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Denise Foley

News, People

Two Thumbs Up for Oscar

/irishphiladelphia.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Oscar-photo.jpg” alt=”” width=”380″ height=”380″ /> “Wee Oscar” at Children’s Hospital in Philadelphia.

The story kept popping up everywhere: Facebook, Twitter, newspapers, TV. The story of an adorable four-year-old Belfast boy who not only had a rare genetic disorder, but who had also developed a rare and aggressive cancer.

The genetic disorder is Jacobesen’s Sydrome, which affects 1 in 100,000 children. It can cause problems with motor skills (sitting, standing and walking), learning difficulties, and even physical problems, including heart defects.

The cancer is neuroblastoma, which also affects 1 in 100,000 children. It’s a malignant tumor developing from nerve tissue that usually occurs in infants and children.

Getting one was bad enough. Getting two. . .”He’s been pretty unlucky,” admits his father, Stephen, a hospital engineer in Belfast.

Bad luck has been dogging “wee Oscar,” as he’s known in the Twitterverse, from Belfast to Philadelphia, where his parents brought him in early October to undergo immunotherapy, a treatment only available in one place in the UK, that uses special antibodies to train the body’s immune system to fight off the cancer on its own.

Supporters, including Olympic boxer Paddy Barnes, and many GAA players in Antrim and Tyrone, had raised more than $400,000 to pay for Oscar’s treatment at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP). On October 6, Stephen, his wife, Leona, a software developer, flew over with Oscar and his two-year-old sister, Isobella, known as Izzy.

But the October 13 blog entry by Leona tells it all. “It all goes wrong in Philadelphia,” is the headline. Oscar, who had just finished a course of radiotherapy for his cancer, was undergoing testing at CHOP when doctors discovered another problem. It was pulmonary hypertension, abnormally high blood pressure in the arteries of the lungs that makes the right side of the heart work harder than it normally does to pump blood through the narrowed arteries in the lungs. It’s also rare.

“The doctors suspect that it may have to do with his chemo or stem cell transplants, but they don’t know,” says Stephen.

For a few days, it looked like it was going to be this latest rare disease to strike Wee Oscar that was going to take him away. “He was pretty sick. The doctors didn’t know if he was going to make it so they prepared us for the worst,” says Stephen. The Knoxes even said their goodbyes, letting little Izzy spend a last few moments with her brother.

It appeared to be the last of a series of cruel blows. Before he was diagnosed with neuroblastoma, Oscar had made such strides in therapy that he was attending a mainstream play group at home. “He had done really, really well,” says Stephen. “One of our biggest worries is that we would have to go to a special school, but he was on par with the other kids so we were over the moon about that.”

Even the neuroblastoma appeared to be in remission when they bundled Oscar onto a plane to come to Philadelphia.

But, on Thursday, October 18, Leona’s blog told a much different story. “He did it, Oscar did it! He fought his way back from the brink and is doing remarkably well,” she wrote.

“He really bounced back,” says Stephen. “He’s on the mend. And we’re hoping to get him home very soon and get the problem with his lungs treated so he can get back to normal, though he won’t be able to have the immunotherapy.”

The Knox family is planning to leave Philadelphia next week. But Philadelphia won’t be far from their minds—and hearts. They didn’t know anyone when they arrived, but they do now.

Thanks to those tweets and Facebook posts, members of the Philadelphia Irish community found the little boy and his family and swathed them in love. “We were shown unbelievable support,” says Stephen. “People got in touch with us through Twitter and Facebook. They came to the hospital, bringing homecooked meals, gifts for the kids. People offered to have us come and live with them and offered us the use of their cars. This was an incredible effort of the Irish community here in Philadelphia. We’ve been very well looked after.”

Among those who reached out were Havertown native Aisling Travers and Irish-born Fidelma McGroary, who traveled to CHOP on Sunday to bring a gift basket of Irish food and balloons for Oscar. “We had seen on Twitter that Oscar loved balloons. We didn’t think we’d get in so we were going to leave everything at the nurse’s station but they told us to go around to his room,” says Aisling, who is a student at West Chester University. “Leona was overwhelmed and started crying. We were the first people they met and soon people were bringing dinners down and sending e-cards. They were overwhelmed by the generosity.”

On October 28, a Tyrone native, Brian Magarity, and his wife, Laurie, will be running a bake sale at Sacred Heart Parish in Havertown to raise money to help the Knoxes, who went through the entire $400,000 just keeping Oscar alive in Philadelphia. (“Thankfully we were in the best hospital in the world, or he might not be here,” says Stephen.) The local group that’s formed around Oscar will also be selling wrist bands and t-shirts. Other events are also in the works. (Check our calendar for listings and details.)

