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Denise Foley

Arts, People

She Knows the Real Ending of the Story Told in the Film “My Left Foot”

 

Hyacinthe O'Neill knew disabled=

Hyacinthe O'Neill knew disabled writer/artist Christy Brown.

What Hollywood calls the “biopic” –biographical films like the recent Johnny Cash-June Carter homage, “I Walk the Line”—tend to treat the facts of a life as though they were Silly Putty, not concrete. What’s ugly is gussied up; what’s pretty is sometimes muddied. The ordinary moments are edited for the sake of drama; the extraordinary, exaggerated for the same reason.

But those who knew Christy Brown—the severely disabled Dubliner who gained fame by using the toes of his left foot to write and paint—say his portrayal by Oscar-winning actor, Daniel Day-Lewis, in the movie “My Left Foot” was uncannily accurate.

“He completely did it,” says Siobhan O’Neill of Philadelphia, who grew up in the same Dublin neighborhood as Brown, a close friend of her parents, Hugh and Hyacinthe O’Neill. “As a little kid, I used to sketch and I would sit and study people. My mother would tell me to stop staring. But Christy would hold his hands in such a twisted way that I can’t even imitate it, and Daniel did it, not even knowing Christy. It was like he was channeling Christy.”

Day-Lewis also captured Christy Brown’s dark side. “He was very funny, a bit of a genius, in some ways great, but in other ways he was terrible,” says Hyacinthe O’Neill, who became close to the Brown family (“his sister Anne was my best friend”) as a 19-year-old engaged to Hugh O’Neill, a lifelong friend of Christy’s youngest brother. “A mind so active as Christy’s, being shut up in a body that doesn’t work was torture. He was depressed a lot which may be why he drank so much.”

Hyacinthe O’Neill will share her reminiscences of Christy Brown next Thursday night at 7:30 PM when The Irish Film Series at Philadelphia’s Irish Center, concludes with “My Left Foot.” And she will provide the disturbing epilogue to Jim Sheridan’s uplifting but unsentimental movie that ends with Christy lifting a glass of champagne with the woman who eventually becomes his wife, Mary Carr. Hyacinthe O’Neill and her daughter sat down at the Irish Center this week to talk to www.irishphiladelphia.com about their old friend, who died in 1981.

Hyacyinthe O’Neill, the daughter of a British Army officer and an Anglo-Indian missionary’s daughter, spent much of her childhood in India where she attended boarding school with Nepalese princesses and a Thai king’s son. After Indian independence, her father left the military and became a policeman in Scotland. O’Neill was living in London when she met Irishman Hugh O’Neill whom she married and with whom she had three children. She lived most of her adult life in Ireland, much of it in the Dublin neighborhood where the Brown family—Christy was the ninth of 13 surviving children—lived.

“His mother was a saint,” says O’Neill, who now lives in Mt Airy and works as an accountant for a Manayunk firm after years in a family business in London and California. Though Brown’s mother was told by doctors that her son was hopelessly mentally disabled, she refused to believe it. And when he picked up a piece of chalk with the only part of his body he could move—his left foot–and tried writing words on the floor, she began to teach him to both read and write.

“There were always tons of visitors at the Brown house and there was always a huge pot of stew on no matter when you went there,” O’Neill recalls. “She was a wonderful woman. I don’t know how she coped with such a huge family and a son who needed so much, but I never saw her lose her temper.”

Not so Christy. “Oh, he swore all the time,” says Siobhan, who works in the admissions office at the University of Pennsylvania. “He had little tolerance for fools, though he was always nice to kids. He really liked children. When we were little, there were always parties at Christy’s house. There were famous people there, like Peter Sellers and Richard Harris, but I guess we were too little to appreciate that. We were bored stupid by them. So we would go up to Christy and ask him if we could play with his wheel chair and he would say yes, and off we’d go, racing each other up and down the way.”

The O’Neills would often give the Brown family a much-needed break, and whisk Christy away to a nearby lake where he could paint. Or down to the neighborhood pub, The Stone Boat. “Christy loved to drink,” says Hyacinthe O’Neill. “There was very little else for him to do besides read.” They would also travel with him to the north side of Dublin to hear his favorite musical group, The Dubliners.

While the film of his life isn’t sugar-coated, it also celebrates Christy’s indomitable spirit—though he knew he would never live like a normal man, he was determined to wring everything out of life that he could. But the ending, which hints that Christy found both fame and the love of his life, says O’Neill, wasn’t truly the end.

