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Jeff Meade

Hawks take charge
Sports

Hawks Gaelic Footballers Sink Their Talons into Boston College

(Photos by Gwyneth MacArthur)

(Photos by Gwyneth MacArthur)

Until recently, they seemed to be the Philadelphia-area Gaelic football club nobody had heard of. Except, possibly, for some local Gaelic footballers.

In any case, the St. Joe Hawks made a great impression on a crowd of Gaelic Athletic Association fans in a special game at Bishop McDevitt High School in Wyncote, Montgomery County. They notched a tight victory over a team from Boston College, 5-12 to 5-8.

With the victory, St. Joe’s earned the Daniel Sweeney Cup, honoring the Philadelphia firefighter of that name who died in the line of duty in April, 2012.

(Gaelic football explainer here, including scoring.)

The Hawk will never die.

The game was the centerpiece of a day dedicated to raising local awareness of Gaelic sports, sponsored by the Glenside Gaelic Club. Glenside is building a youth program, and showing early signs of success. Some of the kids showed their stuff at the half.

Our roving photographer Gwyneth MacArthur was there to record all the action. Check out her photo essay.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

The wild and crazy Mayo Association will celebrate again this weekend.

The wild and crazy Mayo Association will celebrate again this weekend.

This is the weekend of the Mayo Ball and the Miss Mayo Pageant. If your folks hail from this pretty part of Ireland (oh, like there are loads of ugly parts), this is a good place to get to know your peeps. The Mayos are a lot of fun even when they’re not having a Ball, but the music and dancing just makes them more adorable. It’s this Saturday night.

Also on Saturday night, the Hooligans will be performing at the Feast of All Irish Saints (what’s wrong with this picture?) at Church of The Holy Family in Sewell, NJ. There will be Irish step dancers, bagpipers, dinner, a DJ, and an auction.

Also on Saturday night: Timlin and Kane are playing at the St. James Gate Pub in Bethlehem and the Shantys are in Lansdale at Molly Maguire’s.

There’s a set dance event at the Westville Square Zavier Hall in Westville, NJ on Sunday afternoon between 1:30 and 5:30 PM.

There are two places to take Irish ceili dance lessons—at the New Castle County Irish Society in Wilmington, DE, and at the Philadelphia Irish Center. There are also set dance lessons this week at the Wilmington location. These are ongoing events.

On Friday, Nov. 8, give it up for the Philadelphia Police and Fire Pipes and Drums, the only pipe band that I’ve ever heard play, “Do You Think I’m Sexy?”, as they raise money for band expenses. It’s being held at FOP Lodge 5 in Philadelphia. There will be a DJ to give the band a rest between sets.

All this week, Once, the charming musical that started life as a charming movie, is at the Academy of Music.

And next weekend, the Coyle School of Dance is hold a feis (that’s a competition to all you non-Irish speakers), the Philadelphia Freedom for All Ireland Committee (that’s an AOH program) for their Sunday Irish Jam Session for Irish Freedom with Luke Jardel, Bob Hurst, Jamison, The Celtic Connection, the Shanty’s and many more local performers at Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia. Next Sunday: The Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame Dinner.

Music

Top 10 Irish Songs You’ve Never Heard

An image of a Leprechaun playing electric guitar.You think you’ve heard them all. We’re here to tell you otherwise, Mister Smarty Breeches Full of Stitches.

From the home office in Horseleap, County Offaly, the official irishphiladelphia.com Top 10 Irish Songs You’ve Never Heard:

1.  Black Velcro Band. She just doesn’t want to lose that band.
2.  I’ll Tell Me Grandma. Ma never listens to me, anyway.
3.  Danny Man. An Irish fella with a Peter Pan complex.
4.  Dirtiest Old Town. Fresno.
5.  I Knew My Love. Until she threw me over for a tennis pro.
6.  I Wish That I Was Never Wed. OK, you’ve heard this one, but now you know why.
7.   It’s a Long Way to Kensington and Allegheny. But make a left turn at St. Adalbert’s Rectory, cross Aramingo and Frankford, and you’re there.
8.   Kelly the Boy From Kensington and Allegheny. Hey, do we really have to tell you how to find that guy?
9.   Smoggy Dew. Fresno, again.
10. Molly Maloneski. “Crying, pierogis and galumpkis, alive, alive, oh …”

Arts, News

The Artist Behind the Harp

Ellen Tepper and some of her artwork.