There are a lot of sick kids in the world. What is it about Oscar that touched so many hearts. “He’s so cute!” says Aisling, who visited Oscar on her birthday on Friday and was gifted with a stream of blown kisses.

In fact, says his dad, it may his genetic disorder that gives him “a very special wee personality.”

He doesn’t have an ounce of shyness in him. “He talks to everybody and is always laughing and joking,” says Stephen. “He’s always happy and positive. It’s unbelievable, after all he’s come through.”

Though the Knoxes are looking forward to going home, Stephen says they’re also “a little sorry” they aren’t going to be in Philadelphia for six months as they’d planned. “So many people here reached out to us and made us feel well looked-after. We’ll never forget it.”

News, People

Philopatrian Ball Honors St. Malachy’s School

Mary Courtney, developmental director for St. Malachy’s School, received flowers at the Philo Ball.

The Catholic Philopatrian Literary Society, one of the oldest Catholic organizations in Philadelphia – it dates back to the mid-1800s—held its annual ball at the Doubletree Hotel in Philadelphia recently.

Founded by Father Edward J. Sourin, in whose honor an award is given every year, the Philo, as it’s called, provides scholarships and grants to Catholic students in need and to local Catholic schools and colleges.

This year’s ball raised money for St. Malachy’s School, a mission school that serves more than 200 children in North Philadelphia, many of them non-Catholic. At St. Malachy’s there’s a 95 percent daily attendance rate; 91 percent of the kindergarteners test at or above grade level in reading; first graders test 10 percent above grade level in reading; and the majority of students go on to and finish high school.

See our photos of the event. Photos by Gwyneth MacArthur.

Genealogy

Of Irish Ancestry? There’s An App for That

viagra cost

m/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/4-Family-Crest1-173×300.jpg” alt=”” width=”173″ height=”300″ />Your iPhone or iPad may bring you even closer to your roots.

Jusst don’t expect miracles from the new Irish Family Ancestry app available at the iTunes store. You’re still going to have to put some elbow grease into your search. At this point, it’s more of an entry level intro to your Irish ancestry.

You just enter your name and some basic information comes up: the history of your family name, the original family mottos, alternate spellings, and the meaning of your name. You’ll also get a family crest, but don’t get excited. Most of those family crests are from families who probably had way more money and prestige than yours did. I don’t believe for a moment that my Foleys, who emigrated to Newfoundland, Canada, to farm and fish, knew any of the Foleys whose crest bears three black fleur de lis. Many of my ancestors couldn’t read or write. Let’s get real here.

So far it contains only 100 names and is only available for iPhone and iPad. Android users are out of luck for the moment.

Check it out on the iTunes website.  It might provide a little respite from checking your Facebook status or playing Words With Friends. It can’t hurt–it’s free.

October 19, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

c=”http://irishinphilly.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Irish-bread.jpg” alt=”” width=”425″ height=”282″ /> Tullamore Crew will be making dinner at the Irish Center on Sunday. Take a kitchen break!

Don’t worry about cooking up a big Sunday dinner this weekend. Let the Tullamore Crew do it for you. These veterans of the Shanachie Restaurant and Pub in Ambler, which closed its doors this year, will be serving up three courses of Irish fare at The Irish Center in Philadelphia every third Sunday. The cost is $18 for members, $25 for members (now there’s an impetus to join) and $7 for children. You may have tasted their food at the Celtic Classic in Bethlehem last month.

Check out Inis Nua Theatre Company’s latest offering, “A Slow Air,” one of the non-Irish plays they’re doing this year. (The theatre group does contemporary plays from the UK.) Athol and Morna are a middle-aged brother and sister who are forced to negotiate a truce in their rivalry in the shadow of the Glasgow Airport terrorist attack of 2007. The play runs till October 21 at the Off Broad Street Theater at First Baptist Church in center city.

On Saturday night, the Broken Shillelaghs are performing at The Whiskey Barrell Tavern in Gloucester City, NJ. And on Sunday, you can attend a ceili at the Unitarian Universalist Church in Bethlehem with music by Pancho, Kevin and Jimmy.

On Thursday, Professor Molly McCloskey of Villanova, a writer, will be hosting a non-fiction reading co-sponsored by the English department at the university.

Also on Thursday, the Claddagh Fund, a nonprofit, and The Galway Guild—they’re Celtic rockers—will be raising money for Hope for The Warriors, which supports veterans, at the Dubh Linn Square Pub in Cherry Hill.

And on Friday, catch Jamison at Kildare’s in Manayunk (they’ll be at Curran’s in Bensalem next Saturday).

As usual, check our calendar for all the details.

Photo Credit: iStock photo by Sarah Brossert.

