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Denise Foley

How to Be Irish in Philly

Sunday GAA Action

Two Notre Dames players (in blue) corner a Mairead Farrell opponent.

The Notre Dames ladies Gaelic football club took a year off and came roaring back to life on Sunday, defeating national champions Mairead Farrell LGFC by two goals. Final score: Notre Dame, 4-11 (23); Mairéad Farrells, 2-11 (17)

In men’s Gaelic football, Saint Patrick’s put down the Kevin Barrys handily. Final score: Saint Patrick’s, 8-15 (39); Kevin Barrys, 1-5 (8).

Photographer Gwyneth MacArthur was there for irishphiladelphia.com and captured the action.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Catch the Notre Dames on Sunday. Ladies football rules!

Father’s Day is on Sunday. Here’s a gift your dad will love. Take him to see the Mairead Farrell Ladies Gaelic Football Club take on the Notre Dames on Sunday. They’re national senior and intermediate football champs—that’s national, as in, they beat everyone else in the country—in the Gaelic Athletic Association games.
The game starts at 2:30 PM at Cardinal Dougherty Fields on 2nd Street in Philadelphia, followed by the Kevin Barry’s and St. Patrick’s.

Speaking of games, way to lose, Ireland! Check out the video of the Irish fans singing “Fields of Athenry” after Ireland lost to Spain in the Euro 2012 in Poland for a major lesson on how to stay classy even if your team goes down for the count.

This Saturday is also Bloomsday at the Rosenbach Museum and Library on Delancey Place in Philadelphia. Dozens of volunteers will be reading from James Joyce’s “Ulysses” starting at noon, including Frank Delaney, author of “Ireland” and “Tipperary,” a BBC host and Booker Prize judge. “Ulysses” chronicles one day in the life of Leopold Bloom as he meanders through his Dublin neighborhood. The Rosenbach has an original copy of the book in its collection, so go inside afterward to take a look.

If you’re out near York, PA, on Saturday, check out the annual Penn-Mar Irish Festival in Glen Rock, where you can hear the Screaming Orphans, Amhranai Na Gaelige, Irish Blessing, Nua, and the Spalpeens on stage. Also on hand, the Rovers from Annapolis and Mossy Moran. There will be screenings of the documentary “Beautiful People,” about New York’s longest running traditional Irish music session, throughout the festival, with a Q&A session scheduled with the film’s producer.

Of course there will be Irish food, vendors, dancers, and plenty of activities for the kidlets.

On Saturday night, one of Ireland’s legendary singers, Niamh Parsons, will be appearing in concert with Graham Dunne at the Irish Center as part of the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s Songs from the West of Ireland series.

Fisher and Maher are appearing at Catherine Rooney’s Irish Pub in Wilmington, on Saturday, as part of the summer Irish music series. We’ve been hearing good things about this place.

Once you’ve treated your dad to some ladies football, take him to the Albert Miller Memorial Park in Exton for a free concert by Blackthorn. Believe me, your dad will leave you way more in his will if you do these few things. (Blackthorn is also playing free at Park Square in Prospect Park on June 21.)

And it’s the event you’ve been waiting for—Irish night at the Phillies, where we see if the luck of the Irish is contagious. If it’s not, you can still hear Blackthorn, Jamison and Galway Guild, and enjoy the Irish dancers when they take the field. That takes place on Tuesday night.

On Thursday night, catch the Glengarry Bhoys at the Sellersville Theatre and start packing your bag for the Celtic Fling and Highland Games that start on Friday at the Pennsylvania Renaissance Faire in Manheim. Friday is also when Timlin & Kane headline at Catherine Rooney’s Irish Pub in Wilmington, DE.

Next Saturday, catch Celtic Thunder’s George Donaldson solo at the Plough and the Stars. Also next Saturday, head to Bristol Borough for its annual Celtic Day in Lions Park, a very pretty place right on the banks of the Delaware

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

It's summer football season--if you're Irish.

The game is afoot this summer for the Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association, which will be hosting the national championships on Labor Day weekend in Pennypack Park. Local games have started up at Cardinal Dougherty High School field on Second Street near Cheltenham Avenue in Philadelphia and there’s football and hurling action this Sunday. Bring your own lawn chair, bottled water, and Celtic-strength sunscreen, sit back and enjoy the show.

