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Denise Foley

Music

Blackthorn Does a Freebie in Collegeville

Blackthorn concert

A young listener gets into the act. Photo by Brian Mengini. (Click on the photo for more.)

One of the great things about summertime in the Delaware Valley are the free concerts where you can bring your blanket and your baby and occasionally your bucket of beer, to steal a line from James Taylor.

Blackthorn played a freebie this week in Collegeville (look for them July 7 at Central Park in Doylestown and July 8 at Prospect Park’s Park Square Summer Concert series). Fortunately, photographer Brian Mengini was there and captured these moments.

Click on the photo at right to see Brian’s excellent photo essay.

Columns

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

June 16, 2007: Bloomsday at the Rosenbach.

June 16, 2007: Bloomsday at the Rosenbach.

Do other ethnic groups celebrate their heritage as much as we do?

Just this weekend, you can attend an entire day of Irish language immersion (no English allowed, at Philly’s Irish Center), head out to hear some Irish music at the annual New Jersey Irish Festival in Lakewood, NJ, and another Celtic Festival in Cochranville in Chester County. You can tune into Irish music on the radio (on Saturday to John Buckley at 1540 AM and Michael Concannon at 740 AM, then on Sunday to Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald at 800 AM). You can even watch the rough-and-tumble game of hurling (between the Philadelphia Shamrocks and the Allentown Hibernians) at the late, great Cardinal Dougherty High School.

And this is Bloomsday week, when James Joyce lovers around the world celebrate Joyce’s masterpiece, “Ulysses.” They’re celebrating it in the Philadelphia area too, with a primer at Fergie’s Pub on Monday, a lecture at the Rosenbach Museum on Tuesday, and celebrity readings (including Inquirer food columnist Rick Nichols and Mayor Michael Nutter) at the Rosenbach on Bloomsday itself, June 16, the day main character Leopold Bloom wanders the streets of Dublin, chronicled by Joyce in stream of consciousness style. The Rosenbach has an original, signed manuscript of “Ulysses” in its collection, available for viewing and worshipping. Later in the week, you can sign up for a tour of the Rosenbach’s English literature collection where you may be able to actually touch it!

Do the Ukranians have all this? What about the Liechtensteiners? Are the Italians doing the tarantella and serving up cannoli at a festival every other weekend? I think not. We are way ahead in the heritage wars.

As they say on cable, but wait, there’s more.

On Saturday, head down to the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby for a nice cool drink of lemonade. The Rose of Tralee Centres is sponsoring an Alex’s Lemonade Stand to help raise money for research into childhood cancers. The nonprofit Alex’s Lemonade Stand was founded by the parents of little Alex Scott who died of brain cancer. She set up her own lemonade stand to raise money for cancer research. If you can’t make it to Upper Darby, you can donate here.

On Saturday, you can also light up a stogie and watch the US Vs. England in World Cup Soccer at McFadden’s Ballpark World Cup Cigar Party. For $45 to $55, you get an open bar, appetizers, sandwiches and, of course, a cigar, as well as a chance to view the action on wide screen TV. Of course, you’ll cheer for US.

Don’t forget next Friday’s Gas Pump Ceili at the Irish Center. Radio host Marianne MacDonald and musician Luke Jardel are sponsoring this fundraiser for the people of Kingston Springs, TN, who were literally deluged during the May flooding of the Nashville area. At the time, MacDonald was leading a group of local Irish dancers and others on a tour of the Nashville area when their bus was stranded on the flooded highway. Eventually they made their way to Kingston Springs, where they were again stranded for several hours.

“The folks in this little town offered us food, water and lodgings,” explains MacDonald. “They have lost many homes, businesses and a school as a result of the floods. We ended up having a ceilidh in the parking lot of the gas station where we were stranded, which was filmed and eventually made its way to YouTube. We would like to raise money to donate back to them to thank them for their gracious hospitality.”