“It was a horror story in the end. It was heartbreaking,” she says.

In the film, the nurse (called Julia) Christy meets and falls in love with was actually a former prostitute and lesbian named Mary Carr, once briefly a dental assistant who couldn’t hold a job because of her drinking and drug use, a claim made by a controversial biography, “Christy Brown – The Life that Inspired My Left Foot” by British author Georgina Hambleton, published last summer. Though the movie shows Christy and his future wife meeting at a gala event in his honor, in the book Christy’s brother Sean says that he introduced the two. Mary Carr, he says, was the lesbian lover of a friend.

“Oh, she was terrible,” says Hyacinthe O’Neill of Mary Carr Brown, who, like Christy, has since died. “But after he met Mary and married her, Christy was happy. She was not ideal, but he had a companion, someone to talk to. He influenced her to read and they could talk about books. Whether it was obsession, which is probably was, not love, right to the end, no matter what she did, he wanted to be with her.”

What she did, says O’Neill, besides having affairs with both men and women, was neglect her invalid husband, whom she hustled away to an ocean-front cottage in Kerry to keep him hidden from the prying eyes of his anxious family. “We went down there once and found Christy in his wheelchair perched at the edge of a cliff, looking out at the sea alone,” says O’Neill. “And he was emaciated. I don’t think he’d eaten in weeks. Sometimes she would lock him up in the house, leave him with bottles of whiskey and a straw, and go away for God knows how long.”

Yet, hospitalized by his family in Dublin for malnutrition, “he still wanted to go back to her,” says O’Neill. “He said if they didn’t take him back, he would crawl on his hands and knees to get back to her.”

In 1981, Brown choked to death while eating dinner. “All his food had to be cut up into very small pieces so he could swallow it,” explains O’Neill. “He choked on a piece of meat that was too big.” The implication remains unsaid.

After Christy’s death, O’Neill recalls, Mary threw out many of his paintings. Her husband, Hugh, was so disturbed by this that he went into the dumpster and rescued as many of them as he could. For years, the O’Neills kept them in storage. “They moved with us everywhere we went, including to California,” she says. “In the movie, all the paintings you see were the ones we rescued. Anne [Brown] told the producers that we had them, and they borrowed them.”

Unfortunately, all of these early works were all lost when a friend of the O’Neills, a German art conservator who was in the middle of restoring them, died of a heart attack. “We don’t know where they ended up,” she says.

Although the O’Neills, like Christy’s family, believe Mary Carr’s neglect led to his untimely death at 49, they also believe—hope really—that his love for her, however unwarranted, was a source of his happiness to the end. “He was happy with her and he was happy when they moved to Kerry,” says Siobhan O’Neill. “Hopefully, he died happy.”

“My Left Foot” will be shown at the Irish Center, Carpenter and Emlen Streets, in the Mt. Airy section of Philadelphia, on Thursday, May 1, at 7:30 PM. Hyacinthe O’Neill will introduce the film and answer audience questions. The Irish Film series was jointly sponsored by The Irish Center, WTMR radio host Marianne McDonald, and www.irishphiladelphia.com. Refreshments are available for purchase.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

As usual, there are a couple of things we’d like to do this weekend that are going on at the same time. Ah well, it’s not such a bad thing to have an embarrassment of riches.

On tap for Friday night, County Cork’s Liam O’Riordan from the Irish group, Trad Roots, will be appearing at the Trinity Irish Pub and the Pier at Caesar’s in Atlantic City. Don’t worry if you miss him—he’ll be appearing again on April 20 at Emmett’s Place in Philadelpiha and on April 24 at The Shanachie Pub and Restaurant with local (but formerly of County Clare) musician Fintan Malone. We heard Liam about a year ago when Trad Roots made an all-too-brief appearance in the Delaware Valley, and he’s amazing.

On Saturday between 5 and 7 PM, the Irish-American Democrats are holding a rally for Hillary Clinton at Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia, featuring Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley and New York Congressman Joe Crowley. Primary Day is Tuesday—don’t forget to vote. This is an historic election.

Also on Saturday, you can hear the remarkable voice of Terry Kane at her CD release party at McCoole’s in Quakertown. Kane will be performing with the group, Trad Linn to celebrate their debut CD, “The Roads of Clare.” See our story.