Ellen Tepper and some of her artwork.

 

Ellen Formanek Tepper’s little house in Ardsley looks like it’s been invaded by The Book of Kells.

It’s her artwork, minutiae from the illuminated Gospels created by 9th century Irish monks, painted on glass, which she is gathering to transport for a show at the Community Music School in Trappe, starting on November 9. It’s called Celtic Refractions, and she is still trying to come up with an artist’s description. “I call it taking minutiae and make them huge and bringing light to the Dark Ages,” says Tepper, who is probably equally well known for her work as a harpist and harp instructor as she is for her colorful translucent glass paintings.

Though she’s not Irish, she claims affinity. “I’m a proto-Celt,” she jokes. “My family came from the Rhine Valley and the Danube Valley where the Celts started before they came to Ireland.”

A native New Yorker, Tepper spent her formative years in Vienna, Austria, where her father was principal of the American International School. “We were school-homed,” she says, revealing the sense of humor she’s also known for, both onstage and off.

Her German-born mother, whose Jewish family fled Germany, was a psychologist and professor of education who loved museums, so she “dragged us [Ellen, her brother and sister] reading history along the way” on their extended vacations in Europe. Tepper not only absorbed the history, she assimilated the art, particularly the medieval works that now appear in her own creations. At school, she learned to speak German, to draw, dance, and play the harp.

“My father taught me how to embroider, which he learned from watching his mother,” she says. “When I was ready to go to college I didn’t know whether to go to music school or to art school.”

She went to Philadelphia College of Art—now the University of the Arts—but majored in music. She thought she could do both, but the music courses were so demanding “it was just too much work,” she recalls. But when she finally graduated, “the art just burst out.” She sat down and sketched an intricate and detailed embroidery pattern for a 14th Century Venetian harp she saw on a poster and started sewing. The embroidery won a national prize and, though it’s for sale, now hangs on a wall in her living room.

Sewing was her métier for many years as she raised three children, most of the time as a single mother. “When the kids were little I sewed a lot for them and I made pin money making these quilted vests.” She pulls several out of a plastic bag, tiny vests with rainbows and other toddler-friendly designs, some of which now fit her granddaughter. “I would make art during naptime then I would see my work running around,” she laughs.

Tepper’s glass art came much later, the result of the doodling she does to keep her hands busy when she’s not using them for the harp or other things. “I was doing spiral drawing on blank puzzles at The Shanachie [the now defunct Irish pub in Ambler] while sitting at the bar, listening to other people play music,” she recalls. “Then I started putting them on glass. It was all inspired by the bartender at the Shanachie who was also an artist and who I used to tip with art materials. One day he said that he had a friend who had just started painting on glass.”

She discovered oil-based markers and found herself gravitating toward the Book of Kells, with its intricate and ornate pages that marry Latin religious text with Celtic symbolism. And believe it or not, she takes her designs not directly from the book, but from coloring books, which both magnify and simplify the images. She copies, alters them the way she wants them, and enlarges them. Then she tapes her drawing face down on the front of the glass she’s using—often a discarded window—and traces it from the back, where she also colors it.

And no, it’s not cheating. “When I was in the Embroiderer’s Guild, this was known as ‘original adaptation,’” she explains.

Her pieces range from convoluted Celtic knotwork to figures like the Gospel writers and St. Brendan the Navigator on his ship heading for the “island of the blessed.”

What won’t be on display at her show, which runs through January 5, will be her dragons which she cooks up—literally—in her kitchen. They’re an outgrowth of the dolls she used to make, tiny sculptures of fairies, 14th century composers, and rock musicians she did for fun. The dragons—Tepper calls them her “lounge lizards”—are made from polymer clay which she rolls out of a pasta machine into sheets and cuts into gills, which she layers on a frame made from a coat hanger, aluminum foil, and 16-gauge florist wire, “like shingles on a roof.”

“I also have a dedicated garlic press that I used to make some parts,” she says. “These cooking utensils should never be used for food again.”

Once the lizard is the way she wants it, she bakes it in her oven, using empty cat food cans (she has two cats) to protect its limbs from the heating element.

When she’s not making art, Tepper is making music. A harp teacher, she’s also a popular gig artist. With singer-musician Terry Kane, she’s the other half of the Jameson Sisters. The two combine harp, mandolin, and guitar with vocals in both English and Irish, but they also do Baroque and early music, show tunes, and Christmas music. They’re usually at Molly Maguire’s Restaurant and Pub in Phoenixville every fourth Sunday of the month where they lead the session. Tepper also appears solo and does several programs on the history of the harp and of Christmas carols, accompanied by what she calls her “Tepper schlepper,”—whoever she can cajole into carrying her large pedal harp. She’ll be doing that program on November 29 at Glen Foerd Mansion on the Delaware, 5001 Grant avenue in Philadelphia, starting at 7 PM.

And when she lifts the harp off her shoulder, watch her pick up her sketchbook. “I know, I know,” she says with a grin. “I’m prolific. And I can’t stop myself.”

“Celtic Refractions” will be on display at The Gallery at Community Music School, 775 W. Main Street, Trappe, PA, from November 9 to January 5. You can also see Tepper’s work at the Water Gallery in Lansdale, 319 West Main Street in the Dresher Arcade.

Visit with Ellen Tepper and her art via our photo essay.

People

Calling All Miss Mayos!

Marybeth Phillips with Michael Toner

Marybeth Phillips with Michael Toner

It was 1972. Marybeth Phillips was 14, a student at a small Catholic school, St. Leonard’s Academy at 39th and Chestnut on the Penn Campus. And thanks to two classmates who shared her love for Irish dance, something entirely unexpected happened.

She became Miss Mayo—tiara, sash, roses and all.

“I had two really good friends, both of them seniors, when I was at St. Leonard’s. They got wind of the fact that I was an Irish dancer,” explained Phillips, originally from 48th and Springfield in Southwest Philadelphia, now an actor, writer, music consultant and events producer living in Chester County—and part of the year in Ireland.

“Maureen Cavanaugh was active in the Mayo Association of Philadelphia, and Marian Gallagher was also very active in the Irish community. Both of these girls were step dancers. When I met them at St. Leonard’s, those two girls got me a dance part in the school show. Freshmen didn’t get to be in the show, but they lobbied for me. They said ‘Irish dancers are the best dancers, you’re gonna get a part.’ Of course, we were friends after that.”

Irish friends being Irish friends, Maureen and Marian invited Phillips to tag along on their jaunts—including the Mayo Ball, sponsored by the Mayo Association of Philadelphia. Phillips had never gone, but it appealed to her.

“‘You’re coming with us, you gotta go,’ they said. Well, it was black tie and gowns. I’d go anywhere where I could get dressed up.”

Phillips had a great time, but she thought that was all there was to it—until Maureen and Marian urged her to run for Miss Mayo, something that never would have occurred to her.

“I didn’t know what I was doing,” Phillips laughed, but that didn’t stop her. Once again, the prospect of wearing a gown had its undeniable allure, and Phillips thought she had nothing to lose.

She remembers the night as if it was yesterday. “The first part of the night, we hung around with friends and did the ceili dances, giggling and having fun. Then they pulled us into the dining room and interviewed us. It was a little nerve wracking. Billy Brennan was one of the judges, and he asked me what I knew about Ireland. How many counties were there.

“It was 1973, when Dennis Clark had just written ‘The Irish in Philadelphia.’ That was the beginning of my collection of Irish books. And I’d absorbed a lot of the culture from my grandparents and neighbors. (Grandmother Bridget Coyne was from Clonbur, Galway, and grandfather, Tom Ward, was from Tuam, also in the county.) My neighborhood had an overwhelming Irish character to it. You didn’t know anybody whose grandparents weren’t from Ireland.

“Anyway, Billy asked my how many counties Ireland had. I said 28. I just didn’t remember. I’m sure I knew. I don’t remember any of the other questions. But they’d generally ask you about things you liked to do. It was never ‘what’s your plan to save the world.’ They were looking for poise. They were looking for girls who were well-spoken. Do they have a lot of heart and soul? Do they knock themselves out for people? That kind of thing. They wanted to make sure you weren’t snapping gum or twirling your hair. They wanted someone friendly and outgoing and, ideally, knowledgeable about the Irish and who cherished Irish traditions.”