Next Saturday is the annual Penn-Mar Irish Festival in Glen Rock, PA, near York. Yes, it sounds far away, but maybe the musical lineup will lure you: Barleyjuice, Amhranai Na Gaelige, the Martin Family Band, Raining Hearts, Rossnareen, the Spalpeens, and Susquehanna Pipes & Drums. There’s a traditional Irish session in the afternoon (bring your instruments!) and loads of Irish dancers and some terrific vendors.

The Penn-Mar Irish Festival is also a chance for some good-deed-doing. Proceeds from the event benefit Penn-Mar Human Services, a nonprofit that provides support services to families and people with disabilities and other human service needs throughout southern York County and northern Baltimore County, MD.

News

Hot, Steamy, Windy—But the Crowds Got All Irish at Penns Landing

Penn's Landing

We caught this little miss clambering on the Irish Memorial during the Mass that preceded the Irish Festival. Cute, but don't do it again! (Her parents spotted her and put a stop to it.)

When it comes to the annual Penns Landing Irish Festival, the crowds never let a little heat, wind, or even rain stop them. They load up on “Irish Ice”—what water ice is called this one day a year—and enjoy the day.

On Sunday, June 6, the crowds came. . . to hear Paddy’s Well, the Hooligans, Round Tower, and Blackthorn; see 11 Irish dance schools strut their stuff; and play “duck hunt” in one of the many fountains that dot the multilayer amphitheatre where the event is held each year.

As in previous years, the festival opened after a Mass, celebrated by Father Ed Brady of St. Isidore’s Parish in Quakertown, at the nearby Irish Memorial. This year’s Mass paid tribute to the recent Inspirational Irish Women awardees. Members of the committee that planned the May 23 event participated: Keira McDonagh and Emily Weideman were readers, Jocelyn McGillian, a mezzo-soprano, sang to the accompaniment of harper Ellen Tepper. Honoree Liz Kerr of LAOH 25 and her husband Pearse brought the gifts. Honoree Kathy McGee Burns, vice president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association, participated in the raising of the flags over the Memorial park.

We were there and have photos from both events.

  • View the Mass at the Memorial.
  • View the Penns Landing Irish Festival.
  • View more of the Penns Landing Irish Festival
  • Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

    How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

    The smile says it all: Daniel Spahr at a past AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 Irish Festival. It's going on all weekend.

    The smile says it all: Daniel Spahr at a past AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 Irish Festival. It's going on all weekend.

    Like festivals? Have we got a weekend for you.

    The Montgomery County AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 Irish Festival kicks off on Friday at St. Michael’s Picnic Grounds in Mont Clare, not far from Phoenixville. Plenty of music (Bogside Rogues, Paddy’s Well, Misty Isle, Oliver McElhone, Celtic Spirit), food, vendors, fun for the kids, and $2 beers all weekend long. Only $5 to get in and free parking to boot. And it goes on for three days, sorta like Woodstock but without Wavy Gravy.

    The annual Appel Farm Arts and Music Festival happens on Saturday. Not a lot of Celtic acts (Enter the Haggis), but plenty of other great music including Patty Griffin, Buddy Miller, Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings; kids events; and “Poets on the Grove” featuring some hot poetry acts like Napam de Bomb. It’s all going on in Elmer, NJ.

    On Sunday, Penns Landing goes all green and shamrocky with the annual Irish Festival, with Paddy’s Well and Blackthorn headlining; 11—count them—11 Irish dance troupes, vendors galore, and food. It follows the annual 10:30 AM Mass at the Irish Memorial at Penns Landing. Mezzo soprano Jocelyn McGillian, the 2009 Rose of Tralee, will sing.

    This week also kicks off some early Bloomsday (June 16) events in Philadelphia. On Sunday, when you take a break from festivalling, head to the Rosenbach Museum on Delancey Place in the city where there will be a Hands On Tour of the museum’s James Joyce collection (there’s a Ulysses’ manuscript!) and other English literature holdings, including works by Bram “Dracula” Stoker. And when they say hands on, they mean it. You get to touch!

