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Denise Foley

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Singer Briege Murphy will be performing at the Ceili Group Festival.

Singer Briege Murphy will be performing at the Ceili Group Festival.

The Philadelphia Ceili Group’s 40th Annual Irish Traditional Music Festival continues on Saturday with loads of workshops—you can even pick up a few choice words in Irish or learn to play the bodhran. Plus there’s music all day, culminating in a concert with the hot new group, FullSet, along with Sean Keane and his band.

Best news of all—lunch and dinner is available from the Irish Coffee Shop in Upper Darby. If you’ve ever had their food you know you’re in for a treat.

Speaking of festivals, Irish Weekend in N. Wildwood starts on Thursday this week with a concert at Wildwood Catholic High School with All-Ireland fiddler Haley Richardson and Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfetones and music, music, music all weekend long both on the street and in the local pubs. There’s a Mass, a pipe band competition, a street run, and loads of vendors.

On Saturday, Gloucester City, NJ, is throwing its 8th annual Shamrock Festival at Kind Street Marina and Proprietor’s Park on the Delaware with music by The Broken Shillelagh, The Misty Dew’rs and Clancy’s Pistol. The Broken Shillelaghs will be will be playing at Tavern on the Edge in Gloucester City later that evening.

Also on Saturday, the second annual Shane Kelly Memorial Soccer Showcase takes place at Northeast High School. The proceeds benefit the Shane Kelly Memorial Fun which last year provided four $1,000 scholarships to local soccer players. Kelly was an AOH member who was killed during a mugging in 2011.

On Sunday, the John Byrne Band will be headlining at the Burlington County Arts in the Park event at Historic Smithville Park in Smithville, NJ.

On Friday, don’t miss Quizzo Night, a fundraiser for The Irish Center. Dozens of teams will be competing for prizes with their knowledge of trivia. The event takes place at The Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia.

Also on Friday, Blackthorn starts its stint at LaCosta Lounge in Sea Isle City.

Music

Everybody Sing!

Donegal sean nos singer Dominic Mac Giolla Bhride will also be performing tonight.

Donegal sean nos singer Dominic Mac Giolla Bhride will also be performing tonight.

Singer’s Night, the first event of the annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Irish Music Festival, honors the late Frank Malley, longtime organizer of the festival of traditional music and singer. He would have loved Thursday night’s concerts which featured singers such as Armagh’s Briege Murphy, Donegal sean nos singer Dominic Mc Giolla Bhride, Drogheda’s Gavin Harding, and local leading lights Marian Makins, Rosaleen McGill, Matt Ward, Teresa Kane, Ellen Tepper, Miles Thompson, Jen Schonwald, Wendy Fahr and Frank Malley’s daughter Courtney Malley.

The festival continues tonight with a Rambling House event hosted by Gabriel Donohue and featuring musicians from the group Beoga and others, along with a cdili dance in the ballroom with McGillians and Friends..

On Saturday, the John Kelly Memorial Session with the Philadelphia Ceili Band starts at 11 AM, with workshops on Irish language, calligraphy, set dancing, Irish singing with Katie Else of Riverdance, a bodhran with Eamon Moloney, and others. Food will be provided by the Irish Coffee Shop of Upper Darby (the real thing).

On the Fireside Stage from 12:30 PM till 4:30 PM you’ll find The Converse Trio Plus One, a group of talented young musicians, The Jameson Sisters, Dominic Mac Giolla Bhride, The Philadelphia Ceili Band, and the Cummins School of Irish Dancers.

The Next Generation–a group of kids who practice at the Irish Center–will be performing during the dinner hour, also catered by the Irish Coffee Shop.

The grand finale will be an evening concert featuring the Cummins School of Irish Dance, Sean Keane with Bill Cooley and Eamon O’Rourke, and FullSet, a hot new group from Ireland. Following that, a traditional Irish music session takes place–bring your instrument and join in.

View our photos of Singers’ Night.

News, People

Meet Maria Walsh, the 2014 International Rose of Tralee

Maria Walsh of Philadelphia, 2014 International Rose of Tralee

Maria Walsh of Philadelphia, 2014 International Rose of Tralee

Here are a few things you probably don’t know about the new International Rose of Tralee, Maria Walsh, the first Rose from Philadelphia:

After emigrating with her family from Boston to Shrule, County Mayo at the age of seven, she grew up dreaming of becoming the Rose of Tralee, though she never thought it would happen, up until the second, while standing on the stage at The Dome in Tralee, she heard announcer Daithi O’Se say the word, “Philadelphia” after an interminably long drum roll. The Irish bookies had her pegged the winner from the start, but even her family didn’t bet on her.

She once appeared in an Irish reality show in which 40 people were vying for position on an Irish football team. “I was second to the last to get kicked off but then I tore my groin muscle and couldn’t play. I had an Oscar worthy moment when I cried on national TV–and I don’t cry,” confesses the 27-year-old who combines delicate Audrey Hepburn good looks with a wicked Irish sense of humor.

Her ease and naturalness in any situation may have played a large part in winning her the Rose of Tralee crown, but it worried her handlers—and her—just a bit. Her language can be, well, salty. “Before I went out on stage they told me, ‘Don’t swear, and talk slower,’” she recalled this week, sitting, crownless (though she volunteered to go get it) in the atrium near her office at the fashion house Anthropologie, where she’s the studio manager, in Philadelphia’s Navy Yard. No F-bombs were dropped, to everyone’s relief, including hers.  As she came off the stage, she said teasingly, “‘Did I swear?” and they said no, and I said, ‘grand!’” She laughs.

The Rose isn’t the only honor she’s won that brought her fame. In 2005, she was named “Hostess of the Year” for Ireland’s No Name Club, an organization founded in 1978 for young people 15 and older who want a nonalcoholic alternative to pub culture to meet and socialize. Since the age of 12, Walsh has been part of the Pioneers, a Catholic organization whose members take a pledge not to drink.

She tans. She credits her mother’s Connemara roots. One of four children of Vincent and Noreen Walsh (who, like her daughter, was born in the US but grew up in Ireland), she shares her dark, Black Irish skin with her mother and youngest brother, while their two other siblings inherited red hair and freckles. “They’re the typical white Irish people,” she says laughing.

She once wanted to become a nurse “so that I could help people.”

One of the Rose commitments she’s looking forward to the most is spending a week in Calcutta with the Hope Foundation, an Irish charity that provides shelter, education and medical aid to the city’s poorest children—the homeless. She’ll also be going to Chernobyl with her fellow Roses and escorts to work for a week with abandoned and orphaned children, most of whom have mental and physical disabilities.

No, it’s not just the Miss America Pageant with an Irish accent, and Maria Walsh is no ordinary pageant winner. She’s a funny, confident, gutsy woman who plays Gaelic football, loves banter, doesn’t pass up a chance to do volunteer work (“I still get roped into collecting at the church gate for some charity when I go home,” she says), and, until she fell in love with a woman two years ago, never really thought much about being gay. “I dated boys up right up until that, but this was the first time that I found someone I was willing to work my life around,” she says simply. (She’s still close to her now ex, who lives in Ireland.)

She still doesn’t think much about it—much like her Philly supporters–and probably wouldn’t talk about it except that after her win, she got a phone call from a reporter the Irish Sun newspaper who said she wanted to talk to Walsh about “your sexual orientation.”

She still doesn’t know how the reporter found out, though she’s not particularly secretive about it. “Maybe they found something on social media sites—I don’t know,” she says. She hadn’t discussed it with anyone in the Rose organization because “it just never came up, nor should it. I identify with a lot of things, with Pioneers, with volunteer work. . .what am I supposed to say? ‘Oh, by the way, I’m gay?’ It was not a thing for me. Why should it be?”

The Rose organization didn’t blink either. “They don’t get nearly enough credit for being ahead of their time,” Walsh says. In recent years, the 55-year-old Rose of Tralee Festival has increasingly been called “irrelevant” by social commentators, though, after this year’s event, the critics may backpedal on that one. The Rose organizers gave her the go-ahead to talk to the reporter and, ultimately, she was happy with the article and the subsequent mini-storm of stories that followed.

“My biggest concern was this would become a negative issue for the Rose of Tralee organization or the Philly Rose Center. But there was a very positive response. Basically, what people have been saying is “what a great ambassador for the Rose, fair play to her,’” Walsh says.

Her parents already knew and although her Dad has expressed some trepidation for her, they were more than accepting. “My Dad said he was worried about my future, how this would affect my career, whether I’d be able to get married, how I might be hurt because of how I chose to live. He said, ‘You’re choosing a hard life, Maria,’ and I said, I’m choosing my life.”

She wasn’t worried about their reaction. Maria Walsh is her parents’ daughter. Her mother was her Pioneer role model, and both parents are heavily involved in community work. Her father helped expand the town’s community center at largely his own expense when grants fell through; her mother is the chairperson of the local ladies club (“so I got roped into tea mornings all the time,” Walsh says laughing).

Volunteer work may be in the Walsh genome, but she also credits her upbringing for giving her confidence to strike out on her own path from early on, whether it was eschewing alcohol, moving to the States for work, or falling in love with a woman. “I grew up in a great family atmosphere,” says Walsh. “If I wanted to do something, my parents would never say, no you can’t do that. It would be ‘what time?’ and ‘where?’ and they’d be there. They’ve always supported what’s best for me.”

The sudden death of her cousin Teresa in a car accident several years ago brought profound sadness—she was only 19—but has since become a source of strength. In her cousin’s honor, Walsh had three little ladybugs—what the Irish call ladybirds, and something her cousin loved—tattooed behind her ear. And not long after, with some friends, she went to Eddie’s Tattoo on Fourth Street to have the words, “The trouble is—you think you have time” tattooed on her forearm. It reminds her, she says, to carpe diem, to seize the day.

“It’s because of Teresa,” she says. “It’s often difficult to find the time for everything, for work, friendship, love. You’re always saying, oh, I’ll do it tomorrow. I even say it, even though I have this to remind me. The truth is, you don’t always have tomorrow and that can help make big decisions easier to make. That’s why I entered the Rose of Tralee. It’s why I try to make the most out of every day.”

And to make the most out of the opportunities that come her way. She wasn’t, she admits, thinking that she might become a strong role model for other young women like her when she sat down with a reporter to talk about her sexuality. But it’s what’s happened. “There are a lot of young people out there who are struggling with their identity. I’ve gotten a lot of letters and I just got one recently from a young woman who thanked me for coming out publically because it made it a lot easier for her parents to understand her,” she says.

As she told the RTE’s Ryan Tubridy, host of “The Late Late Show” last week: “If I could help one young person come out and deal with it in a positive way, then my year as the Rose of Tralee will already have been completed.”

But she hopes she’s a role model in other ways too, and that also appears to be happening. Case in point: She was on the plane on the way home from Ireland last Sunday after appearing on the “Late, Late Show,” when a little Irish girl came up to her and asked her if she was the Rose of Tralee. “She said, ‘Can I have a photo with you?’ I said, ‘ yes, give me a couple of seconds, where are you sitting?’ So I got my crown and sash and went to where she was sitting. She was literally shaking with excitement. I gave her my crown and my sash to put on. And I asked her, ‘So, do you want to be the Rose of Tralee when you grow up?’ And she said, ‘Oh yes, now that I’ve met you.’”

Walsh smiles. Mission accomplished: One childhood dream realized, and successfully passed along to someone else’s childhood.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Bob Hurst will bring his Bogside Rogues to Canstatters this weekend.

Bob Hurst will bring his Bogside Rogues to Canstatters this weekend.

Canstatters in the Northeast is hosting a three-day Irish fest featuring a terrific lineup of performers, including Jamison, the Bogside Rogues, the Screaming Orphans, Celtic Connection, the Kilmaine Saints, the Highland Rovers and the Sean Fleming Band. The event starts with boxing tonight, with the Harrowgate fighters of Philadelphia facing the Holy Family boxers of Belfast.

Holy Family Boxers—doesn’t exactly inspire terror, does it? But I hear they’re fierce.

You Trentonians and other Jersey folk, the Mercer County Irish Fest takes place this weekend at Mercer County Park, with the Bantry Boys, the Broken Shillelaghs, Gaelic Mishap, Ballycastle, the Celtic Martins, Birmingham 6 and Jamison Celtic Rock.

Speaking of the Broken Shillelaghs, they’re also at the Dubh Linn Square Pub in Bordentown on Saturday.

Also this Saturday, the film, “A Terrible Beauty,” will be screened at International House in Philadelphia. The film takes a sharp focus on events leading up to the 1916 Easter Rising and is produced and directed by the brothers who did the film on Duffy’s Cut. The showing is a fundraiser for the Irish Immigration Center. For more information, read our story.

Next week, mark your calendars starting on Thursday night for the 40th Annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival of Irish Music and Dance at the Irish Center, featuring a singer’s night, a rambling house (a variety show), and a concert featuring the hot new Irish group, Full Set, and Sean Keane. Gabriel Donohue is running the Rambling House event and he’s been making noises on Facebook about bringing in some surprise guests to delight and amaze—though we can’t imagine anyone more delightful and amazing than last year’s guest, Joanie Madden of Cherish the Ladies. That was one for the books.

Coming up: Quizzo Night on September 19, a special benefit for the Irish Center Fundraising Campaign (which is only about $10,000 away from its $50,000 goal, thank you very much!). Teams will be competing for prizes, like restaurant gift certificates and t-shirts, and expect some tough competition and laughter at the losers’ expense.

Later this month: Bethlehem’s Celtic Classic and the Irish Fall Festival in North Wildwood. One features big burly men who toss their cabers, the other, big burly men who toss their cookies. Just checking to see who reads to the end. Have an Irish week!

People

A Second Homecoming for the New Rose

Rose of Tralee Maria Walsh--a definite kid magnet.

Rose of Tralee Maria Walsh–a definite kid magnet.

The cheers that rose when the International Rose of Tralee, Maria Walsh, walked in the front door of St. Declan’s Irish-American Pub on Walnut Street in Philadelphia last Saturday were only partly for her. The Mayo-Kerry semi-final Gaelic football match was on three TVs and Mayo had just scored.

“Oh,” said Walsh, a rabid Mayo supporter, as she craned her neck around to see the screen. “Maybe I should just walk in and out the door a few more times so they score.”

Sadly, that wouldn’t have helped. Mayo lost to Kerry which will be facing Donegal in the all-Irelands this year. But that didn’t dim the festivities for long. The crowd had come not just to watch the game but to cheer Walsh, the first Philadelphia Rose of Tralee ever to bring home the international crown.

Children clamored to sit on her lap while she watched the game, wearing the jersey given to her by the Mayo team after she attended a game during Rose week. Everyone wanted their photo taken with her, including a group of tourists from Tyrone who gathered under the tri-color—the Republic’s flag—flapping in the breeze outside the pub, which is owned by Irish immigrant Aidan Travers and American Marty Spellman, whose daughter, Elizabeth was the 2012 Philadelphia Rose.

A large contingent of the Philadelphia Mayo Association was also there—and again, not just to watch the game. That’s because Walsh grew up in Shrule, County Mayo, after being born and raised for the first seven years of her life in Boston. The Mayo Association has adopted her as one of their own, which she referenced when she made her first public speech as the new Rose, standing behind the bar with a mike in her hand.

Here’s what she had to say, which made them love her even more:

“Three years ago I moved to this great city of brotherly love and I didn’t know a soul. And somehow, a day later, I ended up on the Notre Dames [Ladies Gaelic] Football team, because, like all great Irish, they find you as soon as you enter a new city. There’s a GPS tracker I think on every Irish person that leaves the homeland.

“I fell in love with the city and fell in love with the Irish community and kind of fell into the Rose family here and they welcomed me with open arms. Of course, the Mayo Association. . . I believe I became a member but I didn’t know I became a member. Actually I think [member] Attracta O’Malley is down there asking me to pay my membership.

From all the homecomings I’ve had, for anyone watched me on TV, I have a bit of an identity crisis: Born in Boston, raised in Shrule, County Mayo, did a short stint in New York, and then I found my home, my favorite home in Philadelphia. A lot of people are claiming me, but it was a fantastic honor to hear Philadelphia being called Tuesday night last. This is home.”

Walsh had to fly back to Ireland this week to appear on the RTE program, “The Late, Late Show,” and after that, a whirlwind of other activities will take the Rose around the country and throughout the Delaware Valley during her year’s reign. To see her on Irish TV, where it’s expected that she will talk about the interview in the Irish Sun in which she told a reporter she is gay, go to the online streaming site of RTE on Friday September 5 at 4:30 PM.

View our photos of Maria’s homecoming party here.

 

News, People, Photo Essays

Happy Redhead Days!

Courtney Vincent of Upper Dublin.

Courtney Vincent of Upper Dublin.

This weekend in the Dutch city of Breda, redheads from 80 countries will gather for Redhead Days, now an annual congruence of natural redheads that started unintentionally in 2005 when an artist, looking for models for paintings of redheads inspired by the redhead paintings of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Gustav Klimt, put an ad in the local newspaper.

From 150 gingers (he only needed 15), the festival has grown to more than 7,000 redheads of every hue, from strawberry blond to carrot red to copper to auburn. This weekend the international gingers will party, compare hair color, consult with hair and fashion experts, have their photos taken, and enjoy the exhibit called “Red Hot,” photographs of sexy red-haired men shot by British photographer Thomas Knight. (It’s in New York this week. Here’s a preview.)

