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The 2010 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Festival & Fair

Showing a little leg.

Showing a little leg.

Kilts.

Everywhere you looked at the 2010 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Festival, kilts. The Washington Memorial Pipe Band performed jigs, reels and strathspeys there at the Valley Forge Scanticon all weekend, and of course, you know what they wore. Hanging about the concert stage, beers at the ready, fans of the rowdy band Albannach were decked out in their own colorful tartans—with Doc Martens, which was a nice touch. On Saturday, one young woman paraded about in the shortest kilt I’ve ever seen—not that I looked. We also bumped into a dude named Tweak with a multicolor mohawk, and he was modeling the rugged, no-nonsense Utilikilt. Yessir, we were up to our keisters in kilts.

Of course, Highland apparel wasn’t the only attraction. Organizers Bill and Karen Reid made sure there was plenty to keep festival-goers occupied. The Celts who crowded onto the convention hall floor, starting Friday night and on into late Sunday afternoon, rocked out to great bands like Searson, Paddy’s Well, the Tartan Terrors, Screaming Orphans, Rathkeltair and Brother. (And the aforementioned Albannoch.)

Noshers had their pick of snacks, from meat pies to shortbread to Bailey’s and brown bread ice cream served up by the sweet folks at the Scottish Highland Creamery from Maryland’s Eastern Shore. For tipplers, there were whisky tastings and pints (sadly, small pints) of Smithwick’s.

If you wanted to, you could take Irish language lessons or break out your fiddle and play in a traditional music session. Kids from the Campbell School of Highland Dance and Fitzpatrick School of Irish Dance were up on their toes all weekend. Vendors sold everything from miniature whiskey barrels to personalized pub paintings to Claddagh rings. The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day parade had a table. So did the Sunday morning Irish radio shows. (And, for the first time, us too.)

In the midst of a dreary winter, in the wake of a bone-chilling midweek blizzard, the 2010 festival was just what the doctor ordered. And you’d better believe the Reids were keeping an eye on the weather forecasts.

Says a relieved Bill Reid, “We were sweating bullets the week before and were more than happy when we missed the previous weekend but when Wednesday happened … well, need I say more?”

The cold and the snow—not to mention the ice-coated Scanticon parking lot—evidently didn’t deter festival fans, especially on the first full day of the event. “Saturday is always the bigger day and this year was slightly better than last,” says Reid, “and that was our record setter.”

The Reids are already thinking about how to make next year’s event even better, with an eye toward boosting Sunday attendance and drawing in more locals.

We’ve been going for years, and wouldn’t miss it. The Mid-Winter Festival is a great warm-up for the St. Patrick’s craziness that is to come.

Couldn’t make it? Check out our videos.

Washington Memorial Pipe Band With Campbell School of Highland Dance Part 1
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/washingtoncampbell2010

Washington Memorial Pipe Band With Campbell School of Highland Dance Part 2
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/washingtoncampbell2010-02 

Albannach in Concert at the 2010 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Festival
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/albannoch2010

Brother in Concert at the 2010 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Festival
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/brother2010

Paddy’s Well at the 2010 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Festival
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/paddyswell2010

Fitzpatrick Irish Dancers Step Out
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/fitzpatrick2010-01

The Little Ones
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/littleones

Amazing Grace
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/amazinggrace

Fitzpatrick Irish Dancers
http://www.irishphiladelphia.com/video/fitzpatrick2010-02

Arts

Look Out! Irish Comedy Tour Heading This Way

Comic Pat Godwin was the song parody guy on the old Morning Zoo radio show in Philadelphia. (Not a mug shot.)

Comic Pat Godwin was the song parody guy on the old Morning Zoo radio show in Philadelphia. (Not a mug shot.)

Did you ever sit around with your Irish-American friends, cracking each other up with stories from your childhood? The crazy relatives. The wise-cracking relatives. The relatives who never met a mixed drink they didn’t like.