On Saturday night, the Coatesville Irish Music Series presents three superb musicians—Dana Lyn, Tina Lech, and Donna Long—in concert.

And on Thursday night, don’t forget to catch the latest in the Irish Film Series at the Irish Center—“Bloody Sunday,” about the 1972 clash between the British Army and Irish protestors in Derry that left 14 people dead. See our review.

As usual, you’ll find all the details on our calendar, the only one in the world blessed by the Pope. (Was that lightning I just saw?)

Music

Local Singer Releases New CD

Growing up as the youngest of 11 kids in rural upstate New York, Terry Kane recalls bumping along in the family’s station wagon, her mother at the wheel, she, her mom, and siblings all singing at the top of their lungs.

“We sang in 10-part harmony which we made up, back when cars didn’t have child seats,” she says with a laugh. “I didn’t actually sit on a seat till I was about 12. No, I’m kidding, but I sat on people’s laps for a long time.”

The Kane family “loved music and dancing,” she recalls. “It was a part of our lives. My Mom is the one that pretty much taught us to sing, and her mom taught her to sing. Her Dad was a big dancer and his father was as well. My great-great grandfather bought a farm out there in the middle of nowhere, near the Finger Lakes, and he built a stage in the woods where they could do their Irish dancing. Apparently his second wife didn’t like when they danced in the house so they danced outside.”

So it’s no surprise that for the last decade, Kane, who lives with her husband Todd Daniel in a converted cigar warehouse near Quakertown, has been performing Irish music in the Delaware Valley, New York, and Washington, DC, sometimes solo, often with singer John Beatty as Kane & Beatty. She also anchors the monthly sessions at Granny McCarthy’s in Bethlehem and McCoole’s in Quakertown. But on Saturday, April 19, she’s launching her second CD as part of the group, Trad Linn, with New Yorkers Will Collins and Doug Lammer who play whistle and uillean pipes.

“Will is from a traditional family. His mother is from County Clare. His aunt, Kathleen Collins, is a traditional fiddle player. His father is a well-known accordion player,” says Kane. “I’ve played with Will and Doug at the East Durham Irish Festival in the summer. I don’t get a chance to play with them that often. But they stopped into the studio when I was recording and put down some tracks for me.” Also featured on the CD, called “The Roads of Clare,” are George Fairchild on bodhrán and his daughter Audrey Fairchild on cello.

And anyone who knows Terry Kane will expect to hear some of her unaccompanied sean nos singing, and she doesn’t disappoint. Kane has been studying this traditional form of Irish singing for more than 10 years. As a classically trained singer, it’s been quite a education. Sean nos (meaning “old style”) has many interpreters, but it is largely the antithesis of classical music with its emphasis on fluidity, sweetness, and vibrato. Sean nos can be fierce, almost unmelodic. “It’s also very nasal,” says Kane, who doesn’t think she’s yet achieved the sound.

“I don’t really truly sing in sean nos, though I’m getting very close to it now,” she says. “I have a masters degree in musical education so I sing in a more traditionally classic way. But I’ve been spending a lot of time with singers from Connemara. I’ve been taking workshops with Aine Meenaghan, a well-known sean nos singer who now lives in Chicago. I’ve taken classes with others too, including singers from the Aran islands. Any time I go to Ireland I’m always listening and picking up songs.”

She first became interested in Irish music when one of her older brothers came back from studying in Europe with a raft of recordings from Ireland. “He came back singing all kinds of rover and rebel songs,”” she laughed. “My brother, Pat, also got into the traditional stuff, so we found trad music again.”

Actually, it was for the first time. Though her mother came from a musical family, Kane says, her early ancestors tried to erase most vestiges of their culture, including their music—a familiar story in many families who arrived in America when the Irish were still the victims of strong and sometimes violent prejudice. “My mother’s mother used to sing sean nos type songs, but her husband didn’t like it. He wanted her to sing American,” Kane explains. “So that was the end of the sean nos stuff. My grandmother did teach her to sing the songs of the day. In fact, they used to sing while they were working. On a farm, there’s a lot of manual labor, so they would sing together while they worked. I know it sounds like a musical, but that’s the way it was.”

Today, she and her brother, Pat, who is also a professional musician, carry on the ancient and yet newfound family tradition. “Now,” she says, “this is not just my job but my passion.”