    If you’re into cramming your schedule tight, stay in town and have dinner at McGillin’s Olde Ale House on Drury Street where they’re having a black tie beef-n-beer to celebrate turning 150. The Budweiser Clydesdales—all six-feet, 2000 pounds each of them—will be there. No pony rides.

    Don’t forget to tune in to WTMR 800AM on Sunday starting at 11 AM to make your pledge to the Sunday radio shows—the Vince Gallagher Irish Radio Hour and Marianne MacDonald’s “Come West Along the Road.” This is week 3 in the pledge drive and your chance to keep Irish music filling the radiowaves every Sunday morning.

    Looking ahead: Brush up your Irish at an all-day Irish language immersion program at the Irish Center next Saturday. There are also classes for the curious or beginners too at Satharn na nGael, or “Gaelic Saturday.” The Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic Rose of Tralee Centres are sponsoring an Alex’s Lemonade Stand to raise money for research into childhood cancers next Saturday at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby. The Mid-Atlantic Rose of Tralee will be chosen on June 26 at a gala event at the Irish Center. Order your tickets now—they’re going fast.

    Check out our calendar for times, directions, and other important details.

    People

    How Would You Like to Be Queen… of Your Own Life?

    Kathy Kinney and Cindy Ratzlaff

    Kathy Kinney and Cindy Ratzlaff

    Cindy Ratzlaff could see her layoff coming two years out, like a far-off storm on the horizon. As vice president and director of book marketing at Rodale, Inc., she’d overseen the selling of “The South Beach Diet,” which became one of the first blockbusters for the Lehigh Valley publisher of health and fitness books and magazines in 2003, hitting #4 on the New York Times bestseller list. Subsequent books from the South Beach franchise hit the ground at #1 and catapulted this little publisher in the valley into the big leagues after almost 60 years of churning out books with titles like “200 Fabulous Frugal Uses for Baking Soda” and “The Doctors’ Book of Home Remedies.”

    But one media-killing recession later, Cindy found herself out of work. “Although I saw it coming, I was surprised at how it made me feel,” she said. “I felt like someone had punched me in the stomach. I felt like all those years I was like a gypsy con artist, that I was never any good and all my success was just smoke and mirrors.”

    Then she called her friend and traveling companion of 30 years, Kathy Kinney, who had some succinct words of wisdom for her. “I said ‘Snap out of it,’” said Kathy, the Irish-American comic actress best known for her role as the makeup-impaired Mimi Bobeck on “The Drew Carey Show.” “I told her ‘jobs come and go. You don’t change.’”

    Kathy had had a disturbing wake-up call of her own. While surfing the internet for an explanation for why her feet felt so hot all the time, she found several sites that informed her that she had reached her “crone years.”

    She was shocked.

    “There are people who believe ‘crone’ means ‘old wise woman who lives at the edge of the forest,’” said Kathy, as the three of us enjoyed the filleted trout at Seasons 52 in Cherry Hill, NJ, a few weeks ago. “It does not. It means ‘dead flesh.’ I do not want to be known as dead flesh for the last half of my life.”

    So, instead, Cindy Ratzlaff and Kathy Kinney became Queens. Of their own lives. “Queen of Your Own Life” is the name of their new book, published not by Rodale but by Harlequin (yes, the romance publisher). Its subtitle says it all: “The Grown-Up Woman’s guide to Claiming Happiness and Getting the Life You Deserve.”

    It’s a self-help book that’s laugh-out-loud funny, not surprising from two women who performed together in New York City in various comedy troupes, including Funny Ladies, Belles Jeste and Prom Night. Both wiseass and wise, “Queen of Your Own Life” encourages women to shuck off the various hats they wear—the ones they hide under, the ones that declare their lack of self-esteem, the ones that hide their beauty from themselves and everyone else—and replace them with crowns. Real ones if they can get them.