We’re happy to see that Catherine Rooney’s Irish Pub in Delaware is posting its live Irish music schedule on our calendar. It’s within spitting distance of you folks in Delco and we hear that it’s a great venue for Irish music lovers. People actually listen to the music. What a concept! On tap on Saturday, Benny and Bill. Coming later in the month: Fisher & Maher, Timlin & Kane, and the Seven Rings Band. Reservations are recommended.

Also new to our calendar: Thursday sessions at Brownies 23 East in Ardmore with Scott McClatchy featuring “Americana with an Irish twist.” Bring your instrument and sit in.

On Sunday, a new caterer called Tullamore Crew is presenting a tasting of its fare at the Irish Center. They’re the answer to the question: “Whatever happened to the chefs, cooks and servers from The Shanachie?” When the Ambler Irish pub closed in April, they formed their own catering company which is one of the preferred caterers at the Irish Center.

Also on Sunday: fiddler Dylan Foley and accordionist Dan Gurney will be performing at the Coatesville Cultural Center. Foley is a former multiple All-Ireland winner (starting as a 12-year-old) who has since played with Joanie Madden of Cherish the Ladies, Brian Conway, and the John Whelan Band.

If you’re in Philly, catch Raymond Coleman at Paddy Whacks on Welsh Road. He’s one of our favorites and worth a listen.

Pay no attention to the last name: Joey Abarta is a primo piper from Los Angeles who will be doing a house concert in Havertown on Friday, June 15. He’s a member of Mick Moloney’s “Green Fields of American” ensemble and now based in Boston. House concerts have limited seating, so contact Paddy O’Neill at bogman56@aol.com to reserve your spot. There will also be a session.

Know who else is starting to use our calendar? Blackthorn! No more chasing down dates and times for you know who. They’re playing the first of their summer free concerts, this one at River Winds Ampitheater in Thorofare, NJ on Friday night. There’s a second next Sunday, June 17, at Albert Miller Memorial Park in Exton. And they’ll be front and center at Irish Heritage Night at the Phillies on June 19, right there at the Xfinity Live stage. Jamison and Galway Guild will also be playing at the park that night. Count on some great step dancers too. Maybe the luck of the Irish will rub off on the Phils. God knows they need it.

And if you’re filling out your calendar with free concerts, don’t forget to mark down June 18, Pennypack Park, with Jamison and the Bogside Rogues and Blackthorn again on June 21 at Park Square in Prospect Park.

Free music. Doesn’t get any better than that.

As always, check our calendar for dates, times, maps, and late-comers.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Last year's Penn's Landing Festival--dancing to Blackthorn.

It’s one of those fun festival weekends we look forward to all year.

AOH Div. 1 in Montgomery County is holding its three-day festival starting Friday night at Saint Michael’s Picnic Grove in Mont Clare. Music provided by the Bogside Rogues, Paul Moore and Friends, McHugh and McGillian, Fisher and Maher, and Belfast Connection (whose fiddler, Laine Walker Hughes, celebrates her birthday on Friday!).

The South Jersey Irish Festival to support the Keane Patrick O’Brien Foundation is on Saturday night. The Broken Shillelaghs, Birmingham Six, Clancy’s Pistol, Raymond Coleman, and Fintan Malone and Friends will be providing the music at the RiverWinds Community Park in West Deptford, NJ. The Foundation is a charitable organization that supports children 2with leukodystrophy, a rare disease that affects brain cells. There’s also face painting and inflatables for the kids, food provided by Dubh Linn Square, and Irish vendors.

On Sunday, the annual Irish Heritage Festival at Penns Landing follows a Mass at 11 AM at the Irish Memorial and Second and Front Streets. Blackthorn, Jamison, and The Hooligans will be performing next to the Delaware. There are inflatables for the kids and vendors for the moms and dads.

In the midst of this—a festival of the Irish language. It’s the annual Satharn na nGael—or Day of Gaelic—at the Irish Center in Philadelphia on Saturday. There are language classes, music workshops (including singing and dancing) followed by dinner and a closing session. I guess we need to say seisiun here, since it’s Gaelic Day. At that seisiun, fiddler Marie Reilly, who recently released a new CD, “The Anvil,” will be performing songs from South County Leitrim and County Longford, a region with a distinctive fiddling tradition, and talking about the history of music from the area. Reilly learned many of the songs from her father, a blacksmith who was also a fiddler, hence the title of her CD. Others came from 19th and 20th century manuscripts from Leitrim/Longford musicians. Aficiandos of pure drop Irish music will love this.

