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Denise Foley

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

C.J. Mills with singer Kim Killen at American Celtic Christmas.

C.J. Mills with singer Kim Killen at American Celtic Christmas.

This is the week for Irish Christmas shows, so if you’re not in the spirit yet, you have multiple opportunities to get your holiday act together. By the end of this week, your “bah humbug” bad mood won’t have a chance.

For the third year, An American Celtic Christmas—an extravaganza of traditional and modern Irish music—will command the stage at Bensalem High School for two shows on Saturday, December 6.

The annual holiday show was started by two local musicians, Frank Daly and C.J. Mills of Jamison Celtic Rock and Slainte, and has quickly become a tradition for many families in the Philadelphia area. Through their production company, American Paddy’s, they also produce The Philadelphia Fleadh, a multi-stage festival held in the spring in Pennypack Park.

Along with Jamison, this year’s lineup includes John Bryne, Raymond Coleman, Bob Hurst of the Bogside Rogues, and more than 100 other performers, including three local dance troupes.

Also on Saturday, Irish fiddler Kevin Burke will be performing solo at the Coatesville Cultural Center in Coatesville, and the Philadelphia Theatre Company’s production of John Patrick Shanley’s “Outside Mullingar” continues at the Suzanne Robert’s Theater in Philadelphia.

On Sunday, bring the kids to meet both Santa and the International Rose of Tralee, Maria Walsh, for a Christmas themed afternoon at The Saturday Club in Wayne.

Also on Sunday, the Divine Providence Village Rainbow Step Dancers, a group of developmentally disabled women, will hold their Christmas show at the Masonic Lodge in Prospect Park.

And in Philadelphia, the top trad group, Lunasa, will be performing its Christmas show with vocalist Karan Casey, formerly of Solas, at the Zellerbach Theater on Sunday evening.

On Monday, the Irish Immigration Center and the Irish Center are hosting their annual Christmas luncheon for seniors at the Irish Center. Copies of the Immigration Center’s fundraising calendar—in which the seniors recreate scenes from 12 popular Irish movies—will be available for sale.

On Tuesday, December 9, two popular Irish musicians – Phil Coulter and Andy Cooney—join forces for an evening of Christmas music at the Keswick Theater in Glenside.

On Thursday, December 11, Oisin McDiarmada and his group, Teada, are bringing their popular “Irish Christmas in America” to the Sellersville Theater.

Also on Thursday, the Irish American Business Chamber and Network is having its 12th Night Before Christmas part at LeMeridien Philadelphia Hotel on Arch Street in Philadelphia.

And next Sunday, December 14, popular Irish performer Cahal Dunne brings his Christmas show—and likely some interesting outfits and lots of laughs—to the Irish Center.

News, People, Photo Essays

New Mary from Dungloe Chosen

The new Mary from Dungloe, Shannon Alexander, serenaded by Vince Gallagher.

The new Mary from Dungloe, Shannon Alexander, serenaded by Vince Gallagher.

A 20-year-old chemical biology student at St. Joseph’s University and a capella singer was crowned the 2015 Mary from Dungloe at the Donegal Association of Philadelphia Ball on Saturday, November 30, at the Irish Center in Philadelphia.

Shannon Alexander of Sellersville will compete in Dungloe (Dun-low), County Donegal, in July 2015 at the 48th annual pageant, part of a week=long festival, which draws women of Irish descent from all over the world. (The current Mary from Dungloe, Kate Lindsay, is from Sydney, Australia.)

It will be the first trip to Ireland for Shannon, who plans to work in disease and drug research after graduation. Her grandmother was born in Donegal, and her grandfather in Galway. She’s a member of City Belles, St. Joseph University’s only a capella group (think “Pitch Perfect”).

Shannon was crowned by outgoing Mary, Kelly Devine, a public relations and social media account coordinator for a PR firm in Philadelphia. She is a graduate of St. Joseph’s University with a degree in food marketing and is competitive Irish dancer and teacher with the Coyle School of Irish Dance.

It was a packed house for the annual Donegal Ball and dancing went on into the wee hours to the sounds of the John “Lefty Kelly Band. Mary Crossan, a past president of the Donegal Association, planned the ball and grand marshal was John Durning.

We were there and took lots of photos so you can feel like you were there too.

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How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Dancers like these are competing in Philly this weekend.

Dancers like these are competing in Philly this weekend.

It being Thanksgiving weekend, downtown Philadelphia is alive with the sound of Irish music. The Mid-Atlantic Oireachtas (o-rock-tas), the regional Irish dance championships, draws dancers from Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey, and Delaware to Philly each year for three days of hard-fought competition. It’s fun to watch even if you don’t have a dancer competing. Actually, I think it’s more fun if you don’t–it must be tense for the moms and dads.