    Cindy and Kathy held their first “crowning ceremony” during their annual girlfriends getaway trip. During dinner their first night in Prague, after congratulating one another for “not being on any kind of medication,” they hatched the Queen idea and based the crowning ceremony on a New Year’s ritual of Kathy’s—to ask and answer two questions: “What do you want to let go of or leave behind that no longer works for you, and what do you want to keep that’s still working for you?”

    So, over ghoulash and pilsner, watching the swans floating in the Vlatava River, they celebrated who they were. As Cindy describes it: “We were two small town girls from Wisconsin who lived for a couple of decades in New York and got to high points in our careers and there we were, sitting in Prague. And wow, we really had to admire the journey. It was pretty impressive.” They toasted their future—as queens of their own lives, not crones.

    When they returned from Prague, they found that all their friends wanted to have the same experience. And so, while visiting a friend in Las Vegas, they bought one another rhinestone broaches in the shape of a crown and performed the ritual again. They did it again with a group of New York girlfriends.

    After a few more clamored-for crowning ceremonies, Cindy’s publishing instincts kicked in. “This could be a book,” she said. Using Skype and iChat, Cindy in Allentown and Kathy in Los Angeles started writing a proposal for a book that they believed would help other women get back in touch with their inner royalty.

    “At some point,” said Kathy, “you have to be wise enough to poop or get off the pot. You have to come to the point in your life when you decide how you feel about yourself, some time before you’re on your deathbed. In my life I’ve dealt with the fear of failure, the fear of success, the fear of being alive. To survive on a day-to-day basis it takes the basic faith that everything is going to be allright. What’s it going to be—fear or faith?”

    The book outlines seven gifts that will propel any woman to the throne—and not just to clean it—including taking time to admire the person you’ve become, guarding your borders (setting boundaries so your time and energies aren’t sucked away, and, perhaps most important, creating your “court:” the people in your life who, when you are beating yourself up over losing your job will not hesitate to tell you to “snap out it” because you’re the same worthy person you were when you were gainfully employed.

    Of course, that’s something Cindy Ratzlaff and Kathy Kinney know plenty about.

    “I can’t imagine going through life without a good friend,” said Cindy. “My friendship with Kathy has lasted because she has no agenda for me and I have no agenda for her. It’s unconditional—I don’t have to lost weight or do this or that for her to be my friend. I’m confident she will be my friend no matter what.”

    Her advice: “When you’re choosing the people you want to be with, you want to choose the best.”

    So sayeth the Queen.

    Yes, They’re Irish

    “My father always said we came from County Clare,” said Kathy Kinney. “But I know there were Kinneys in Roscommon and Dublin. Nobody ever really pinned it down.”

    She does know that her family’s journey didn’t end when they hit American shores. “They promptly moved to the center of Wisconsin which was as barren and green as Ireland. They were ‘in lumber,’ which was a polite way of saying they cut down some trees.”

    Cindy Ratzlaff’s family were the Selfs (“not one of the big clans”) who left New York to end up in Minnesota, where she was born, “passing the Kinneys along the way,” she joked.

    People

    Sold-Out Crowd Helps Honor 11 Inspirational Irish Women

    Rosemarie Timoney

    Rosemarie Timoney, one of the 11 Inspirational Irish Women of the Delaware Valley. (Click on the photo to view a photo essay.)

    More than 300 people watched on Sunday, May 23, as 11 Irish American women from the Delaware Valley were honored at the Philadelphia Irish Center, with the inaugural Inspirational Irish Women Awards.

    The event was launched to recognize the important role women play in every aspect of Irish-American life and to single out those whose grace, courage, generosity, and intelligence particularly embody the Irish spirit. Among the honorees were Princess Grace of Monaco (the former Grace Kelly of East Falls); Sister Mary Scullion, co-founder of Project Home and one of Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People; and Rosemarie Timoney, an Irish immigrant who founded the Timoney School of Irish Dance to help keep Irish culture alive in the Delaware Valley. J.B. Kelly, nephew of the late Princess Grace, was on hand to accept her award on behalf of her children.

