All Posts By

Denise Foley

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Girsa at the Irish Center on Saturday

Girsa at the Irish Center on Saturday

Got festival fever? We do! There are a bunch of them this month, including the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s annual Irish traditional music event at the Irish Center in Philadelphia, which started on Thursday with singers’ night and ends on Saturday with music, workshops, kids’ activities, and a concert in the evening by the all-girl band, Girsa.

And that’s not all. There’s the Northeast Philly Irish Festival on Saturday featuring Irish country singer Deirdre Reilly, the Bogside Rogues, Timlin and Kane, the Hooligans, Celtic Connection, Belfast Connection and Oliver McElhone, all at Canstatters in the Northeast.

There are still tickets available to hear Diamh, an exciting band from Scotland, at the Alapocas Run State Park in Wilmington on Thursday.

Continue Reading

News, People

Golfing for Charity

Flyers alum Bernie Parent does a meet-and-greet.

Flyers alum Bernie Parent does a meet-and-greet.

Boston’s Ken Casey, front man for the Celtic rock band Dropkick Murphys, admitted the other night that he was leaning towards becoming a Philadelphia Flyers’ fan. In his neck of the woods–Bruins territory—that’s not just heresy but a potential cause for justifiable homicide.

But even the most devoted Bruins fan would have to bend a little just this once. The Flyers organization came out in force to support Casey’s Claddagh Foundation on Wednesday at the annual celebrity golf outing at Woodcrest Country Club in Cherry Hill, NJ. About a dozen current and former players joined foursomes—which went for $2,000—to play the William Flynn-designed 178-acre course. That included stogie-chewing, wisecracking Flyers alum Bernie Parent (”Only the Lord saves more than Bernie Parent”) and popular right winger and All-Star Jacub Voracek, a Czech native, who allowed himself to be auctioned off (along with girlfriend Nicole Warneke) for a date night with a lucky bidder.

Continue Reading

Music, News, People

Hall of Famers Twice: Kathy DeAngelo and Dennis Gormley

Kathy DeAngelo and Dennis Gormley

Kathy DeAngelo and Dennis Gormley

Emma Gormley was kicking to the beat of the bodhran in utero, laying as an infant at the foot of her mother’s harp, and up on stage at the age of three singing the Irish folk song, “Johnny Todd,” to a huge audience for which her musician parents, Dennis Gormley and Kathy DeAngelo, were providing “the background music.”

DeAngelo laughs as she recalls the moment. “They weren’t paying any attention to us as they drank their glasses of wine, then suddenly, when they heard this big voice coming out of this little girl, they started listening. Dennis said to me, ‘She’s going to be just like you!”

When Emma took up the violin at school, her parents weren’t surprised. Between them, they play a full orchestra’s worth of instruments. Kathy is a self-taught guitarist, fiddler, and harper who also plays mandolin and banjo; Dennis plays anything with strings, flute and whistle. The entire family sings. They occasionally perform together. (See a photo of the whole family below.)

Kathy and Dennis, who met when they were college students in New Jersey in 1973, have been the Irish trad duo (and sometimes trio, with other performers), McDermott’s Handy since 1978. They have two CDs, the latest of which is “Bound for Amerikay: The Irish Emigrant Experience: Coming to America as Told Through Music, Song & Story.” They recorded and mixed it in their own basement studio.

Their lives have been steeped in music. But in 1997, when Emma was 10, her parents thought she needed a group of kids her own age to play with. Then that year, a friend who was director of the Garden State Discovery Museum in Cherry Hill asked DeAngelo if some of her and Dennis’s students could play Irish music during multicultural month celebrations. They rounded up a few kids, asked friend and fellow music teacher Chris Brennan-Hagy of Philadelphia to bring some of hers, and booked Tom Slattery, an Irish storyteller, for the event. “This is how things always happen,” says DeAngelo. “You think, okay, this will be easy!”