There’s more coming up this week. Claire Mann and Aaron Jones willl bring their mélange of traditional and contemporary Scottish and Irish music to the Blue Ball Barn in Wilmington, DE, a Green Willow production. Claire Mann is an All-Ireland flute and tin whistle champion but she is equally accomplished on the fiddle. Mighty bouzouki player and singer, Aaron Jones is currently the front man of Scotland’s award-winning Old Blind Dogs and has also recorded on over sixty-five traditional albums.

A note: The former Shanachie session in Ambler that moved to Finn McCool’s is temporarily homeless. A wall collapsed at Finn McCool’s at the beginning of May and it’s been closed ever since. Our reporters in the field tell us the session moved to a private home for a while, but is going to be the moveable session until McCool’s is intact again. Our sources also tell us that the rumor that Kildare’s was moving to the old Shanachie building were half right. It’s going to be Doc Magrogan’s Oyster House and Raw Bar. That’s Kildare’s non-Irish brother. Look for it in the Fall–maybe in time for Ambler’s international music festival!

As always, check our calendar for times and maps and late-breaking events. And check out our Facebook page too, where people announce other events, chat, argue, and in general treat it like a pub with no beer. Enjoy the weekend!

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Statue of Commodore Barry behind Independence Hall

A little story about Ceili Rain, the Celtic-flavored band playing Friday night at the Tin Angel in Philly. I heard them many years ago by accident. After dinner at The Plough with my cousins, we were walking along 2nd Street when we heard this irresistible music coming from the upstairs venue. We weren’t planning to hear music that night, but Ceili Rain changed our minds. If you’ve never heard them—they’re Tin Angel regulars—and like Celtic fusion played by top notch musicians, now’s your chance.

This weekend is also the annual commemoration of Commodore John Barry, father of the American Navy. The Wexford-born Barry lived in Philadelphia when he wasn’t sailing the high seas, fighting the British. He’s buried in the historic graveyard of St. Mary’s Church on Fourth Street, and it’s there on Sunday that a Mass and wreath-laying will be held.

Afterwards, head to the Irish Center where they’re holding a fundraiser so that a memorial to Barry can be completed at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, MD. Since Barry was an Revolutionary War hero, it’s about time the Navy recognized him. The national Ancient Order of Hibernians is just one of the Irish organizations behind the memorial.

If you’re down the shore, and I know some of you will be, catch Jamison performing at Casey’s in North Wildwood on Saturday night.

If it’s Memorial Day weekend, and it is, Blackthorn must be having its annual bash on Monday at Cannstatters in northeast Philly. And whaddya know, they are! That’s about 12 hours of fun and frolic that should be on your bucket list.

This coming Thursday, two of my favorite performers in all the world will be sharing a stage. Dublin’s legendary Finbar Furey will be at the World Café Live in Philadelphia, with the John Byrne Band (of Dublin and Philadelphia), opening for him.

Unfortunately, a few of my other favorite performers in all the world will be sharing a stage at the same time in Wilmington, DE, also at World Café Live–at the Queen. The Teetotallers are fiddler Martin Hayes, guitarist John Doyle, and the wild-and-crazy multi-instrumentalist Kevin Crawford of Lunasa. What to do, what to do?

Save the date: June 1, next Friday, is kick off for the annual three-day AOH Montgomery County Irish Festival held at St. Michael’s Picnic Grove in Mont Clare, PA. (It’s not as far away as you think—it’s near Phoenixville.) On the bill are Jamisn, the Bogside Rogues, McHugh and McGillian, Fisher & Maher and Belfast Connection. The Celtic Flame and Coyle School dancers will also be there, along with the Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums. Worried about the cost? Don’t be. It’s $5 to get in. Can beat that with a shillelagh.

And don’t forget: Sunday June 3 is the annual Irish Festival on Penns Landing. This year it features Blackthorn, the Hooligans, and Jamison, plus plenty of Irish dancers, food, and vendors, on the sparkling Delaware.

As always, check the calendar for details, times, listings and maps.

News, People

A Fundraiser That’s a Hole in One

Joan Waychunas sets up the sign for the Team Fiona 10th Tee Fundraiser.

