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Denise Foley

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

There’s still time to get Mom a mighty nice Celtic gift at the Phoenixville Celtic Street Fair on Saturday in. . . where else, Phoenixville. Loads of vendors have signed up (pray for sun), and there’’s music from the Malones. The Bogside Rogues, the Brigade, Pride of Erin Dancer, Oliver McElhone and the Brian Boru Pipes – all for free.

Saturday night, dance the night away at the Galway Society 100th anniversary dinner-dance at the Irish Center. It all starts with a Mass at 5:45 pm. Happy anniversary, Galway!

Don’t forget hurling practice this week at Torresdale Boys Club and the second Sunday session at Braveheart Pub in Hellertown, one of the new entries in the area’s session schedules.

On Thursday, one of our favorites—uilleann piper Paddy Keenan at the World Café Live. If you think you hate the pipes, Paddy will make you love them.

Starting this week and running through July 31, a photo exhibit called “To Love Two Countries” from photographer, John Minihan, is on view in the Barry Room at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia. The profile photos were taken in the course of two weeks in New York, New Jersey and Philadelphia. In the words of poet, Derek Mahon, “The photos were based on real people untouched by celebrity.” What they all have in common is that they all emigrated from Ireland in the early or middle decades of the twentieth century. Some local Philadelphians featured in this exhibit are Barney Boyce, John Joe Brady, John Egan, Tom Farrelly, Barney McEnroe, Jimmy Meehan and Darby O’Connor.

Check out our calendar and pay special attention to next Saturday when Teada is scheduled to perform at the Irish Center. These guys totally wowed the crowd in December with their Christmas show.

Genealogy

Answered Prayers

Tracey Farrell Munro, right, with her cousin Mary Ann Farrell LaPorta, and one of Tracey's father's trophies the family has kept.

Tracey Farrell Munro, right, with her cousin Mary Ann Farrell LaPorta, and one of Tracey's father's trophies the family has kept.

For those who don’t believe in the power of prayer, consider the case of Tracey Farrell Munro.

The Hamilton,Ontario-based landscape designer grew up on Long Island, NY, the daughter of a tennis champion who taught the game to the likes of the Rothschilds and Rockefellers, and his wife, a former fashion model for Vogue and Bazaar. Tracey had two siblings, but their family splintered when her parents divorced when she was 10. Later, after her own marriage failed, she raised her son, Charles, by herself.

“What I wanted more than anything was a family,” says Munro. “I have prayed for a family. All my affirmations about the life I wanted to create I saw in terms of family. If I thought it would never happen, it would break my heart.”

Then, one day, she got a phone call.

A man named Will Hill of Wyndmoor was on the other line. He was contacting her, after a search that took five years, to let her know that they were cousins. They shared the same great grandfather, Patrick Hill, from County Cavan. And she had a family—a big family—in Pennsylvania.

“My father was Joe Farrell and I knew his mother was a Hill,” Munro says. “And my sister’s name is Erin Hill Farrell.”

As they chatted, Will Hill recalls, “it was clear that we weren’t only relatives, we had so much in common as people.” They made plans to meet, and Munro traveled to Philadelphia several weeks ago. . .for a family reunion.

“It’s been awesome!” Munro said at a family dinner at The Shanachie Restaurant in Ambler. What’s been most remarkable for the newest member of the Hill family is seeing her DNA in action.

One day, her family took her to visit the gardens her great grandfather designed in the Philadelphia suburbs. “What he did is very similar to the projects that I’m doing—on large estates, swimming pools, waterfalls. . .” she marvels. A singer (“in two different a cappela choirs and chanting”), she was thrilled to learn that her Philadelphia family is musical: Will’s son, Tim, plays the bodhran, whistle, flute and uilleann pipes and is a fixture at the Shanachie and The Plough and the Stars’ Irish sessions. The author of several books of poetry, Munro was stunned to learn that her cousin, Joe Hill, is also a published author. “I really feel like I’m beginning to understand where I came from,” she says. “I felt like I now had all the pieces.”

The Hills made sure Munro really saw where she came from. One day, she and Will visited the location of the Farrell’s farm—her father’s home—near what is now Halligan’s Pub on Bethlehem Pike in Flourtown. They located two older homes that fit the description of the old homestead on Mill Road, then known as Cleaver’s Mill Road. “I have information from the 1910 Census when her dad was only two years old,” says Will.

One thing that really surprised Munro was learning that two of her father’s many tennis trophies were still in the family that really never knew him. “They told me that Aunt Doris, who recently passed away, used to polish my father’s silver cups,” she says. “He was a whole lot more important in the tennis world than I ever knew. My sister told me that he had hundreds of them in boxes in our basement. But he never kept any out. I don’t think he really identified with him. His attitude was, ‘It’s something I did.’ That’s the way I am too. This has really reminded me that I am my father’s daughter.”