A CD release party is being held on Saturday, April 19, from 5:30 to 11 PM at McCoole’s Arts and Events Place, 10 S. Main Street, Quakertown. Tickets are $25 and come with a free CD. You can meet Terry and the band before the concert, and enjoy food and drink. The concert, which also features John Beatty, George and Audrey Fairchild, will start at 7 PM with a post-concert session at 8:30 PM.

You can contact Terry at 215-541-0282 or email tkane@netcarrier.com for tickets or purchase them at the door.

To listen to the CD, click here.

Music

New Local Group Releases CD

Call it the power of sibling rivalry, but John Gallagher reluctantly admits that he’ll be singing on stage and selling his first CD at Molly Maguire’s Restaurant and Pub in Phoenixville on Friday night, April 11, because his younger brother told him he “didn’t have the balls” to do it.

“My brother, Pat, and I were talking about art and writing,” explains Gallagher, an entrepreneur (he owns his own recruiting business) from Ardmore. “He told me I didn’t have the balls to do anything with it.” Pat Gallagher, also a recruiter, has launched a successful side career as a painter because he literally couldn’t stop “doodling,” as he called it. He was discovered in New York by an art dealer who saw him drawing in a bar and convinced him to pursue his talent.

“There’s always been a part of me that wanted to write and sing,” says John. He comes by it naturally. Both his parents, Donegal immigrants, sing; his uncle Vince Gallagher has his own band and an Irish radio show on WTMR. “I always sang for fun. After I decided I was not going to make it to the NBA, this is what my passion was.”

But, like many dreams, this one took a backseat to the practical. Gallagher needed to make a living. “I have my own company, I’m responsible for taking care of my family and my employees. I couldn’t focus on what I left behind. This is where my life took me,” he says like a man who was content with what seemed like fate.

Then, suddenly, fate laid out a slightly different path. A convergence of events—call it serendipity—sounded like a message from the universe to John Gallagher. His brother started painting and selling his work—without quitting his day job. He hired his first employee, Craig Newman, who had toured with the band, Sunflower. And his wife’s cousin is married to Patsy Ward, guitarist with the local Irish group Causeway. He, Craig, and Patsy started playing together as The Pointe. And John started writing songs.

“Last Memorial Day we went into the studio and this CD is what came out of that,” he says.

It’s called “The Other Side of the Tracks”—a reference to the fact that the Gallaghers grew up on the Main Line, but literally on the other side of the Reading line from its manicured mansions. One of the 11 songs, “Piece of Work,” is about John’s relationship with his brother, Pat. It has a distinctly country flavor and, despite the sibling rivalry that might have inspired it, it’s clearly about brotherly love. He’s already sung it a cappella at an open mike night. And he’ll be singing it Friday night at Molly Maguire’s.

“We’ll see how we’re received,” Gallagher says, his voice reflecting that same “what will be will be” attitude that guided his career. “I’m not really thinking about where it might go. Who knows what could happen? I’m doing it because I love it.”

And because, as anyone who has a younger sibling knows, he has a kid brother knew exactly what he was doing all along.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Two fantabulous Irish groups will be joining forces on Saturday, April 12, for a show at the Sellersville Theater. Tempest, that crazy Norwegian-Irish fusion group from California that creates so much energy you’d think they were the aurora borealis, are headlining the show with local group, Burning Bridget Cleary, doing the warm-up (we’ve seen them and they’re perfectly capable of doing a heat-up). Tempest has a strong local following, and they’ll also be appearing on Sunday night at Brittingham’s Irish Pub in Lafayette Hill.

But before that: On Friday night, think about heading to Ardmore for AOH Comedy Night. No, not a bunch of Hibernians cracking each other up—real Irish comics such as Joey Callahan and Ed McGonigle (with the wonderful Oliver McElhone providing the music) all coming together for a good cause, the “Treasures for Our Troops” project which provides essentials and comfort items to soldiers overseas and financial help to the wounded and their families. A worthy cause, a lot of laughs, music—that’s the AOH for you.

And they’re doing it a second time this weekend. AOH Division 1 in Gloucester County, NJ, is holding a benefit for Project Children, a 33-year-old program that brings Protestant and Catholic children from Northern Ireland to the US for the summer so they can get to know one another away from any strife. There will be beef and beer, the Shantys and friends, and raffles.

Also on Friday night: New local group The Pointe will be releasing its first CD at a special performance at Molly Maguire’s in Phoenixville.

One thing you can take off your calendar is the Young at Heart Luncheon scheduled for Sunday at the Irish Center. That has been rescheduled for June. More details to come.