Ultimately, despite the wrong answer, that proved to be Marybeth Phillips. And no one could have been more, as they say in the Irish tradition, gobsmacked.

“I was so surprised. I just thought: Now what do I have to say?”

Today, winners of local Irish contests, such as Miss Mayo, Mary from Dungloe and the Rose of Tralee, collect some nice prizes, including Waterford punch bowls, fancy jewelry, a large check, or a trip to Ireland.

Back then, it was a tiara, a sash and roses. And that was just fine. Especially the roses, Phillips said. “I was over the moon about those.”

She still has the tiara.

A year later, Phillips won the Philadelphia Donegal Association’s Mary from Dungloe pageant. That meant a trip to Ireland for the big international contest, where she came in third. But Miss Mayo was really the beginning of a lasting and significant relationship with Philadelphia’s Irish community, and with Irish culture. Becoming Miss Mayo made a big difference.

“It made me feel validated. Just all of those little layers of Positive reinforcement kept me involved. I took being Miss Mayo seriously. They like you to represent them, and they want you to continue on with your Irish interests.”

And Phillips did just that. She went on to teach Irish dance. She formed a Celtic dance troupe. She wrote a monthly column, “Putting on Airs,” for the Irish Edition. She joined the Philadelphia Ceili Group, and now serves on its board. She owns a home in Cortoon, Ballinrobe—in County Mayo, appropriately—just across Lough Mask from her granny’s farmland.And all of that is just scratching the surface.

Years later, the Mayo Association is still recruiting accomplished young women to represent them in the Irish community and beyond. As tough as the competition was in 1972, the competition seems tougher today.

“These kids started out in day care prepping for Harvard,” Phillips said. “They’re scary smart. They’re so accomplished, and so young.”

But one more distinction awaits the next Miss Mayo—she’ll be the 50th.

For that special occasion, the Mayo Association is hoping for a reunion of as many former Miss Mayos as they can round up. That’s Marybeth Phillips’ job. And it’s a tough one, but she’s staying positive.

“It’s hard. A lot of them are people who did not stay involved. So far there are something like six of us. If there are only 10 girls who enter the contests this year, and there are 10 of us, that’d be pretty good.”

The ball is on Saturday November 2, from 8 p.m. until the cows come home, at the Philadelphia Irish Center/Commodore Barry Club. Details here.

And you can learn about all of the Miss Mayos here.

The Hawks in action
Sports

St. Joe Squares Off Against B.C. in a Saturday Gaelic Football Match

The gang from Glenside

The gang from Glenside

Gaelic athletics are well-established in the Philadelphia area and, at least among the fans who follow the local hurling and Gaelic football teams, everyone knows who plays these freewheeling, uniquely Irish games.

Brendan Gallagher of the Glenside Gaelic Club thought he knew all the teams.

Turned out he didn’t. The Hawks of St. Joe’s fields a Gaelic football team, and you’ll get to see them in action in a game against a team from Boston College Saturday at 3 p.m. at Bishop McDevitt High School in Wyncote, Montgomery County.

The team at St. Joe’s, Gallagher said, had already been planning a small exhibition game, “but it was going to be a much smaller event.”

The creative geniuses at the nascent Glenside club had a better idea.

“We saw it as an event of much larger significance,” Gallagher explained. “They saw it as a huge step for their club. I saw it as something bigger. I saw it as a huge step for Gaelic sports in the region.

“Ciaran Porter is the local GAA development officer and a paid employee of the GAA, and his job is to develop Gaelic sports in this region. He was the main force between us getting this event up and running. He has been holding development meetings, and asking people to come from different clubs. It was at one of those meetings at St. Joe’s that I met these young guys. I understood the significance.”

Glenside saw the game as an opportunity to bring out all the GAA fans—plus folks who have never witnessed a Gaelic athletic game of any kind. So the Glenside club is sponsoring the event, and it will now be a much bigger deal.

“At halftime, we’ll have a seven-a-side tiny tots game,” Gallagher said. “Were hoping to line up kids from the Delco Gaels to play against our kids. If not, we will have an intramural game. We see that as a marketing tool for ourselves.”