    CBS3 news anchor Susan Barnett was the emcee for the cocktail reception which also honored her colleague, meteorologist Kathy Orr. Artist Pat Gallagher, himself the son of immigrants who grew up on the Main Line, painted abstract impressionist portraits of the women which will hang at the Irish Center for several months before they go to Ireland for a special exhibit at the Oscar Wilde House, American College Dublin. Vincent Gallagher, president of the Commodore Barry Club (the Irish Center), welcomed the audience to the event.

    Proceeds from the event will support the Irish Center and Project H.O.M.E., the nonprofit agency that has been credited with reducing homelessness in Philadelphia.

    The 2010 honorees are:

    • Sister Mary Scullion, co-founder of Project H.O.M.E.
    • Sister Kathleen Marie Keenan, senior vice president of Mission and Sponsorship of Mercy Health System, the largest Catholic health care system in southeastern Pennsylvania.
    • Rosemarie Timoney, founder of Timoney School of Irish Dance, longtime promoter of Irish culture in the Delaware Valley.
    • Kathy McGee Burns, Realtor, president of the Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame, vice president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Committee.
    • Kathy Orr, Eight-time Emmy Award-winning CBS3 meteorologist, anchor of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day coverage, and supporter of several local charities.
    • Emily Riley, executive vice president of the Connelly Foundation.
    • Denise Sullivan Morrison, senior vice president and president, North America Soup, Sauces and Beverages Division of Campbell Soup Company.
    • Siobhan Reardon, first woman president and director of The Free Library of Philadelphia.
    • Liz Kerr, RN, longtime member of Ladies Ancient Order of Hibernians Div. 25, member of the Heart Transplant Team at Temple University and director of the Patrick Kerr Skateboard Scholarship.
    • Rosabelle Gifford, winner of the Rose of Tralee Centre’s first Mary O’Connor Spirit Award in 2009 for her lifetime of courage in the face of adversity and personal advocate for abused women.
    • Princess Grace of Monaco, Academy Award-winning film star, mother, and founder of The Princess Grace Foundation which serves the needy in Monaco and supports the arts in the U.S.

    Music for the gala was provided by Shannon Lambert-Ryan and RUNA, and Michael and John Boyce and Karen Boyce McCollum. The Timoney Dancers performed in surprise tribute to Rosemarie Timoney. Food was prepared and coordinated by Geraldine Quigg and Sarah Walsh, with assistance from Geraldine Trainor, Carmel Boyce, and Maureen Brett Saxon. Flowers by Susan Yeager and Sarah Meade.

    The Inspirational Irish Women Awards committee included Sarah Conaghan, Karen Conaghan Race, Denise Foley, Marianne MacDonald, Kiera McDonagh, Jocelyn McGillian, Jeff Meade, and Emily Weideman.

    Major sponsors included Connelly Foundation, The Philadelphia/Midatlantic Rose of Tralee Centres, Mercy Health System, the Wall-Burns family, and irishphiladelphia.com.

    Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

    How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

    Blackthorn

    Blackthorn with Eileen Ivers: They have fun and they're carriers too. See them at Canstatter's this weekend.

    Whether you’re heading to the shore or just planning a cookout in the backyard or heading over to Canstatter’s in the northeast to spend Memorial Day with Blackthorn, take some time out this weekend to remember the men and women who gave their lives to make and keep us free. That’s what it’s all about.

    Burning Bridget Cleary has been everywhere in the last few weeks, and they’re back (sort of) in the area, playing at the Shawnee on the Delaware Celtic Festival in the Poconos on Saturday and at Mayfair in Allentown on Memorial Day.

    The Sunday Irish Radio Shows fundraiser is in full swing—tune in to 800-AM (you can hear it live on the Web too) between 11 and 1 on Sunday as the Philadelphia Donegal Association takes your pledges over the phone. There are lots of great prizes you can win just by making a donation to keep Irish music on the radio in the Delaware Valley.