Pat Godwin and Derek Richards did, and even though they grew up in different Irish Catholic neighborhoods—Godwin in Wilkes-Barre, Richards in Detroit—they found they lived on common ground. “We all realized we had relatives with drinking problems—I know, go figure, who saw that coming?” quips Richards. “The funniest thing though was when we all realized we had mug shots. We’d all been arrested at some point. It was not like we’d ever hijacked an armored car, but we’d all been in the situation where we’d had too much booze with the wrong people.”

Then, they took this conversation on the road.

Godwin (you may remember him as the song parodist from the John DeBella Morning Zoo and later the Howard Stern radio shows) and Richards, along with Jim Paquette and Mike McCarthy are the comics that make up The Irish Comedy Tour (‘they’re Irish, they’re American, and they’re not holding back”). Godwin, Richards, and Paquette will be bringing it to the Sellersville Theatre on Sunday, October 25.

The four met on the comedy circuit, and one thing led to another. Listen to Richards and see if any of this sounds familiar:

“We were sharing stories over some Jameson and some beer and we started noticing a common thread in personal backgrounds. And I thought, can we take what we talk and joke about here and bring it to stage?”

They could. The Irish Comedy Tour started in 2005 as a one-off St, Paddy’s Day thing. This year, it’s taking its nose-bashing, (you have to check out their website to get that one) Irish-pubby sense of humor from Michigan to Key West. “It’s kind of like an Irish pub and comedy show that you put in a food processor,” says Richards, who was a semi-finalist in Comedy Central’s Open Mic Fight.

Paquette and Godwin are both musicians as well, so there are some tunes in that comedy Cuisinart too. “Pat does a hilarious song about the lack of birth control in the Irish community called ’13 Kids and Counting.’ He also does a version of ‘Black Velvet Band,’ with a comedic twist,” Richards says. (Few songs deserve it more.)

If you saw “Last Comic Standing,” you saw judge and “Cheers” alumn John Ratzenberger nearly swallow his mustache when contestant Godwin started singing that pre-K favorite, “Bingo (was His Name-O)” as Bono (“this is for all the dogs in shelters!”). “That was funny,” Ratzenberger said as Godwin left the stage.

In fact, Godwin started as a musician before he turned to stand-up and acting. “I was playing down at Smokey Joe’s at Penn and it was pretty clear what they wanted was cover songs and things they could sing to. But I was talking in between the songs, satirizing rock and roll stars and singing funny stuff, and that turned into my act. [Philadelphia comedian] Todd Glass saw me and suggested I do an open mike and that’s how I was hired to do the DeBella show.”

When the Morning Zoo was shuttered, Godwin turned to the guy who was to blame, Howard Stern, who hired him to churn out topical song parodies for his pre-satellite radio morning show. “I left there and moved to LA,” Godwin says. “I didn’t do any more songs. I had a few failed pilots, knocked around LA with my girlfriend at the time, wasn’t successful at much of anything. I failed in LA once as an actor at 18, then as a songwriter at 26, then again as a comedian. It’s LA 3, Pat Godwin, zero.”

But now he’s on the Irish Comedy Tour, and things couldn’t be better. Both he and Richards say this is the most fun they have all year. They get to reach deep back into their childhoods and bring up the funniest bits, even the ones that weren’t funny at the time.

“For me,” says Richards, “a lot of it is the sense of humor I grew up with. My grandfather was my biggest comedy influence. Growing up, down in the basement in my mother and father’s house, myself and my brother would listen to Dad and Grandpa trade the most wrong jokes ever. (Even though it’s an adult show, we won’t be doing any of those.) As long as we never told our mother and grandmother, we could stay down there and listen.”

Godwin, who is a descendant of the writer Mary Shelley (“Frankenstein”), grew up with “the drinking thing.”

“I mind my Ps and Qs with alcohol, because I’ve seen a lot of smart, creative people ruin their lives,” he says. “On the road I drive for those two wackos so they can tear it up after the show.” But he’s found a way to give it a comic spin. “I wrote a song called, ‘Switch to Beer,’ about the way some Irish people handle their drinking problems—putting down the whiskey and switching to beer. It came from seeing the Irish actor Richard Harris in the Bahamas, completely bombed, after he’d been on the Letterman show a week before talking about how he’d solved his hard drinking problem. I went up to him at the roulette table where he was completely trashed and I asked him about it. He said he stopped drinking the hard stuff. He switched to beer.”