I had my own redhead festival of sorts over the last six weeks, photographing redheads like Courtney Vincent, above, all over the Delaware Valley. You can see our Ginger Snaps here or below. (There’s text and more photos on our flickr site.)

Why such an interest in a hair color that occurs in just about two percent of the world population? Well, it’s just that. Red is rare. If you’re Irish or Scottish, you may find that hard to believe since there are more redheads in the Celtic population than most others. The statistics are conflicting and confusing, but in general about 12 percent of the Irish and 15 percent of Scots have red hair. By one estimate, as many as 80 percent of people carry the recessive gene for red hair, even if there are no redheads in their families. So that Internet rumor that circulates every few years that redheads are going to become extinct? Unlikely.

Redheads are like the original X-men—mutants. The hair color is caused by a series of mutations of the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) gene, which acts as a switch between red and yellow pigments and black and brown pigment. (If you’re looking for yours, it’s on chromosome 16.) Because it’s a recessive gene, both parents need to carry it for you to have red hair.

But the trait isn’t limited to the Celts. Two of the earliest known redheads were a 43,000-year-old Neanderthal from Spain and a 50,000-year-old Neanderthal from Italy. There were redheads among the ancient Greeks, and the Romans encountered plenty of redheads when they were conquering southern and western Germany, where they still abound.

While largely a European phenomenon, random redheads are found in the Middle East, Central Asia, and in China. A tribe called the Udmurts, living in the Volga Basin in Russia, are the only non-western Europeans to have a high incidence of red hair (10 percent of the population).

No matter where they think they come from, all redheads share a common ancestry that can be traced back to a single Y-chromosomal haplogroupL R1b. What’s a haplogroup? Glad you asked. Think of it as like a big clan. And if you have red
hair, you’re part of it. Because it’s linked to a Y chromosome, the ancestor you all share is a man. (Possibly those Neanderthals mentioned above, but more recenly a Norwegian: recent studies suggest that Vikings may have been involved in the spread of red.)

There are a few other things you redhead share, besides the pale skin and freckles.

About those freckles. They’re just nature’s way of saying you’re at risk for skin cancer. Even worse, that MC1R gene predisposes you to melanoma, the most lethal of all the skin cancers. Harvard researchers found that along with red hair, the gene may make redheads more susceptible to the damaging effects of ultraviolet rays of the sun, in part by getting in the way of the cancer-protective effects of a tumor-suppressor gene called PTEN.

One thing that may protect you is your pain tolerance. You don’t have much. You may avoid getting a sunburn because studies show that redheads feel pain more acutely than people with other hair colors. You’re especially sensitive to the cold. Scientists believe that the ginger gene causes another gene that determines cold sensitivity to become overactive.

Anecdotal evidence—that’s just unconfirmed reports from the field—suggests that redheads may need more anesthetic when undergoing surgical or dental procedures. In one small study, a researcher gave electric shocks to women of many different hair colors (yes, that’s how they do it) and found that the redheads needed about 20 percent more anesthetic to dull the pain. Redheads also bruise more easily.

Do cold-sensitive redheads nevertheless have fiery tempers? That one’s just myth. So if you’ve been trying to pass off your frequent outbursts as “my redhead coming out,” you are now officially busted.

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How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Count on seeing lots of this.

Count on seeing lots of this.

We are quickly moving into the “all festivals, all the time” season and we’re starting with Brittingham’s annual festival on Sunday, featuring the Bogside Rogues, Jamison, Oliver McElhone, and the Bare Knuckle Boxers who will be playing under the tent—byo lawn chairs.

Next Friday you can see real boxers—from Ireland and Philly—duking it out at Cannstatter’s in Northeast Philly to kick off the three-day Irish Fest featuring
Jamison, Bogside Rogues, Belfast Connection, the Kilmaine Saints, the Sean Fleming Band, the Screaming Orphans, Celtic Connection, the Highland Rovers and the Fitzpatrick Irish Dancers. There will also be kids activities and Irish vendors.

Speaking of Jamison, they’re at Casey’s in North Wildwood on this Saturday night, with Slainte—Frank Daly and CJ Mills of Jamison—playing at Keenans’s in North Wildwood earlier in the evening. Speaking of Daly and Mills, they’re also known as American Paddy Productions and tickets to their American Celtic Christmas, in its third year, go on sale on September 1. Visit their website for information. Date: December 6, two shows, at Bensalem High School.

Also this Sunday, catch Blackthorn on the Beach at The Club at Diamond Beach in Wildwood.

On Thursday, one of my favorite groups comes to the Sellersville—Brother, the band featuring Digeridrew who plays the digeridoo, an Australian instrument that you won’t be seeing in any local school bands. He’s actually Drew Reid, son of local music promoter Bill Reid (East of the Hebrides, which is bringing you both the Brittingham’s and Northeast Philly Irish Fests). Not sure where he took lessons, but he’s mighty good at coaxing some tribal music out of that thing.

On Friday, catch rising star comic Mick Thomas at The Irish Center. Read our interview with him. Opening for him is Dennis Rooney. It’s sure to be an Irish—and funny—evening. Proceeds from the event go to the Save the Irish Center fund.

Also on Friday, the Young Dubliners headline the Delaware Irish Fest, along with Barleyjuice and Brother, at World Café Live at the Queen in Wilmington.

In addition to the Northeast Philly Irish Fest, there’s one in Mercer County, NJ, on Saturday, featuring the Bantry Boys, the Broken Shillelaghs, Caelic Mishap, and the Shanty’s on Saturday, with Ballycastle, Celtic Martins, Birmingham Six, and Jamison on Sunday.

There are more festivals the following week too, including the three-day Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival at the Irish Center, now in its 40th year.

Take a break from festival going on Saturday, September 6, to see a first US screening of “A Terrible Beauty,”  an Irish film about the Easter Rising of 1916, co-sponsored by the Irish Immigration Center,  the AOH Dennis Kelly Division 1, and the Irish Easter Rising Centennial Committee. The event is at International House, 3701 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. The proceeds from ticket  go to the Irish Immigration Center.  Go to their website for more information.

News, People

Our Rose Returns

Even her fellow passengers fell in love with Maria Walsh.

Even her fellow passengers fell in love with Maria Walsh.

Before Maria Walsh, the new International Rose of Tralee, showed up at the arrivals gate at Philadelphia Airport on Tuesday, her fellow passengers, seeing the crowd and the banners there to welcome her, stopped to give their own review of Philly’s Rose.

“She is truly a rose,” said one woman, who didn’t give her name. “I met her on the plane. She’s a sweetie!”

Another woman, who, with her husband and children, had just returned from an Irish holiday, had encountered the new Rose before. “We went into one town and when they found out we were from Philly they said, ‘Oh, that’s where the Rose of Tralee is from. She’s here,’” she said. “Everyone was very excited.”

But not as excited as the 30-some people who were waiting for Walsh, the first-ever International Rose of Tralee from the Philly Rose Center in its 12 years. When they spotted her—looking chic in her gray patterned dress and pearls and remarkably awake for someone with no sleep—they burst into cheers.

Walsh quickly pulled her crown out of her bag and maneuvered it onto her head, grinning from ear to ear. She thanked the crowd for coming, said she was “glad to finally be home,” and posed for photos with anyone who asked, including one woman she met on the plane.

Philly’s Rose, who was tied for first in all the betting parlors in Ireland from the moment she arrived there, was a first in other ways too. For one, she’s the only Philly Rose who’s had an Irish accent. Born in Boston, she moved to Ireland with her parents and siblings when she was seven, settling in Shrule, County Mayo. The immigration pattern comes naturally—her mother was also born in the US and moved back to Ireland with her parents; Walsh’s father is Irish-born. She moved to Philadelphia about three years ago.

She is also proud of the fact that she is a Pioneer—an Irish-based program for teetotalers. Walsh doesn’t drink. And she is apparently the first Rose with visible tattoos—three ladybugs on her neck that serve as a memorial to a cousin who died in a car crash and the phrase: “The trouble is, you think you have time” on her arm which she says, “reminds me to always carpe diem because you never know.”

And, as she announced to a reporter in Ireland, she is gay which, though the Irish press was all over it, is clearly a non-issue for her Philly-based fans who will be gathering on Saturday at St. Declan’s Well Pub and Restaurant, 3131 Walnut Street, in Philadelphia, a pub co-owned by the father of the 2012 Rose, Elizabeth Spellman, who accompanied Walsh to the Rose event in Tralee this year. The festivities start at noon and are open to the public.

As for Walsh, her plans for the day were simple. She was going to work. She’s studio manager for the fashion and lifestyle brand, Anthropologie, based at Philadelphia’s old Navy Yard. “I was supposed to be back on Monday so I think I’d better go to work and check in,” she said laughing.

View our photos of Maria’s arrival back in Philadelphia.