Last year, Philadelphia’s trophy-winning Gaelic footballers, the Mairead Farrells, brought home their second national championship in a row. But the tournament, held in San Francisco, left them in the hole.

So this year, with the Gaelic championships in Philadelphia’s Pennypack Park over the Labor Day weekend, their annual fundraising golf tournament, held on Sunday, May 20, allowed them to play a little catch-up on last year’s bills since travel expenses will be minimal this year.

It also allowed them to do a good turn for a fellow footballer.

The tenth tee at the bucolic Edgmont Country Club in Delaware County was dedicated to Team Fiona—the name chosen by the group of friends and former teammates of Fiona Kealy who are determined to raise money to help the County Down native and mother of a toddler pay for her cancer treatment.

Team Fiona, which numbers 14 so far, will be competing in the Team Livestrong Challenge Philly race on August 17-19. There’s a 5K and an 10K walk/run, along with a bike ride up to 100 miles.

“Fiona and I were teammates on the old Emerald Eagles,” said Mairead Farrell’s coach, Angela Mohan. “That was back when we won four national championships in a row. When she was diagnosed with cancer last year, we knew we had to do something.”

Several dozen golfers came out for the yearly event. At the 10th tee, they were asked to bet on whether they’d be able to put their ball into a ring set up on the faraway green. All the losses were going to Team Fiona. And some of the wins too.

Team Fiona has also scheduled a fundraiser on June 22 at Paddy Rooney’s Pub, 449 West Chester Pike, in Havertown, featuring jewelry from Newbridge Silver, an Irish company with strong ties to the Philadelphia area.

The participants in the Saturday morning “Boot Camp” run by Mohan, who is a fitness trainer, are all contributing to Team Fiona too. Last year, “Angel’s Army,” as they called themselves, used money donated via the Boot Camp to buy toys and books for children at Nemours/Alfred I. DuPont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, Delaware. “This year the money from the camp goes to Fiona,” said Mohan.

It’s only fitting, says Joan Waychunas, like Mohan, a native of Tyrone and a former footballer, who ran the 10th tee fundraiser. “If it was anybody else, Fiona would be doing the same thing,” she said.

View our photos from Sunday’s golf tournament.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Timlin & Kane

Play time: Inis Nua Theatre Company’s latest production, “The Walworth Farce,” is getting some great reviews and you have until Sunday May 27 to see it at the “Off Broad Street Theatre” at the First Baptist Church in Philadelphia. You can also catch Brian Friel’s classic immigration story, “Philadelphia Here I Come,” at the Walnut Street Theatre

The Newtown Celtic Fest is this weekend. Catch some of our faves, including RUNA, Timlin & Kane, the Birmingham Six, and the Fitzpatrick Irish Dancers on Saturday. There’s food and drink and vendors too, otherwise they couldn’t officially call it a “fest.” No, we just made that up.

Timlin & Kane are all over the globe this weekend. They’re at the Sands Casino in Bethlehem on Friday night (performing, not gambling) and they’re off to the Scranton Irish Festival on Saturday night (that’s a lot of festing for one day, guys).

Speaking of dueling festivals—how about two more? We knew you’d love that. In Bensalem on Saturday , they’re hold the 22nd annual Summer Irish Festival at Park Polanka, featuring Tom McHugh and Company and Irish dancers. And Jamison Celtic Rock is performing at the Molly Maguire Street Festival in Lansdale, next to Molly Maguire’s Pub and Restaurant at Main and Wood Streets, also on Saturday. Top prizes to anyone who gets to all four festivals (unless you’re Timlin & Kane).

Make sure you tune into WTMR-800 AM on Sunday at noon. Marianne MacDonald, host of “Come West Along the Road,” is having an on-air pledge drive with lots of great prizes, including tickets to some upcoming musical events.

On Sunday, Celtic Thunder performers Ryan Kelly and Neil Byrne make a return engagement to The Plough and the Stars in Philadelphia for an evening of trad, folk, and original songs billed as “Acoustic by Candlelight.” Show up at The Plough on Thursday to hear BibleCode Sundays, a London Irish rock band making its first ever appearance in Philadelphia.