So, by now you’ve figured out that the Irish Comedy Tour isn’t the place to take the kiddies. “This sense of humor is part of our upbringing, which might be a little off-color and politically incorrect, but it’s not dirty,” says Richards. “It’s all in good taste.”

And, he says, it might remind you of sitting around with your pals at a pub, sharing a frosty one and some memories. “People come up to us after the show, even people right from Ireland, and tell us this is everything they talk about,” he says. “It’s a fun party atmosphere. It’s a party—that’s the best way to describe it.”

Arts

Fringe Bonus: The Return of “Trad”

Charlie DelMarcelle and Mike Dees as "Da" and Thomas.

Charlie DelMarcelle and Mike Dees as "Da" and Thomas.

“Trad,” a play by Irish comedian Mark Doherty and a popular production by the Inis Nua Theater Company is returning to Philadelphia as part of the 13th annual PhiladelphiaLive Arts-Fringe Festival in September.

A comic take on the hero’s journey, the play follows the path taken by Thomas, a 100-year-old Irish bachelor farmer and his even older “Da” as they search for the child Thomas sired 70 years before. In the course of their sojourn, they experience a little culture shock, much like someone who hasn’t been back to Ireland in the last decade or so might experience today.

“We’re incredibly excited to be part of the Philly Fringe and to bring ‘Trad’ back for another go-round,” says Inis Nua Artistic Director Tom Reing. “When we produced ‘Trad’ as part of the Live Arts Festival two years ago, it received a great response. We have such a good time with this show,we wanted to bring it back for a longer run, not only for the audience but for ourselves.”

In addition to performing in the Philly Fringe, Inis Nua will also be producing “Trad” in NYC as part of the First Irish Festival, running concurrently with the Fringe.

“It’s going to be a lot of work, but we’re really excited to be performing in both cities,” Reing says. “We’ll be splitting the weeks up, half in New York, half here at home.”

Playwright Mark Doherty’s radio credits include “Only Slaggin,'” “A Hundred and Something,” “Stand-up Sketches” and “The Bees of Manulla” for RTE, and “The O’Showfor BBC Radio 4. He has written for, and appeared in, various TV shows, including “The Stand Up Show” and “Back to the Future” for the BBC, and” Couched,” a 6-part comedy series for RTE.  He has also workedextensively as a stand-up comedian and actor. He was the recipient of the 2004 BBC Radio Drama Award (Stewart Parker Award) for Trad. Doherty also wrote and starred in the movie,” A Film with Me in It.” 

Inis Nua Artistic Director and founder,Tom Reing, will helm the production. His credits include all Inis Nua productions to date (A Play on Two Chairs, Tadhig Stray Wandered In, Crazy Gary’s Mobile Disco, Skin Deep, Made in China ). Tom has also directed for (among others) Azuka Theatre, Shakespeare in Clark Park, Brat Productions and at the Walnut Street Theater.

The cast includes Barrymore-Award-winning Mike Dees as Thomas, Inis Nua favorite Charlie DelMarcelle as Da and Associate Artistic Director Jared Michael Delaney as Sal/Fr. Rice. “Trad” also features musician John Lionarons on hammer dulcimer, fiddle, accordion and tin whistle, providing live sound on stage.

 You can see “Trad” at the Amaryllis at the Adrienne Theater, 2030 Sansom Street, Philadelphia on the following dates:

September 3 at 8 PM; September 4 at 8 and 10 PM ; September 9 at 7 PM; September 10 at 9 PM; September 11 at 9 PM; September 16 at 6 PM; September 17 at 9 PM; September 18 at 7 PM;  September 23 at 8 PM; September 24 at 8 PM; September 25 at 8 PM. 

Tickets are $15 and available by calling 215-413-1318.

Arts

Philly Debut of “The Brothers Flanagan”

Funny how things work out.

About eight years ago, Bill Rolleri wrote a play about a couple of Irish brothers who own a bar in Philly and are at odds over everything, from whether to put in a TV to whether they should sell the place below market value, given the fact that a serial killer prowling the neighborhood is really cutting into business.

 A few months ago, Rolleri and some friends held a benefit at Fergie’s Pub in Philadelphia to raise money to stage the play. They didn’t really make enough, but Rolleri’s play, “The Bros. Flanagan,” will still go on. . .in a Philly pub, owned by an Irish guy who thinks TVs in bars are an abomination.

 “What better place to see a play about two brothers who own an Irish pub in Philadelphia than in an Irish pub in Philadelphia,” asks producer Stephen Hatzai.

 Fergus Carey, who owns Fergie’s and several other pubs in the city, first saw “The Bros. Flanagan” a few years ago when Rolleri presented it during a festival of new plays at InterAct Theater Company. “He came up to me and said, ‘I presume you have a day job,” deadpans Rolleri, raising an eyebrow or two from Hatzai  and Carey who are sitting with him at a dark corner table one afternoon recently at the popular Sansom St. watering hole and restaurant.

 “Did I?” asked Carey.

 “No,” said Rolleri.

 “I didn’t think so,” Carey says. “I’m not that rude. He makes things up,” he adds, nodding his wild, silvery locks toward Rolleri. “Which is a good skill for a playwright.”

 “The Bros. Flanagan” is part of the 13th annual Philadelphia Live/Arts and Fringe Festival which kicks off September 4. The Inis Nua Theatre Company’s popular production of “Trad,” another Irish play, is also part of the festival, which is known for its cutting edge artists and performances and unconventional venues, like art galleries, the YMCA, churches and, of course, pubs.

 Carey, who came to the US planning to write plays and act “and didn’t,” has become that theater essential—a supporter of the arts. He is chairman of the board of Brat Productions, a local theater company and “The Bros. Flanagan” won’t be the first play staged in his upstairs room. Just last winter, you could have seen a production of “Beowulf,” a musical monologue called “Buddy Felch Tells It LikeIt Is,” and “Go Irish: The Purgatory Diaries of Jason Miller” with your beer.

 “Fergie is such a theater animal,” says Hatzai. “He loves things that are a little off-beat.”

 And he thinks that a pub is just the place to see a play. “It’s a fun thing to sit in a bar and hear someone tell you a story,” says Carey, who won’t have a TV set in his pubs because he thinks they’re conversation killers. “And what is a play but great storytelling?”

 Rolleri’s play certainly is.The story: Business at the Flanagan brothers’ struggling bar isn’t helped by the terror gripping the neighborhood in the wake of a series of murders, deemed by the police to be the work of one killer. But that’s not the only violence in this four-man play. The brothers are at each other’s throats over just about everything, but mainly about selling the bar whose market value drops with each scary headline.

Into the mix Rolleri adds a police officer who is part of the task force hunting for the killer and a real estate speculator with political ties whose aim is to “buy the bar for peanuts.” There’s a lot of drama, some comedy, and, of course, it being a play set in a bar, there’s some fighting.

 It’s taken Rolleri eight years to get his play produced, but it hasn’t been sitting in a drawer somewhere. “The Bros. Flanagan” has been rewritten many times. “A lot of people’s hands have been in this play,” Rolleri says. “I’m almost ashamed to put my name on it.”

 “But he did,” quips Hatzai. 

 And he got a few of the city’s finest actors to play in it. Character actors Michael Toner and H.Michael Walls play the eponymous brothers, while Jerry Rudasill is the police officer and Chris Fluck the smarmy real estate speculator.

 But he never really raised enough money to produce it, which may be why he has more than a few butterflies. “We never hit our budget, so we’re going ahead on faith,” says Rolleri.