Sign up now to have breakfast on Friday, April 18, with Temple basektball coach Fran Dunphy, one of the all-time winningest coaches in Philadelphia Big 5 history. It’s sponsored by the Irish American Business Chamber & Network and will be held at The Pyramid Club in center city.

A portion of the admission of $35 for members/$40 for non-members will be donated to Coaches vs. Cancer which Dunphy chairs in this area with St. Joe’s coach Phil Martelli. Space is limited so call 215-772-3101 or email irish_event@iabcn.org to make your reservation.

Don’t forget Movie Thursdays at the Irish Center! This week’s film will be “The Snapper,” an hilarious adaptation of the Roddy Doyle novel (adapted by Roddy Doyle himself), starring the ubiquitous Colm Meaney and Tina Kellegher (Niamh from “Ballykissangel”). The plot: A young woman (Kellegher) becomes the talk of the town when she becomes pregnant and refuses to name the father, to the consternation of her Da (Meaney). This is one of Meaney’s best performances (and he’s had plenty).

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Start your weekend off right and go to the Irish Center on Friday night, April 4, to listen to a Frenchman play Irish music on his fiddle.

Patrick Ourceau was born in Paris in 1967, but the minute he first heard Irish music he was hooked. He had planned to learn the concertina, but he had such a hard time finding one in France that he switched to the fiddle, which he started learning at the age of 12. He moved to the US in 1989 to play Irish music in New York with the likes of Andy McGann, Paddy Reynolds, Brian Conway, and Tony DeMarco (whose last performance in Philly earned him three standing Os).

Ourceau is accompanied by Dublin guitarist Eamon O’Leary who also came to New York in the late 1980s.

Expect a toe-tapping, get-up-and-dance kind of evening.

Expect an equally rousing adventure if you join the Shamrocks Hurling Club on Friday night at the Irish Times in Philly’s Queen Village for a social. Learn about this great sport that’s exciting to watch and, we hear, equally exciting to play. The Shamrocks and other Gaelic Athletic Association sports teams play on summer Sundays at Cardinal Dougherty High School in Philadelphia and it’s always a blast. What’s hurling look like? Check out the photos.

Blackthorn fan alert: On Saturday night, your boys are playing a benefit for a very worthy cause—the Special Equestrians, which provides equestrian experiences for disabled children. Tickets are $25 and it starts at 7 PM at Finnigan’s Wake.

On Sunday, at Holy Cross Cemetery in Yeadon, the 69th Pennsylvania Volunteers, Irish Brigade, will provide the honor guard for the annual commemoration of the late Irish activist and Philadelphian Joseph McGarrity, who played a pivotal role in the Easter Uprising of 1919, which led to the independence of the Irish Republic. A social will follow at Galileo Hall, 401 Bailey Road, Yeadon, PA, across from the graveyard. Admission to the social is $25 and includes food, drink, and music by Declan McLoughlin.

Monday night offers you a chance to hear Kevin Burke and Cal Scott at Moorestown Community House in Moorestown, NJ. Burke has been called “one of the great living Celtic fiddlers” and you’ll find out why.

On Thursday, join www.irishphildelphia.com and WTMR radio host Marianne MacDonald for Thursday night at the movies at the Irish Center. We’re co-sponsoring this six-week series of Irish films that you need to see—and if you’ve seen them, you need to see again. (We’re on our third go-round with “The Boys and Girl from County Clare,” our first film; and we can recite most of the dialogue for our second, “The Secret of Roan Inish.”) Up next: The Butcher Boy, a gritty film about a young boy’s tumultuous childhood, based on a novel by Patrick McCabe that was shortlisted for the 1992 Booker Prize and won the 1992 Irish Times Irish Literature Prize for fiction. The bar will be open (host Marianne McDonald says you may need a drink with this one–read her review here) and Barry Club manager John Nolan will be serving up his soon-to-be world famous hand-cut fries.

And on Friday, the AOH Comedy Show—sold out last year!—goes on stage at the Palombaro Club in Ardmore. Proceeds from the fundraiser will go to “Treasures for our Troops,” a program that supplies American soldiers with daily essentials and comfort items, as well as providing financial assistance to wounded troops.

You know where to get all the details: Our calendar, which will be seen on the next season of “Dancing with the Stars” if it doesn’t make the “American Idol” cut.

People

Fighting Hunger, One Tray at a Time

Emily Semon and Miranda Shaw put the finishing touches on a mac and cheese meal.