Next weekend, American Celtic Christmas comes for the third time to Bensalem High School. Featuring Jamison, John Byrne, Raymond Coleman, Bob Hurst of the Bogside Rogues, singer Kim Killen, and more than 100 dancers and other performers.

The John Patrick Shanley play, “Outside Mullingar,” is continuing its run at the Suzanne Roberts Theatre on South Broad Street in Philadelphia.

Also continuing: the going-out-of-business sale at McKenna’s Irish Shop in Havertown, where new discounts are in effect.

Barlyejuice is playing the World Café Live on Saturday night at 8 PM. Jamison is at Curran’s Tacony starting at 9:30 PM Saturday.

On Sunday, Gabriel Donohue, John Byrne and other musicians will be playing live in studio for the last pledge drive of the year for WTMR’s “Come West Along the Road” Irish Radio Hour, which starts at noon. The station is at 800 AM and is available online.

On Wednesday, Paul Byrom of Celtic Thunder will be on stage at the Sellersville Theatre where he’ll be performing tunes from his holiday album, “I’ll Be Home for Christmas,” to get you in the mood.

On Friday, Carbon Leaf, the Virginia-based indie band known for its folk- and Celtic-infused rock, will be at World Café Live.

Also on Friday, the City Theater Company is producing James Joyce’s “The Dead” at The Black Box at OperaDelaware Studios in Wilmington, DE.

Along with An American Celtic Christmas next weekend, keep three other events on your radar:

First-rate trad fiddler Kevin Burke will be performing solo at the Coatsville cultural Society in Coatesville on Saturday night.

The Philadelphia Rose Center’s Christmas Celebration on December 7 at The Saturday Club in Wayne, featuring arts and crafts, music by Karen Boyce McCollum and “The Lads” (Pat Close and Pat Kildea), and a special visit from Santa who is sure to be upstaged by International Rose of Tralee, Maria Walsh, because, well, she’s charming and she can do that.

The Divine Providence Village Rainbow Irish Step Dancers, a group of developmentally disabled women who live at the Catholic institution in Elverson, will hold their Christmas recital at the Masonic Lodge in Prospect Park on Sunday, Dec. 7, from 2:30 to 5 PM. Doors open at 1:30 for a baked goods sale and Santa will be available to hear your wish list from 1:30 to 2:15, when he’s expected elsewhere.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Catch John Byrne and his band this weekend in Lancaster.

Catch John Byrne and his band this weekend in Lancaster.

A new festival—new to us, anyway–joins the Celtic scene. The Rose and Shamrock Celtic Festival is this weekend in Lancaster (at Tellus360 and The Ware Center) and features some Philly stars, including the John Byrne Band and the Birmingham Six, as well as Burning Bridget Cleary, Charlie Zahm, the Kilmaine Saints and more.

There will be workshops at The Ware Center , including how to play the bodhran and the tin whistle, as well as lectures on Duffy’s Cut and poetry readings. Of course, there are vendors (Christmas is coming!), food and drink.

Speaking of Christmas, McKenna’s Irish Shop in Havertown is closing and every week stock dwindles and prices go down. Make sure you stop in before it’s gone forever!

On Monday, join Maureen Faulkner, widow of slain Philly police officer Daniel Faulkner, at the Irish Pub in Philadelphia for a fundraiser for the Fraternal Order of Police Survivors Fund. Maureen will be one of the guest bartenders.

The night before Thanksgiving (Wednesday) I will be baking and cooking. Others will be performing, including the Shantys at Paddywhacks on Welsh Road in Philly; Slainte at Curran’s in Bensalem, and Enter the Haggis will be in concert at the Sellersville Theater.

On Friday, the play, “Outside Mullingar,” by John Patrick Shanley, opens on stage at the Suzanne Roberts Theatre on South Broad Street in Philadelphia, a production of the Philadelphia Theatre Company. Use the code “irishphilly” to get a $10 discount on every full-priced ticket. It’s very likely you know John Patrick Shanley’s work: he wrote Doubt, which was a movie starring Meryl Streep, and Moonstruck, the Cher-Nicholas Cage classic. Check our calendar for dates and times.

On Saturday November 29, the Donegal Ball and the Mary from Dungloe selection takes place at The Irish Center. (I’m a Mary judge this year, so I hope to see some of you there!) Also on Saturday: Barleyjuice is at World Café Live, the Broken Shillelaghs are at McMichael’s Pub in Gloucester City; and Jamison is at Curran’s in Tacony.

And when we at irishphiladelphia.com give our thanks for our many blessings on Thursday, we’ll be including you.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

These two remarkable musicians will be joined by All-Ireland fiddler Dylan Foley in concert on Saturday.

These two remarkable musicians will be joined by All-Ireland fiddler Dylan Foley in concert on Saturday.

After a jam-packed week last week, this one is relatively tame, but still filled with some wonderful ways to be Irish.

All-Ireland fiddle champ Dylan Foley of The Yanks will be performing at a Philadelphia Ceili Group house concert on Saturday night with two topnotch trad musicians, Rose Conway Flanagan from Cherish the Ladies, and flute player Laura Byrne.

On Sunday night, they’ll be dancing the night away to the Theresa Flanagan Band at McGillcuddy’s in Upper Darby. Unless they’re in Wilmington, in which case they’ll be dancing the night away at the ceili at Wilmington’s Irish Center.

On Tuesday, join genealogist John McDevitt at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby for more tips and tricks to finding your Irish ancestors, including the ones that don’t want to be found.

On Friday, St. Patrick’s Church in Norristown is holding an oldies night hosted by the AOH/LAOH Notre Dame Division 1. You don’t have to be an oldie to go—this term refers to the music. There will be food, beer, wine and setups, all for $25, most of which will go to local charities, because that’s what the AOH/LAOH does. We love them for it.

A heads up for next Monday, November 24: Maureen Faulkner, widow of the late Daniel Faulkner, who was killed in the line of duty, will be guest bartending at The Irish Pub on Walnut Street in Philadelphia to help raise money for the Fraternal Order of Police Survivors Fund. Great place, great cause.

Check our calendar for more details and for any late-breaking events. Or join our Facebook Irish Philadelphia group, where we post updates. We’re approaching 5,000 members. Shouldn’t you be one of them?

News, People

Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Grand Marshal Announced

Kathy McGee Burns

Kathy McGee Burns

The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association carefully matched its parade theme to its selection of grand marshal this year. The parade will honor families, and its grand marshal, Kathy McGee Burns, has a huge one: She’s the mother of nine children.

But there’s far more to Burns than motherhood on a grand scale. She sits on the boards of most of the Irish organizations in Philadelphia—and has headed most of them at one time or another. She has served as president of the Donegal Association, the parade board, is currently the president of the Delaware Valley Hall of Fame (which inducted her into the hall in 2012), and serves on the boards of the Irish Center, the Claddagh Fund, and the St. Malachy’s School Advisory Board. She was the driving force behind the direct mail campaign to raise money for the Irish Center this year and has thrown her support—financial and otherwise—behind the Duffy’s Cut project, whose board she now sits on. In 2010, she was one of the first recipients of the Inspirational Irish Women awards.

Read more about the woman who will be leading the parade here.

The parade will be held rain or shine on Sunday, March 15.

News, People

Four Inducted Into Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame

Musician Luke Jardel holds a photo of Emmett's Tavern while Emmett Ruane shows off his new white apron, a gift from Jardel.

Musician Luke Jardel holds a photo of Emmett’s Tavern while Emmett Ruane shows off his new white apron, a gift from Jardel.

Emmett Ruane, whose Emmett’s Place tavern in Philadelphia gave birth to the careers of countless Irish musicians and provided a dance floor for countless Irish dancers, was one of four people inducted into the Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame on Sunday night.

Joining Ruane at the head table at the Irish Center were Donegal-born Jim McGill, former president of the Philadelphia Ceili Group and the Donegal Association, whose daughter Rosaleen pointed out was her—and many other people’s—first introduction to the Irish heritage and culture he loves; and Frank and Bill Watson, twin brothers who persisted against all odds and donated hours of their time and thousands of dollars of their own money to keep the memory of 57 Irish immigrants who died violently at a railroad site called Duffy’s cut more than 130 years ago, victims of disease, fear, and intolerance.

The first Commodore John Barry Award was given posthumously to Barry himself, the Wexford-born Revolutionary War hero who is considered the father of the US Navy. He lived in Philadelphia and is buried in the graveyard of Old St. Mary’s Church, near Independence Hall and the large statue of Barry that sits behind. Accepting the award in Barry’s name was Barbara Jones, Irish Consul General in New York, who is from Wexford.

The award was first proposed by Frank Hollingsworth, a member of the Hall of Fame committee, who traces his ancestors back to Wexford.

More than 300 people attended the event, which is held annually at The Irish Center.
See our photos below.

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News, People

Irish Immigration Center Seniors Star in Their Own Calendar

Declan Forde in the iconic scene from "Waking Ned Devine."

Declan Forde in the iconic scene from “Waking Ned Devine.”

Don’t order that Sierra Club calendar for 2015. The Irish Immigration Center of Greater Philadelphia has something better hitting the lucrative calendar market this year.

The Center’s full color 2015 calendar features photographs of more than 20 of the regulars at the weekly senior luncheon acting out iconic scenes from 12 popular Irish films of the last 60-some years, from “The Quiet Man” to “Once.”