Will Hill and his brother, Patrick, have been working on their family history since 1980 and started actively searching for Munro and her family in 2004. Her father—whose mother, Louise, was the sister of Will and Patrick’s grandfather, Patrick—left the Philadelphia area and never returned, at least as far as Munro knows.

What broke their “case” was a posting that Will made on the genealogy website, www.ancestry.com. “A relative on her mother’s side recognized the names I’d listed and responded,” he explains. “She knew where Tracey’s brother lived and I called him. He has since passed away, but he gave me contact information for Tracey and her sister.”

When Will called her, Munro remembers, “I thought, this is what I’ve been praying for.” In fact, it might be even a little bit more. Munro, like the Hills, felt an instant kinship. “When we got together we laughed, cried, went to lunch, went to pretty places, and had a blast. When you’re with your own people, there’s definitely a kind of connection that’s unspoken and automatic,” she says. “It’s been awe-inspiring, exciting, and very embracing.”

History

Relive the Saga of the Molly Maguires

Vince Gallagher, who appeared in the Martin Ritt movie, will be one your hosts on the trip.

Vince Gallagher, who appeared in the Martin Ritt movie, will be one your hosts on the trip.

The “Molly Maguires” were a group of miners in the coal region of Pennsylvania who formed a union in the 1860s to protect workers from the terrible working conditions in the mines, which weren’t properly ventilated and had no safety provisions, and horrendous living conditions that were dictated by the miners’ low salaries. Often, they were paid in what we called “bob-tailed” checks, which consisted of goods that had to be purchased at the overpriced company store. They were largely, though not entirely, Irish.

In 1970, Martin Ritt’s film, “The Molly Maguires,” starring Sean Connery, debuted, featuring a group of extras from the Philadelphia area, including musician Vince Gallagher, now president of the Commodore Barry Club (The Irish Center).

On June 6, you can join Gallagher as well as fellow WTMR radio host Marianne MacDonald on a trip down memory lane—actually, to the towns of Jim Thorpe and Eckly, PA, where the film was made. The bus trip, leaving from the Irish Center, will include a tour of Eckley’s Miners’ Village and the Old Jail Museum in Jim Thorpe, with a dinner, featuring Gallagher and his band, at the Emerald Restaurant. The $79 charge includes transportation by bus with rest rooms, DVD, and on-board refreshments, all admissions, sit-down dinner, and entertainment.

Seats are filling up fast, so call Marianne MacDonald at 856-236-2717 or email rinceseit@msn.com or call Vince Gallagher at 610-220-4142 for information or tickets.

Arts

Get Ready for Thursday Night at the Irish Movies

Musician and County Clare native Fintan Malone introduces "The Boys and Girl from County Clare" at last year's film festival.

Musician and County Clare native Fintan Malone introduces "The Boys and Girl from County Clare" at last year's film festival.

It’s movie time again.

Starting on Thursday, May 8, join WTMR radio host Marianne MacDonald (“Come West Along the Road) and me for the first film of our second Irish Film Series at the Irish Center (Commodore Barry Club), Carpenter and Emlen Streets in Philadelphia. The free series will run every first Thursday at 8 PM.

Kicking off the new festival is the 2008 Cannes Camera d’Or winning film, “Hunger,” from neophyte director Steve McQueen (no relation to the actor). This powerful movie, which was recently shown at the Philadelphia Film Festival and is now playing in theaters, was co-written by Irish playwright Enda Walsh and stars Michael Fassbender as Bobby Sands, who led other prisoners in the infamous H-block of Belfast’s Maze Prison on a hunger strike in 1981. Their demand: That the British government acknowledge the Irish Republican Army as a legitimate political organizations and them as political prisoners. Ten men, including Sands, starved to death.

We’re hoping to have a special guest to introduce the film and answer questions afterwards.

Last year, we co-sponsored a series of films that included “The Secret of Roan Inish,” “The Butcher Boy,” “The Boys and Girl from County Clare,” “My Left Foot,” and “The Snapper.” We were fortunate to have Fintan Malone, a musician from County Clare, to introduce “The Boys and Girl from County Clare,” a warm and funny film about a ceili band competition. Hyacinthe O’Neill, an old friend of Christy Brown, the disabled writer and artist whose life is depicted in the Jim Sheridan film, “My Left Foot,” shared her memories with the audience after the movie was aired.

All the films are shown in the Fireside Room, the bar will be open, and snacks available for purchase.

And you can help us select subsequent films for the series. What’s your favorite Irish movie? Did you love, “The Boxer,” or are you nuts about “The Quiet Man?” How about “The Molly Maguires,” which features some local Irish actors, including musician and WTMR radio host Vince Gallagher, who is also president of the Irish Center? Maybe you’re a “Finian’s Rainbow” fanatic. Let us know what you’d like to see (click on the “contact us” button on the website) and we’ll add it to the list. (Need some help remembering the Irish movies you’ve seen. Don’t worry, you’re in good company. Here’s a place where you can jog your memory.)