    The previously mentioned Blackthorn event at Canstatters—it’s where I first hear this rocking Celtic group—goes on rain or shine thanks to a tent. If you’ve been to a Blackthorn concert, you know it’s fun. If you’ve never been to Blackthorn concert, what’s wrong with you?

    We’re going to look ahead to next weekend because there’s plenty going on you need to know about. June 6 is the big day—the Irish-American Festival at Penns Landing, with Blackthorn, Paddy’s Well, The Hooligans, and Round Tower, 11 dancing groups, and plenty of vendors and food, all on the waterfront in Philadelphia. The festivities start at noon. A Mass will be celebrated at the Irish Memorial at the waterfront right before the gates open.

    It’s also the big day for AOH Notre Dame Division 1 which holds its big Irish festival at St. Michael’s Picnic Grounds in Mont Clare.

    And you can enjoy both those events and still be in time to have your picture taken with one of the Budweiser Clydesdales at McGillin’s Olde Ale House in Philadelphia. The oldest Irish pub in the city is turning 150 and they’re having a big blast between 5 and 8 PM with all kinds of beer and Irish comfort food—all for $45. But tickets are going fast, so check out our calendar for the details.

    And check out the calendar for information on Satharn na nGael, a Gaelic Saturday immersion weekend for those who are interested in the Irish language. If you register by May 29, you get a discount. This all-Irish-all-the-time day is being held at the Irish Center on June 12.

    Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

    How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

    Hurling at Cardinal Dougherty

    All the action is back at Cardinal Dougherty on Sunday!

    This is one seriously Irish weekend. Here are your choices:

    Take a bag of groceries to Washington Savings in Philadelphia and the Hibernian Hunger Project—which will put the food to good use feeding the needy—will allow you to shred one bag of your most important papers, the ones you don’t want to fall into the wrong hands.

    The hot local group, Burning Bridget Cleary, are holding workshops for the Philadelphia Folksong Society in Philadelphia on Satuday. You can go and still make it in time to hear Irish tenor Daniel O’Donnell—a Donegal man—in concert at the Academy of Music.

    At the Irish Center, the first of two major events: The Philadelphia Ceili Group Fundraiser on Saturday, which features some of the area’s sterling Irish traditional musicians and will raise money for the group’s annual Traditional Irish Music Festival in September.

    On Sunday, 11 Delaware Valley Irish-born or Irish-American women will be honored with the first Inspirational Irish Women awards. The cocktail reception will launch an art exhibit by abstract impressionist Pat Gallagher, former of Ardmore an now living in Louisville, KY, whose work is owned by President Barack Obama, Irish Ambassador Michael Collins, and former 76ers coach Larry Brown. Proceeds from the event will benefit the Irish Center and Project H.O.M.E., a program to end homelessness founded by one of the award winners, Sister Mary Scullion.

    Sunday also kicks of the biannual fundraiser for the Sunday Irish Radio Shows on WTMR 800-AM. Tune in at 11 for the Vince Gallagher Irish Radio Hour followed by “Come West Along the Road” with Marianne MacDonald and call in a pledge to keep Irish music on the air.

    Busy day, Sunday. On Sunday morning, AOH Div. 39 will join in an international day of remembrance for An Gorta Mor, the Great Hunger, with a Mass and breakfast afterwards. The Philadelphia Shamrocks hurling team will meet the Washington, DC, Gaels on the field at Cardinal Dougherty High School on N. Second Street in Philadelphia (not far from Cheltenham). The Bucks County Irish Center Annual Festival is being held at Park Polanka in Bensalem, with music , dancing, and food. And to top off the day, the legendary Kevin Burke and Cal Scott will bring their virtuoso sound to the Coatesville Cultural Center.

    Support your local Irish immigrant by attending the rally for immigration reform at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. Representatives from the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia will be there. Last time they brought step dancers—the Irish really know how to demonstrate.

    And get ready for a fabulous concert next weekend at the Irish Center. Part of the proceeds from the show, with topflight groups The Elders and Searson, will go to support the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade.