless your wonderful family.

Kathy McGee Burns, Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Board Member

I can never remember a funeral as big and beautiful as Knute’s. It was a tribute to a great man. In his death, he was remembered as he lived—not in a maudlin way, but in a happy way.

Knute was buried dressed in his emerald green high-top sneakers, with a shillelagh, his WWII cap, his service decorations,a grand marshal’s sash, a walkie-talkie,an Irish shamrock tie, a book titled “Irish Philadelphia,” a rose in his pocket , a CD playing songs from his string band days, and his Green Top Hat.

I watched the people lean over and kiss him, or rub his hand. I bet there were 1,000 people who came to say goodbye to Knute. The eulogy by a family friend, John Delaney, was nothing short of a vaudeville show, filled with Knute jokes. Pat (Bonner) told me that they closed I-95 for the procession of a “Fallen Hero”as they went to the cemetery.What a farewell party!

Genealogy, History, News

Rest in Peace: John Ruddy

Professor Bill Watson and Vince Gallagher. Gallagher donated the plot in the Donegal cemetery where John Ruddy will be buried on March 2.

Professor Bill Watson and Vince Gallagher. Gallagher donated the plot in the Donegal cemetery where John Ruddy will be buried on March 2.

The remains of John Ruddy, one of 57 Irish railroad workers who died at an area in Malvern known as Duffy’s Cut, will be buried on Saturday, March 2 in a donated grave at Holy Family Church in Ardara, County Donegal, Ireland—181 years after his death.

The remains were shipped to Ireland several weeks ago, said Professor William Watson of Immaculata University who, with his twin brother, Frank, discovered the remains of the victims who may have died of cholera—or were murdered by vigilantes—near a railroad embankment in the woods in East Whiteland Township.

Vincent Gallagher, a businessman and president of the Commodore Barry Club (The Irish Center) in Philadelphia, donated the grave in his family plot. The Watsons had hoped that Ruddy, who was believed to be an 18-year-old from Inishowen, would be buried near his own family, but the DNA tests on the body and a possible family member in Ireland have not been completed.

The remains of six other victims, including one woman, that were recovered from the site were buried in a donated grave in West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Lower Merion last fall. Skulls of several of those victims exhibited signs of violence and a University of Pennsylvania anthropologist confirmed that one was shot through the head. The Watsons have speculated that the seven may have tried to leave the site after the cholera outbreak and were killed to keep them from spreading the disease, which is caused by a bacteria and is usually spread by consuming contaminated food or water.

Work is expected to begin this spring to unearth the rest of the Duffy’s Cut victims who are buried much deeper than the first seven and close to the Amtrak railroad tracks. Following the intervention of US Sen. Robert Casey and other legislators, Amtrak, which originally told the Watsons that it was too dangerous to dig up the remains so close to the tracks, finally gave permission.

The Smithsonian Channel will be airing the documentary, “The Ghosts of Duffy’s Cut,” on March 7 at 8 AM and 5 PM, and again on March 15 at 10 PM.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

It's almost here!

It’s almost here!

The first fundraiser for Philadelphia’s St. Patrick’s Day gets the season off to a good start, with Jamison, the Bogside Rogues, and No Irish Need Apply providing the music at The Heroes Ballroom at the FOP Lodge 5 in Philadelphia on Sunday. A second, set for March 3, has moved from the Springfield Country Club to Cardinal O’Hara High School on South Springfield Road in Springfield. It features the music of Slainte and Round Tower, with performances by the McDade, Cara, and McHugh Schools of Irish Dance.

Also this weekend: Gael Scoil! That would be Irish school, an annual two-day event during which kids between the ages of 7 and 17 learn about Irish history, sports, dance, mythology, and language at Notre Dame High School in Lawrence Township, NJ.

On Sunday, the Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day Parade is holding its grand marshal dinner at the High Street Grill in Mt. Holly, NJ. This year’s grand marshal is Francis X. McAneny, EdD, a longtime educator and currently the principal at St. Mary School in Bordentown, NJ. He is also a longtime Irish dancer who has appeared with the Crossroads School of Irish Dance and won many awards. The parade, always the first in the region, is scheduled for Saturday, March 2.

Irish language lessons are available in the Glenside area starting on Monday. See our calendar for more details.

“Jimmy Titanic,” a new play from Belfast-born playwright Bernard McMullan debuts at the Second State at the Adrienne in Philadelphia on Wednesday, Feb. 27. It explores “the Irish side” of the Titanic disaster through the eyes of a former shipyard worker turned sailor who died on the voyage. Colin Hamell stars in this one-man play which runs through March 10.

And Lunasa will be on stage at the Sellersville Theatre on Wednesday night.

At a luncheon on Thursday at the Hyatt at the Bellevue in Philadelphia, the Irish Ambassador to the US, Michael Collins, will present the annual Irish American Business Chamber and Network’s Ambassador’s Award to the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), the Taoiseach Award to James and Frances Maguire and the Uachtaran Award to Sr. Marguerite O’Beirne, OSF. The Maguires are principals of the Maguire Foundation, a philanthropic organization that funds education. Sister Marguerite O’Beirne, OSF, is vice president of mission and ministry at Neumann University.

If you didn’t get a chance to get your copy of “Irish Philadelphia” signed at the Irish Center a few weeks ago, author Marita Krivda Poxon will be autographing again on Saturday at McKenna’s Irish Shop in Havertown.

Also next Saturday, March 2, the Glenside Gaelic Athletic Association is holding a beef and beer at the Irish Center on Emlen Street in Philadelphia.

Don’t forget: The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade is coming up on March 10. Stake out your chunk of curb now.

Music, News

Lunasa: New CD, New Show

Lunasa (Trevor Hutchinson in the middle)

Lunasa (Trevor Hutchinson in the middle)

It’s rare to find an Irish musician who could be described as “full of himself.” In my experience, and I’ve met quite a few, they tend to be pretty modest, more interested in playing music than anything else, including, in some cases, making money playing music.

Lunasa’s Trevor Hutchinson (the tall one with the stand up bass) takes humble to a whole new level.

When I asked him the other day about how it felt to be part of a group that was named “Performers of the Decade” in 2010 by popular internet radio-TV station, liveireland.com, this was his response:

“We were? I didn’t know that.”

When we both stopped laughing, he admitted, “I’m actually unaware of these things, which makes it hard to bask in the glory then.” And we laughed some more.

I didn’t ask him if he knew that when you Google the band, the website that comes up reads, “Lunasa, the hottest Irish acoustic group on the planet.” I’m guessing, no.

There’s no getting around that this is a hot band. After 15 years and soon-to-be nine releases, they’re till getting five stars on amazon.com. Still being showered with superlative adjectives like “exhilarating,” “superb,” “the new gods of Irish music,” and “better than the music you hear in an Irish pub.” Okay, so that last one was on one of those internet sites where any yahoo can make an unmoderated comment, but you get the idea.

When you’re that hot, you can take some chances, and with their new CD (due out April 16), they are. When the band performs at the Sellersville Theatre on Wednesday, February 27, you won’t be getting the full effect of their latest effort, “Lunasa with the RTE Concert Orchestra.” That’s because they’re not traveling with the orchestra, which has backed performers as diverse as Luciano Pavarotti, Cleo Laine, and Sinead O’Connor. The concert at which the two groups performed together last summer sold out Dublin’s Concert Hall.

I asked Hutchinson, one of the founding members of the group back in 1997, how this collaboration—an intriguing one—came about. The link, he said, was Niall Vallely, the concertina player and composer from Armagh, whose brother, Cillian, is Lunasa’s piper. RTE approached Niall Vallely about creating arrangments and working with a traditional band. For some reason, Lunasa sprang to mind.

“We jumped at the chance,” said Hutchinson, who is from Cookstown, County Tyrone. They knew that Vallely would create arrangements that would enhance rather than drown out the traditional tunes. “Niall is a traditional musician who understands the music so we knew we weren’t going to get something that was full of schmaltzy strings and that.”

In fact, says Hutchinson, Vallely chose tunes from Lunasa’s back catalog that would work with just a little orchestration. “He had to look for pieces that had a deeper kind of arrangement already there.”

On the CD you’ll find “Casu” and “Merry Sisters of Fate” from their 2001 CD, “Merry Sisters of Fate;” “Leckan Mor” from Se; and other Lunasa tunes that, as his band mate, Kevin Crawford said, “had been banished to the wilderness, destined never to see the light of a Lúnasa day ever again.” Vallely rescued them, rearranged them for trad band and orchestra, and made them into something very new.

The band would like to mount another orchestral concert. The first was exhiliarating, says Hutchinson. “It does work fantastic live,” he says. “At that concert in Dublin, to be surrounded by all those fantastic musicians and that great big wall of sound was incredible. We’re seriously considering doing it again, but so far nothing definite.”

The band is currently touring the US (Florida after Sellersville) and is known for spending many weeks on the road every year, though Hutchinson says they’ve cut back some. “We don’t do as much as we used to, though we’re gearing up to do a bit more again,” he says. “Most of our touring is really in America. Some years we go once, some years two or three times, usually this time of year. Every two or three years we tour Japan, a bit in the UK and Europe.”

Are there lots of Lunasa fans in Japan? “Irish music is very big in Japan,” says Hutchinson. “Big in the sense that we can do nice sized theaters and get a really good audience. The Japanese are a dedicated type fan. They take any kind of hobby really seriously there.”

How serious? “I think we might even have a Lunasa tribute band,” says Hutchinson, laughing.

Arts

“Jimmy Titanic” Comes to Philadelphia

Colin Hamell as "Jimmy Titanic."

Colin Hamell as “Jimmy Titanic.”

Titanic: The Comedy?

Even 101 years after the sinking of the unsinkable ocean liner—1498 souls lost in the icy sea—no one is going to turn the story of tragedy and hubris into an SNL skit. But Belfast playwright Bernard McMullan, like all good Irish writers, was able to find the humor at the bottom of the pit of sadness—and craft a story that, despite the books, plays, movies, and Discovery Channel specials, you likely haven’t heard.

He’s bringing his play, “Jimmy Titanic,” to the Adrienne Theater on Sansom Street in Philadelphia, for two weeks starting Wednesday, February 27.

“This was a bit of a challenge of a play,” said McMullan in a phone interview two weeks ago. “It’s been done before, so it had to be innovative. I’m not sure people want a new serious story of the Titanic, so it was up to us to bring it to another level, to instill some comedy into it.”

The eponymous Jimmy—played, along with 20 other characters in this one-man play, by Colin Hamell—is actually Jimmy Boylan, a former shipyard worker who knew every rivet on the ship where he was also a sailor on its first—and last—voyage. But the play opens in Heaven, where Jimmy is “good friends with the Angel Gabriel and God” and a figure of some prestige, so closely associated is he with the “Titanic brand,” says McMullan.

“It’s a little bit of a play on all of us slaves to marketing and branding. The Titanic brand lives on and Jimmy used the brand to give him status in heaven.”

McMullan uses the comedy as comedy is often used in Irish plays—as juxtaposition with the horror, as relief from the “dark passages,” including how people met their death.

“It’s ultimately the story of dreams shattered,” he says.

“Jimmy Titanic,” which was critically acclaimed in its New York run, explores many ruined dreams, from the immigrants looking for a new life to the officials and people of Belfast who were so proud of “their ship” and fearful of what the sinking will do to the future of shipbuilding in Belfast.

“I’ve really concentrated on the Irish side of things, including ship building in Belfast,” said McMullan. “Being from Belfast, it’s really part of the culture there and I grew up hearing stories from people who worked on the shop. In Belfast, people will ask, ‘Why do you celebrate this ship that sank?’ and the people of Belfast will tell you, ‘It was allright when it left here.’ That’s their way of shifting the blame elsewhere.”

Though the Titanic was a luxury liner, its sole purpose was not to carry wealthy people from Europe to America and back again. “It was built as an emigrant ship,” said McMullan, a former TV news reporter who read and studied Titanic’s history, even attending lectures by its discoverer, Robert Ballard of Woods Hole Oceanagraphic Institute in Massachusetts and visiting Titanic exhibits all over the world, including one in Pigeon Forge, TN (yes, the home of Dollywood).

In fact, according to the Titanic exhibit now on display at the Franklin Institute, the White Star Lines raised the bar on comfort even in steerage because it was counting on European immigration to boost its profits. “But the stories of the immigrants on the Titanic are forgotten amid the stories of the Astors, the Rockefellers, and other millionaires on the ship,” said McMullan.

Colin Hamell, who starred in the play in New York, plays many of those immigrants from all over Europe who were fleeing oppression, poverty, or the law—or just looking for a fresh start. “He wouldn’t tell you this himself, but he does a great job,” said McMullan. “He’s wonderful with accents and changes of character.”

Hamell has some high praise for McMullan too. “Talking to people after the play was interesting. They found the historical parts as compelling as the humorous parts. Bernard really got the balance right,” he said.

You can see “Jimmy Titanic” at the Second Stage at the Adrienne, 2030 Sansom Street, in Philadelphia, Wednesday through Sunday, from Feb. 27 to March 10. Tickets are $25 for adults, $18 for students. Call 215-567-2848, or go to http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/316089

See more photos from the play.