We may have some surprises as the series continues, so stay tuned.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Members of the Tyrone Society accept a proclamation acknowledging their 100th anniversary from Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter.

Members of the Tyrone Society accept a proclamation acknowledging their 100th anniversary from Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter.

If you see the Tyrone Society around, wish it a happy 100th birthday. You might want to do it in person on Saturday night at their anniversary ball featuring Ireland’s “Queen of Country,” Philomena Begley. It’s being held at the Irish Center where you can enjoy cocktails, dinner, and all kinds of entertainment. And we have to say, Tyrone looks great for 100. Happy Birthday!

A fundraiser benefiting Project Children, which brings children from Northern Ireland to the US in the summer, is scheduled for Saturday night at the AOH Div. 1 Hall in National Park, NJ. Music will be provided by some of Philly’s best Irish musicians, including The Shanty’s , Birmingham Six, the Bogside Rogues, the Broken Shilellaghs and more. There will be beef, beer, raffles and prizes—and all for a worthwhile cause.

On Thursday, US National Scottish fiddle champ Hanneke Cassel will be joined Celtic cellist Natalie Haas at the Blue Barn, Alapocas Run State Park in Wilmington. And in Phoenixville, Enter the Haggis will be playing at The Colonial Theater. This Celtic rock group has a big local following.

On Friday, get ready to laugh while doing a good deed at the same time. The Dennis Kelly AOH Div. 1 of Havertown is holding its annual comedy night to benefit the Heroes Homecoming Fund, the division’s own charity which provides funds to injured returning veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan theaters and their families. It’s being held at the Palombaro Club in Ardmore.

We have all of the juicy details on our calendar.

Don’t forget to buy Irish!

News

St. Paddy’s Day Parade Award Winners Honored

CBS 3's meteorologist Doug Kammerer checks out a cellphone picture with award-winning Rince Ri dancers Katie McGlynn and Marielle Baird.

CBS 3's meteorologist Doug Kammerer checks out a cellphone picture with award-winning Rince Ri dancers Katie McGlynn and Marielle Baird.

It may be April, but the St. Patrick’s Day festivities weren’t over till this week, when parade award winners were given their plaques, trophies, and crystal bowls at a banquet upstairs at Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia.

Vince Gallagher and Karen Boyce McCollum provided the music, parade association President Michael Callahan was master of ceremonies, and the CBS3 crew who do the play-by-play during the parade, which is televised live on Channel 3, acted as presenters.

But you can see it all here, via our photos and video.

Music

No Silly Love Songs

Shannon and Matt Heaton are performing in Bethlehem on April 25.

Shannon and Matt Heaton are performing in Bethlehem on April 25.

When Shannon and Matt Heaton sent me their new CD, “Lovers Well,” in February, I thought, “Perfect, love songs, just in time for Valentine’s day.” Then I listened.

At least two of the tunes involve dogs and guns. Several describe some serious flirting that could be called by another name, but we can’t say it here. And yes, there are sweet songs of undying love, but there’s also some dying going on too.

“Okay, they’re relationship songs, really,” laughed Shannon when I pointed this out to her. “When we tried to have love be the hook, it was cumbersome. Relationships are complicated. A friend told me about a book she’d read by [psychotherapist and spiritual writer] Thomas Moore who said ‘Every relationship has an end.’ It’s really simple. A lot of time the end is parting, somebody’s died, or jealousy gets the best of you. When we say these are love songs, we’re talking about so many different aspects of relationships. It’s how we manuever them.”

They’re not Barry White and they’re certainly not Paul McCartney, but they are tunes that certainly do capture the richness and poignancy of love. Some may actually be familiar to you, like “Lily of the West,” a traditional American folk song that’s been covered by Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and Peter, Paul and Mary, but which has been “Irish-ized” by Shannon Heaton (Flora is now Molly and she comes from Ireland, not Lexington). It’s a story of obsessive love, betrayal, and eventually murder. “The Golden Gloves” is a delightful tale of a young betrothed woman who falls in love with the man chosen to give her away and discovers a clever way to marry the true man of her dreams on her wedding day.

And there is the lovely, lilting “Lao Dueng Duen,” which I at first thought was in Irish but is actually a Thai song Shannon learned when she spent a year in Thailand on a Rotary Club scholarship when she was a teenager. The child of globe-trotting parents (she spent some of her childhood in Nigeria where her mother was teaching on a Fulbright Scholarship) Heaton had wanted to go to France to learn the language, but chose Thailand after she heard all of the other scholarship winners opt for either Paris or London. “I was ambarrassed that no one had chosen Africa or Asia so when they got to me I said, ‘How about Thailand?’ My mother picked me up and said, ‘So, are you going to France?’ and I said, ‘No, Thailand,’ then burst into tears. All because I was too stubborn to be like everybody else!”