On Sunday: a serious turn. The Irish American Anti-Defamation Federation will join a variety of groups marching on Martin Luther King Drive in Philadelphia in the “March Against Hate.” The march is scheduled to start at 2 PM. You can walk with them (go to the website, walkagainsthate.org to register) or stand on the sidelines cheer them on. The IADF monitors and takes action on anything anti-Irish, but particularly products that promote negative stereotypes.

On Tuesday: There will be a vigil from 4:30-6 PM at the Cathedral of Sts. Peter and Paul in support of Catholic nuns and sisters, who were recently criticized by the Vatican for not speaking up against abortion and homosexuality because they were too focused on taking care of the poor. We could say something really snarky here, but we’ll just leave it at an enthusiastic, “You go, Sisters! We love you!” The event is sponsored by the Nun Justice Project.

Set your calendars for next weekend for the annual commemoration of Commodore John Barry, who is so much more than a bridge and an Irish Center. The Wexford-born Barry lived in Philadelphia when he wasn’t busy starting the new American Navy during the Revolutionary War. (John Paul Jones often gets the credit, but he was just along for the ride.)

After a Mass at Old St. Mary’s Church on South 4th Street in Philadelphia, where Barry is buried in the churchyard, there will be a graveside ceremony followed by a fundraiser and meal at The Commodore Barry Club in Mt. Airy—AKA The Irish Center—to help raise capital for the erection of a memorial to Barry at the US Naval Academy at Annapolis.

News, People

Taking Their Next Step

St. Patrick's Day Parade Director Michael Bradley with two of the Rainbow Irish Dancers, Colleen, left, and Noreen, right.

The ladies were insistent. Michael Bradley, director of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, had to get up and learn an Irish step dance with them.

“You don’t want to see that,” joked Bradley, though he followed them half willingly to the dance floor, where, in the confusion, he managed to sneak away before the music started.

“That one,” he said, nodding toward one of the women, “told me when I came in that she was the best dancer.”

“That one” was Colleen O, one of the Rainbow Irish Step Dancers and a resident, like the rest of the troupe, of Divine Providence Village in Springfield, Delaware County, an Archdiocesan cottage-style residence for women with developmental disabilities.

Bradley, along with John Dougherty Sr. and Brian Stevenson, business agent for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Union Local 98, were at Divine Providence Village on Monday night on a very special errand. For their first appearance in the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade in March, the Rainbow Irish Step Dancers won the newly created Mary Theresa Dougherty Award, which will be given each year to an organization “dedicated to serving the needs of God’s people in the community.”

The award is named for the mother of John Dougherty Jr., business manager of Local 98 and this year’s parade grand marshal. The senior Dougherty presented the troupe with their plaque.

Kathleen Madigan, a former nutritionist at Divine Providence, is the troupe’s dance instructor. “The day of the parade was amazing,” she said. “The families were following us along the parade route, but so were people we didn’t know. When I asked some of them why they were following is they said “we just wanted to be with you and cheer you on.’ They were clapping for us all along.”

Madigan never set out to form a dance troupe at Divine Providence. The women were the standouts in a class Madigan gave every other Saturday. When she saw their determination, talent, and joy as they danced “Shoe the Donkey” and “Bridge of Athlone,” she decided to turn a social activity into something more serious.

The young women have mastered several dances and are learning several more. “They know their steps,” says Madigan. “Sometimes their heads and their feet don’t always work together, but they remember the steps. I can hear them repeating the steps out loud.”

A few of the women appear to have been born for show biz. Two are avid line dancers who go out a couple of times a week. Another is a performer with the State Street Miracles in Media, a troupe that highlights the artistry of adults with developmental disabilities.

And then there’s Colleen. Born with Down syndrome, Colleen (“I’m Irish, you know”) has the comic timing of a professional stand-up. When Bradley announced to the women that they would be attending Irish Heritage Night at the Phillies on June 19 and dancing on the field, the women broke into applause and hugged each other. “I’m going to teach the Phillies to dance,” announced Colleen, who waited for the laughs before she smiled too.

Bradley was visibly moved by the event. “It means a lot to me. I had a brother who had Down syndrome,” he said. That’s one of the reasons why, for more than 20 years, Bradley has been the basketball coach at the nearby Cardinal Krol Center at Don Guanella Village, working with the developmentally disabled young men who live there. “This is the kind of thing that makes everything I do all year worthwhile.”

View our photo essay.