Continue Reading

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Rob Dunleavy and Michael Boyce of Blackthorn doing a duet?

Rob Dunleavy and Michael Boyce of Blackthorn doing a duet?

We’re rich! We’re rich!

Rich in Irish entertainment that is. It all starts this weekend when Blackthorn, Galway Guild and the Shanty’s perform on the same stage—Harrah’s Philadelphia Casino in Chester—on Saturday night. They’re calling it “Irish Paradise,” and it sure sounds that way to me.

If you’re in Upper Darby on Saturday, stop in at Cawley’s Irish Pub at 9 PM and show your support for the Young Irelands Gaelic Football Club–regional champs!–by eating some beef and drinking some beer. Cawley’s is at 7919W. Chester Pike. Music will be provided by John Lefty Kelly. Proceeds from the benefit will help the Young Irelands get to Chicago for the national championships in which they’ll face Vancouver in the first round on Friday, September 4.

Continue Reading

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Paddy O'Brien and Nathan Gourley

Paddy O’Brien and Nathan Gourley

This Sunday, the annual Mass of the Golden Rose will be said at St. Patrick’s Church in King of Prussia, starting at noon. Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums, the AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 Color Guard, and St. Patrick’s Choir will take part. An Irish festival, with music, dancing, food and drink, will follow.

A ceili, featuring Tom McHugh and Jimmy and John McGillian, is scheduled for Saturday night at St Patrick’s–bring your dancing shoes.

Continue Reading

News, People, Sports

Up Tyrone!

Tyrone fans in Philly.

Tyrone fans in Philly.

More than a dozen Tyrone GAA fans, many of them Tyrone natives, dashed up the front steps of the Philadelphia Art Museum, Rocky-style, last Sunday to pose for a photo to share with Tyrone fans across the world.

Their team is facing Kerry, the reigning champs, this Sunday in Croke Park in Dublin in semi-final action. The last time Tyrone made it to the All-Ireland was in 2008. This weekend, the coach who took them to victory in 2008, 2005, and, for the first time ever, in 2003, Mickey Harte, is hoping for number 4.

The reason for the photo—which was to join all the other photos from around the world—was to show support for the team which was, until this week, facing the loss of a key player. Tiernan McCann was facing an eight-week ban for allegedly overreacting to an opposing player from Kerry touching his head during a quarter final game at Croke Park. Officials said McCann “dived” when his hair was ruffled, leading sports writers to dub the incident “rufflegate.” That ban was lifted this week by the Central Hearings Committee.

Continue Reading

Sports

Finals and Kids’ Games at GAA Field This Weekend

Glenside Gaelic will be facing off with the Delco Gaels on Sunday.

Glenside Gaelic will be facing off with the Delco Gaels on Sunday.

There’s plenty of sports action at the Philadelphia’s GAA fields in Limerick this Sunday, starting at noon with under-14 camogie—the feminine version of hurling—with the Philadelphia Shamrocks vs. New York. The Shamrocks are a brand new team this year.

You can also see junior and senior championship and final games and the all important hurling final between the Allentown Hibernians and the Na Toraidhe team from Philadelphia.

The Delaware County Gaels Under 10 team will also be facing off against the Glenside Gaelic Club in football starting at 4 PM.

The fields are located in the countryside of Limerick at 484 Longview Road. The setting is beautiful and you can see the cooling towers of the Limerick nuclear plant a little more up close and personal than usual.

Sports

This Week’s GAA Action

Get ready for some football.

Get ready for some football.

It’s championship season  for the Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association. Here’s the lineup for this Sunday:

1 PM, the Young Irelands face off against the Kevin Barry’s in junior championship action.

2:30 PM, the Allentown Hibernians and the Na Toraidhe hurlers tangle for the hurling championship.

At 4 there will be senior semi-final action  between the Young Irelands and the Kevin Barrys.

Championship football and hurling will continue on Sunday, August starting at 1 PM at the Limerick fields at 484 Longview Road.