Since she didn’t speak Thai, she asked to be placed with a bi-lingual family. Looking back on it, she says, she should have been more specific. Her family was bi-lingual—they spoke both Thai and Chinese. Heaton didn’t speak Chinese either. But she did learn Thai eventual.

“My first year of college I was doing cooking, banana leaf folding, doll making, and music,” she laughs. “ It was kind of like home ec, called life sciences. Eventually my language got good enough so I majored in ethnomusicaology.” (She returned to spend her junior year there as well.)

She still speaks Thai fluently, so for the CD, she sings in Thai, only translating the melody so it would have a Celtic sound. The liner notes include her rough translation of the lyrics—and this one is a classic love song:

“Oh my love, my moon.
Like the fragrance of a flower
Such is the heady perfume of her essence.
It envelopes me completely, like nothing before.
The scent of her, [my soul mate], this beautiful woman
Oh the sweetness of this love.”

“I’ve always been really nervous to do that song when we perform, but [musician and folklorist] Mick Moloney encouraged me to do it,” she explains. “We performed it at a benefit Mick organized in October to raise money for the Mercy Center in Thailand. Mick has a home in Thailand and he’s studying meditation and aiming to spend more time there.”

And she added it to “Lovers Well” not only because it’s a pure love song, but because “ singing it, I’m immediately transported back to Thailand, where I’m sitting in my teacher’s livingroom, I’m 17, and it’s hotter than hell. I don’t speak Irish, but I can imagine that the same thing happens to people who might have learned sean nos in Ireland. When they sing in that language, there’s an immediate transportation back home. ”

But what about her own love story? The Heatons met in 1992 “because I need a guitar player for a wedding gig. He was the first person I called who was home so he got the job.” (Their friend, Steve, was first on her list. “Musically we’re not compatible and personally I don’t think it would have worked out, so I’m glad Matt was home and Steve wasn’t,” she says.)

Matt had an eclectic background. He studied classical guitar, played in rock bands, and was writing tango music when they met. “At the same time he was doing independent study in Irish traditional music because he was interested in it,” she says. The two picked up tunes and techniques (he for guitar, Shannon for flute and voice) playing in sessions in Chicago and later on many trips to County Clare. Moving to Boston—one of the most Irish cities in America—also helped cement their bond to Irish trad. “Matt really got into it, so it’s really the only music he plays now. He kept up the tango stuff and had me try tango music with him. But we settled on Irish music.”

They married in 1995, after finishing college, and decided to perform together, a decision that has been both a joy and a challenge, Shannon says.

“It is a profound challenge—how to keep thing separate and how to integrate things, especially,” she laughs, “when you live in a small house.”

And when you’re also on the road together, as they are now, promoting their CD of eclectic love songs. Matt and Shannon Heaton will be appearing on Saturday, April 25, at the Godfrey Daniels Coffee House in Bethlehem (http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/calendar for details). If you decide to go—and I encourage it—you’ll see that, despite the challenges, these two make beautiful music together.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

Scenes from a recent Rambling House.

Scenes from a recent Rambling House.

It’s a slowish week, Celtically speaking, but that’s good because it gives us a chance to tell you a little more about a monthly evening of entertainment at the Irish Center called the Rambling House, which happens this coming Thursday night.

A “rambling house” is truly a piece of old Ireland. A rural County Kerry tradition, it was an informal evening of music, stories, jokes, and recitations usually held in the home of a local farmer. The performers weren’t professionals—just neighbors and friends who presented their “party piece,” acted as the seanchai (storyteller), fiddled, sang, or danced. Yes, it was Irish amateur hour, but it’s also the place where the traditions were passed along, the stories came alive, and a sense of community and closeness were forged.

I went to the first Rambling House, produced and hosted by WTMR 800-FM radio host, Marianne MacDonald, and got that same feeling of “home” I experienced when I was in Ireland. I like to attribute the sensation to some mystical form of ethnic memory, though I suspect it had more to do with the realization I had while sitting in my cousin’s kitchen in Ballyharry, County Donegal: What I thought of as my family’s own personal customs—sitting at the kitchen table for hours, talking and laughing and telling stories—were actually part of some larger set of traditions whose source I discovered at this other table, while sipping tea and talking to people I’d just met but with whom I share a few grandparents.

Even if you’ve never had this kind of experience, you’re sure to feel a closeness to your roots at the Irish Center’s Rambling House, which is scheduled for April 16 at 8 PM. As the old song goes: “Boul in, boul in and take a chair, Admission here is free, You’re welcome to the rambling house, to hear the seanchai.”

Check out our calendar for the loads of sessions on tap this week.