October 19, 2012 by
News, People

Irish Prime Minister Visits Philadelphia

Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny, right, with two of the symposium organizers, John O’Malley, left, and Joseph Kelley, center.

This week, Enda Kenny, Taoiseach of Ireland, became the first Irish Prime Minister to visit Philadelphia in. . . no one could remember how long.

Kenny, who was leader of Fine Gael, was invited to the city by the Brehon Law Society, which held its second annual Legal Symposium at the Rittenhouse Hotel on Rittenhouse Square October 10-12. The first was held last year in Dublin and Mayo, and Kenny also attended.

Taoiseach Enda Kenny, Ireland’s Prime Minister.

On Friday morning, accompanied by a phalanx of Philadelphia police, State Police, and Secret Service agents, Kenny greeted more than 200 people who paid $250 a ticket to have breakfast with him. On Thursday night, he had dinner at the Union League with about 50 people, including Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett.

At a jam-packed breakfast Friday morning at the Rittenhouse, Kenny heaped praise upon his host city.

“There is something about this city of Philadelphia,” he said. “It’s a city of light, of illumination. Right now, I understand there’s a magnificent 3D installation, open air, over on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. That light, made and shaped by thousands of Philadelphians, is a symbol of the light of liberty and democracy, and actually what it means to be a citizen.”

He then went on to deliver a message to those who might be interested in doing business back home: Ireland might not have recovered completely from the economic downturn, but it’s getting extremely close.

Calling Ireland a “changed country,” he promised potential investors that the government will not rest until the job’s done.

“Back at home in Ireland, a time of enormous challenge for the country, we are on the path back to economic revival. That journey is long and challenging and we still have a distance to go, but we are equal to that challenge in the same way we have faced adversity in so many areas, over so many years.”

We captured some video of the event. You can watch it here.

See all the action in our photo essay. 

 

October 12, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

/irishphiladelphia.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/WID.jpg” alt=”” width=”380″ height=”380″ /> The Legendary Wid will be getting laughs on Friday for the Irish Anti-Defamation Federation.

Heads up—the first of the county balls happens this week, as does the first fundraiser by the Irish Anti-Defamation Federation which is also a laugh-raiser.

But we’ll start at the beginning.

Head to McGillicuddy’s in Upper Darby on Sunday and dance the night away to the Theresa Flanagan Band.

This week is also the seniors’ lunch at the Irish Center (on Monday). Enjoy a home-cooked meal and listen to the Vince Gallagher Band (or, better yet, get up on the dance floor), all for free. There will also be a short presentation on the Irish link to Tay-Sachs disease, a fatal genetic illness that strikes babies.

On Tuesday, the Irish American Genealogy Society meets at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby.

On Wednesday, Michael Tubridy, founding member of the Irish music group, The Chieftains, will be at the Irish Center, joining dance instructor John Shields teaching a special set dance class starting at 7:30 PM. Admission is $10. A multi-instrumentalist (and an engineer!) Tubridy is also a dancer.

Big doings next Friday. In Springfield, the Cavan Society is having a ball. They have a ball all the time—they’re a fun-loving group—but this is a dress-up ball. Yes, it’s county society ball season, and Cavan is taking the lead. Donegal and Mayo will follow shortly.

Also on Friday, the first big fundraising event for the Irish Anti-Defamation Federation: An Irish Night of Comedy, featuring local favorite, The Legendary Wid, and four other comics. Wid is really Michael Baldwin, a New Jersey native, who is a prop comic. You know what that means—leave your toupee at home. He’ll grab it and improvise for the laughs. Wid (which is short for “without ID”) has appeared on MTV and Comedy Central. We found a mini-documentary on Wid on the internet to whet your appetite. As Johnny Carson used to say, “Funny, funny stuff.” And for a good cause.

 

October 12, 2012 by
Music, People

“Elementary,” My Dear Caitlin

//irishinphilly.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/caitlyn-tv-pic.jpg” alt=”” width=”380″ height=”237″ /> Really, that’s Caitlyn Finley in this screen shot from “Elementary,” the new Sherlock Holmes TV series.

If you watched the premier episode of CBS’s “Elementary,” the modern update of the Sherlock Holmes story set in New York, you caught the briefest flash of a young Irish fiddler in a smoky pub.

Unless you were the fiddler’s mother, who fell asleep. “She missed me!” says Caitlin Finley of Lower Merion, the fiddler in question, of her mother, Denys Everingham.

Lucky for Everingham—and anyone else who missed one of the area’s premier young fiddlers—she can still catch the episode on the CBS website or on Comcast On Demand.

So how did Finley, a 21-year-old physics major at Columbia University in New York, wind up on a show starring Aidan Quinn as the modern day Lestrade, Lucy Liu as Holmes’ physician sidekick Joan Watson, and Angelina’s first ex, Jonny Lee Miller, as the drug-addled poster child for Aspberger’s, Sherlock Holmes?

“I was contacted by an Irish musician I know in New York, the flute-player Deirdre Corrigan, who was childhood friends with a woman working on the show,” says Finley, who has been a fixture on the Irish music scene in Philadelphia since she was a child and now plays in several New York sessions. “They said they wanted a fiddler or this scene in a pub. She put me in contact, they asked me to send a picture, and then I heard, ‘You got the job.’”

And quite a job it was. Even behind the scenes, TV doesn’t have a firm grip on reality. First, Finley had to talk them out of having her play classical music because, well, no one does that in a pub. Then, they told her she didn’t move enough while she was playing.

“One of the people on the set said she goes to this pub, Lily’s, where all the musicians are so impassioned that they’re dancing while they play,” says Finley. “I said, no, I play at Lily’s, and usually we’re just sitting there.”

Caitlyn Finley in real life.

Still, they made her go outside on the street and practice play “like in ‘Celtic Women,’” the made-for-TV group of gorgeous Irish women who do dance while they play. “It was really embarrassing,” confesses Finley. “This is not how people act in a pub at a session. This is TV.”

It wasn’t all bad. “I got my hair and makeup done,” she says. “The director said I didn’t look old enough to even be in a bar. And they had wardrobe for me—just jeans and a sweater.”

Though her part was a nanosecond long and the entire scene just a couple of minutes, it took six hours to film. “A lot of it was just sitting around waiting,” Finley says.

Though she didn’t get to meet Miller and Liu, she did shake hands with Aidan Quinn. “He’s really nice, he’s great. He introduced himself to every single member of the crew and to me. He was a very nice guy.”

So, would she do it again? “Maybe, we’ll see,” she says, laughing. “It was a lot of fun and I got paid, but if I do it again I have to join the actors’ union. They give you one free pass and then you have to pay dues.”

But Finley has bigger fish to fry. She’s now applying for post-graduation jobs—and not as an actor or fiddler. She gave up the idea of fiddling for a living because most fiddlers she knows—including her teacher, Brian Conway—have day jobs. Conway, who is well known in the Irish music world, is also an assistant district attorney in New York.

“Oh, I’ll definitely keep playing music but I don’t know if I’d want it to be a job. It’s not a good way to make a living and it’s something I do now for stress relief,” she says.

Her post graduate options are very different. “I’m studying Italian and taking a course to teach English as a foreign language so I’m looking at possibly spending time in Italy as an English teacher,” she says. At the same time, she wants to put all that physics she’s learned to good use.

“I’m applying now for jobs at NASA,” she says.

She wants to be a rocket scientist? “Oh, I would love to do that!” Finley says with enthusiasm.

October 12, 2012 by
How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

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Cathie Ryan of Cherish the Ladies will debut her new album at the Tin Angel this week.

Incredible weekend ahead!

Clannad, the family band that was formed in Gweedore, County Donegal, in 1970—Moya Brennan is their voice—will be appearing at the Keswick Theatre in Glenside on Saturday night.

And FullSet, a brand new ensemble—named “new group of the year” at the 2012 Live Ireland Music Awards—is at the Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Philadelphia.

As they say on the late-night infomercials, “but wait, there’s more!”

Timlin and Kane are playing at St. James Pub in Bethlehem on Saturday night.

On Sunday, catch the wonderful little Irish movie, “Once,” that won its stars an Oscar for best movie theme (“Falling Slowly”) at Villanova’s Connelly Center Cinema. Look for our friend, Fergus O’Farrell singing his song, “Gold,” during the session scene.

On Wednesday, Cathie Ryan of Cherish the Ladies will be performing tunes from her new CD, “Through Wind and Rain,” at the Tin Angel. Marianne MacDonald of WTMR 800FM’s Irish music show, “Come West Along the Road,” interviewed Cathie last week and played some cuts. Cathie’s voice will pierce your heart.

On Wednesday, the Brehon Society is starting a three-day symposium on doing business in the US and Ireland. Registration closes on Monday, October 8, so get your dibs in quick. Tickets are available for breakfast with Ireland’s Prime Minister Enda Kenny at the Rittenhouse Hotel in Philadelphia at 8 AM on Friday. Contact Siobhan Lyons at 267-702-5771 for details.

Another plug for our self-service calendar—you can put your own events right on there without any interaction with a human whatsoever by clicking on the Irish Events Listing in the orange bar at the top of our home page and following directions. We’re frequently not home, so we leave the door open for you, our friends to let us know what you’re doing. Don’t make us come after you.

October 5, 2012 by