The calendar idea was inspired by a similar calendar of classic films such as “Titanic” and “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” that were recreated by seniors at a German retirement center last year, says Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Immigration Center, located in Upper Darby. “I thought it was an excellent idea and lots of fun. I thought it was something we could do, but with Irish films.”

The first person she approached was Declan Forde,79, a self-described “Cork rebel” who now lives in Havertown. “I spoke to Declan, who plays the character on the motorbike in ‘Waking Ned Devine,’ and told him I needed him to get naked for the Immigration Center, he said, ‘Name the date,’” says Lyons, laughing.

You can see Forde half-naked—just shirtless—on a motorbike on the October 2015 calendar page. Husband-and-wife Jim and Kathleen McCaffery appear as actors Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova from the sweet Irish romance “Once,” strolling down Grafton Street, which is played in the calendar by Elfreth’s Alley in Philadelphia. Tom McArdle was cast as the John Wayne character, Sean Thornton, and redheaded Kathleen Murtagh as Mary Kate Danaher, played by Maureen O’Hara, in the movie, “The Quiet Man.” The “cottage” was portrayed by the Fireside Room of the Irish Center in Mt. Airy. And Barney Boyce donned a brown wig to be Darby O’Gill joking around with the leprechaun, played by Jimmy Meehan in crown, green cape, and white knee socks, from “Darby O’Gill and the Little People”—a photo that required a little perspective trickery.

The Immigration Center partnered with www.irishphiladelphia.com to produce the calendar, which is on sale now online.

“What we think makes our calendar a standout is that we didn’t have a large budget, green screens, or bought costumes,” says Lyons. “We took the idea of the film and interpreted it the best we could with Philadelphia scenes. Where would this have happened in Philadelphia? So it really has a Philly flavor to it.”

Along with Elfreth’s Alley and the Irish Center, the latter which provided the back drop for “Darby O’Gill,” “The Quiet Man,” “The Field,” “My Left Foot,” and “The Commitments,” the photos were shot at McGillin’s Olde Ale House on Drury Lane in Center City (“Michael Collins”), Valley Green in Fairmount Park (“Waking Ned Devine”), the Italian Market (“Agnes Browne”), Harrowgate Gym in Kensington (“The Boxer”) and the Upper Darby Police Department (“The Guard”).

Many of the locations even have an Irish connection. “McGillin’s is the oldest Irish pub in the city,” says Lyons. “The Upper Darby police station—there are plenty of Irish there. If you look at the census, most of the original residents of Elfreth’s Alley were Irish people who worked as weavers and linen workers. And the Italian market? Well, a lot of our people married their people!”

The Irish community also helped. The seniors created their own costumes and props with the help of Leslie Alcock, the social worker from County Carlow who runs the senior programs at the center. (She’s listed as “key grip” in the calendar credits, but she was also prop girl, lighting director, and senior wrangler, among other things.)

AOH/LAOH Div 25’s Pearse and Liz Kerr connected the Center with Charlie Sgrillo of the Harrowgate Boxing Club to arrange to photograph Pete McEneany in his role of Daniel Day-Lewis in “The Boxer” at the club in Kensington which regularly hosts Irish boxers in the summer in AOH-sponsored bouts. Sgrillo even taped McEneany’s hands to make the photo look more authentic.

Gary O’Neill of Drexel Hill responded to an Irish Philadelphia Facebook request for a motor scooter for the “Waking Ned Devine” scene. One Saturday, he hitched his cherry red, nonfunctional Honda scooter to the bed of his truck and drove it to Valley Green where he, his daughter, Eve, and friend, Brian McCaul, unloaded it and set it up. “We were going to use Declan’s son’s motorcycle, but Declan has two artificial hips and he was not getting a leg over a motorbike,” explains Lyons. He had no trouble with the scooter, though taking his shirt off on a cool autumn day was a little daunting.

Besides making some money for the Center’s senior programs, Lyons hopes that the calendar will make people think a little differently about the elderly. “There’s a stereotype that older people are just sitting down in wooly slippers waiting to die,” she says. “Working at the Irish Immigration Center, I have another view. If they were devils at 15, they’re still devils when they’re 75 and heaven help us, they worse because they don’t care anymore what people think!”

The making of the calendar proved to be so much fun—“we laughed through the whole thing,” says Lyons– that now more of the seniors want to be in next year’s production, theme still undetermined. “We might have to be doing some large crowd scenes,” she laughs.

The Irish Immigration Center 2015 Calendar sells for $20 ($15 for seniors; $4.95 postage) with discounts available for bulk purchases. You can purchase yours from the Irish Immigration Center starting on Monday, or pre-order at the online store.

Check out our photos below–some are actual calendar photos, others, outtakes from the shoots.

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