Afterward, from 6 to 8 at the Knights of Columbus Hall on nearby Limekiln Pike, the Glenside club will serve food and drink. Everyone is invited. It’s five bucks to get in. For newbies and their parents, the Glenside club will explain the basics of the game—and take the opportunity to recruit, of course.

In the meantime, Gallagher is gratified to learn of the Hawks club, and sees it as a positive sign for the growth and development of GAA sports here in Philly, and throughout the United States.

“This is their third year,” Gallagher said. “Ultimately, just like lacrosse and rugby, we’d like the games played at local universities, so students could be enticed to play into their 20s.”

Mick Moloney and Dana Lynn
Music, News

Another Successful St. Malachy’s Concert

When Mick Moloney comes to Philadelphia to do his annual concert to benefit St. Malachy’s Church and School, he always brings a collection of superlative performers. He didn’t disappoint this year either.

Along with premier accordion player Bill McComiskey, uillean piper Jerry O’Sullivan, and fiddler Dana Lyn, the concert featured 11-year-old Haley Richardson of New Jersey, a 2013 All-Ireland winner in two categories; British singer John Roberts; folk singers Saul Braudy (who played a mean blues harmonica), Dick Swain, and Murray Callahan; and one surprise—to Moloney at least—bodhran player.

He introduced the crowd to Mal Whyte, whom he hadn’t seen, not mentioned played with, for 40 years. The London native, an actor (Father Ted fans may remember him as the picnic warden in The Old Grey Whistle Theft episode, or, more recently, in The Borgias on Showtime), now living in Philadelphia, joined Moloney on stage and played as though no time had passed.

Mock Moloney

Mock Moloney

Check out our photo essay and watch the video of Haley Richardson playing with the big guys.

 

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to be Irish in Philly This Week

Ten years in, the Irish Memorial has become a tourist attraction.

Ten years in, the Irish Memorial has become a tourist attraction.


The Irish Memorial is celebrating its 10th birthday this week with a re-dedication ceremony at the site at Front and Chestnut at 4 PM on Saturday followed by a gala event at the nearby Hyatt’s Penn’s Landing. The sculpture by Glenna Goodacre, designer of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial on the Mall in Washington, DC, features 35 bronze figures arranged in vignettes portraying each phase of the Irish immigrant’s path to the new world, from the famine to prosperity in America. The rededication ceremony is free to the public.

Snag some great bargains (think Christmas) at McKenna’s Irish Shop’s annual parking lot sale on Saturday from 11 AM to 3 PM in Havertown. Some items are up to 80 percent off! They’re only doing this one day a year, and it’s rain or shine. So load up!

On Sunday, kick up your heels at the AOH Ceili at the AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 hall in Swedesburg between 2 PM and 5 PM. And if you see any of the members of Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums, which calls AOH Div. 1 home, give him or her a pat on the back. The band raised money through the sale of special t-shirts for the Susan B. Komen Foundation—to the tune of $2,500.

You can combine your love of Irish music and help raise money for breast cancer research on Sunday by attending a special benefit at The Irish Center in Philadelphia featuring Cletus McBride, Tom Brett, McHugh and O’Neill, Clyde Croasdale, Oliver McElhone, Andy Maher and his band, with a special reading by 2010 Bucks County Poet Laureate, Bernadette McBride Duffy.

On Sunday evening, there will be a spooktacular event at St. Malachy’s Church in Philadelphia. A group of local actors, including Mal Whyte, Dr. William Watson, Thom Nickels, and Marita Krivda Poxon, will provide an evening of Irish ghost storytelling—all local ghosts of course. Poxon is the author of several books of Philadelphia history, including her most recent, “Irish Philadelphia, “ as well as one on historical ghosts, “Oak Lane Ghost Stories.”

On Tuesday, Mick Moloney will be back in town to continue the “Two Roads Diverged” lecture at Villanova University along with Lenwood Sloan, Pennsylvania film commissioner.

On October 29, The musical play, “Once,” based on the hit movie, will launch a run at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia through early November. The play tells the story of a Dublin street busker who meets a young Czech woman who is entranced by his music.

Next weekend, the Mayo Association will be crowning its new Miss Mayo for the 50th time and celebrating a dancing through the night for the 108th time at the Irish Center.