Emily Semon and Miranda Shaw put the finishing touches on a mac and cheese meal.

How many people does it take to make 6,000 meals?

About 160, working side by side at long tables propped up by apple juice cans for about three hours.

I know that because I saw it for myself on Saturday, March 30, at the warehouse of Aid for Friends in Northeast Philadelphia, just off the Roosevelt Boulevard. Dozens of members of Delaware Valley Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH) divisions and their distaff LAOHs filled aluminum trays with slabs of meatloaf, scoops of mashed potatoes, mountains of peas, and puddles of creamy mac and cheese. The individual meals were frozen and will be distributed to the more than 2,000 needy shut-ins served every week by Aid for Friends, a 34-year-old organization that provides three meals a day and an empathetic listener to the homebound, mainly the frail elderly. And it’s all free.

Not for the AOHers, though. They collect money all year long–at parades, Irish events, fundraisers–to buy the food that they whip into meals once a year. And we’re talking enough to prepare more than 60,000 meals since the charity was founded 9 years ago by AOH Div. 87 member Bob Gessler, who was honored by the national organization this year for his efforts.

Though the program started in Philadelphia, the national AOH has adopted the Hibernian Hunger Project as an official AOH charity and it’s quickly spreading across the country from one division to the next.

It’s easy to see why. With Irish music blaring from a portable CD player, the volunteers, bustling in assembly lines, still took time to chat with their neighbors, laugh, and joke. It’s a little like a party–one of the ones that take place mostly in the kitchen.

“This is always a real feel-good kind of day,” said Donna Donnelly, Philadelphia County co-chairman of the organization, who was doing a lot of bustling herself. “But this was amazing. We had members, kids from local high schools, other volunteers. We’ve never been done this early.”

The meatloaf, however, was done before the side dishes ran out, so an executive decision had to be made: The last meals would be light mac and cheese suppers with lots of peas. Then the clean-up. It only took a few minutes to whip off the tablecloths, yank the apple juice cans that raised the folding tables to waist-high for better prep, and fold the tables and put them away. Around noon, the volunteers started to drift away, 6,000 trays of food stocked neatly in a walk-in freezer. It was done. Till next year.

You can learn more about the Hibernian Hunger Project here.

You can learn more about how to volunteer for Aid for Friends here.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Apparently some in the Irish community did not get the memo asking for a moratorium on all things Celtic for a respectful period after St. Patrick’s Day. After all, we need the time to get the green Jello coloring out of our hair and wean ourselves off the early morning Guinness.

But no, there’s no rest for the Irish. There’s plenty going on this week—and it’s quite varied.

For example, on Friday, March 28, you can hear Kevin Burke and Cal Scott—a popular duo in these parts—at the Cultural Center in West Chester. Or you can go the the AOH Div. 67-sponsored Irish Night Benefit for Our Lady’s House in Glenside, a home for unwed mothers and their babies. The Stanton Family singers and the Timoney Dancers are scheduled to perform. That starts at 7:30 PM.

But get a good night’s sleep, because the Ancient Order of Hibernians and the Ladies AOH are holding their big Cook-In on Saturday in northeast Philly for the Hibernian Hunger Project, a program that started in Philadelphia and has spread across the country. Their goal: To make and freeze 10,000 meals for the needy. All hands welcome.

On Saturday night, join the Donegal Association of Philadelphia as they welcome Bishop Boyce, the Bishop of Raphoe in County Donegal. He will say Mass at the Irish Center and talk about the Ards Friary in Donegal. Dinner will be available for purchase. Later that evening, the Tyrone Society will hold its annual ball at the Irish Center, starting at 9 PM with music and dancing. It’s their 99th—so expect big things for the centennial next year.

If you’re in Delaware, stop in at the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts in Dover to hear McDermott’s Handy perform as part of the In Harmony series.

Sunday is Allentown’s day to go green. It’s the last St. Patrick’s Day parade on the roster and opens with breakfast and a Mass.

It gets a little quiet until Thursday when the second in a series of six Irish films will be shown at The Irish Center. See our story here. The first one was way more fun than we’ve ever had at the Regal.

There are some terrific events scheduled for next weekend too. For details on all the Irish events in town, go to our calendar, which combines the good looks and intelligence of George Clooney with the zaniness and hot body of Jenny McCarthy (and aren’t you proud to know that they’re both Irish?).