 “The Bros. Flanagan” will run September 5, 12, 19, at 2 and 6 PM; September 6 and 13 at 4 PM; September 9 and 16 at 7 PM at Fergie’s Pub, 1214 Sansom Street, Philadelphia. Admission is $20. And if you buy one entrée, you get one free. Call 215-413-1318 for tickets or info, or order tickets online.

Arts

The Kings of Irish Comedy

Ardal O’Hanlon is explaining the difference between his comedy and that of his two companions—Dylan Moran and Tommy Tiernan, the reigning triumverate of the Irish comic scene known collectively as “The Fellas” who are headlining at The Troc in Philadelphia on Wednesday night. It’s clear he’s given it a great deal of serious thought.

“We’re quite different really,” says O’Hanlon perhaps best known in the States for his turn as the “incredibly silly stupid priest,” Father Dougal, in the BBC series, “Father Ted.” (Think Jessica Simpson’s brain in the head of a good-looking young guy in a cassock and collar.)

“Tommy Tiernan is very radical, radically different from myself, extremely high energy, bares his soul on stage. He’s quite shocking in some ways [The Irish Senate twice accused him of blasphemy], but immensely popular in Ireland. He represents the counterculture. He’s like a messiah to some people in Ireland. Tommy for them speaks the truth and I suppose he goes where other comics do not dare to tread.”

And Dylan Moran, whom most American audiences know from his roles in the Simon Pegg comedies, “Shaun of the Dead,” and “Run Fatboy Run”? “Dylan is a very cerebral comic. For me, he is occasionally profound in ways other comics aren’t. He has an Oscar Wildian wit. He’s always been one of my favorite comics. He has a lovely way with words, a lot of integrity, he doesn’t pander to the masses.”

As for himself, O’Hanlon seems to have given that less thought. “I find it hard to describe my own style,” he admits. “It’s observational, deadpan in tone, surreal around the edges. That’s it in a nutshell.”

One of six children of prominent Irish Fianna Fail politician, Dr. Rory O’Hanlon and his wife, Teresa, the Monaghan-born Ardal O’Hanlon says he’s not sure why he wound up in comedy. His siblings found their way into medicine, politics, and accounting (“They seemed like good jobs until a year ago—who’s laughing now?”), and he was by his own admission “a quiet, shy boy, always doodling with a pen” who wanted to be a writer. Then, in college in the 80s, he fell in with funny companions. Inspired by the exuberant young British comedy scene, they founded one of Ireland’s first comedy clubs, The Comedy Cellar, in Dublin.

“It was a tiny club, haphazardly and badly organized, and we would get only about 50 people there on a Wednesday night,” O’Hanlon recalls. It all might have died there had O’Hanlon and company not done what millions of Irish have done over the last several hundred years: emigrate. “Not till we moved to London enmasse did we take off. Like New York at one time, London was alive with comedy clubs where every serious comic wanted to go.”

A comedy diaspora? Growing up in pre-Celtic Tiger Ireland, O’Hanlon says, “you assumed you were going to leave. It wasn’t even daunting. It was accepted. It’s what we do.” (In one of his earlier monologues, O’Hanlon quipped that he was “typically Irish, really in the sense that I don’t live there anymore.”)

Though his father was a doctor—and government minister—they weren’t rich by any means, so O’Hanlon and his siblings worked over school holidays to make money to pay for their education. “Ireland was a pretty poor country in the 80s and 90s, and on an average doctor’s salary, you can’t put six children though college,” he says. Hence, on his resume, a stint at a British pea cannery and a season on an Irish pig farm. A pig farm? “I grew up in a pig-farming area of Ireland,” he explains. “It was a good thing. In a way, everything was easier after that. I knew it was one of the things I never wanted to do again, and although I’ve been in some horrific dressing rooms, nothing is as bad as a slurry-covered truck.”

And the move to London in 1994 was a boon too. “There you could pit your wits against the best in the business and you only got better.”

After a couple of years on the UK comedy circuit, “Father Ted” came along: a sitcom about a group of priests living on a remote island (Craggy Island) off the West coast of Ireland. O’Hanlon landed the role as Father Dougal McGuire, the simple-minded, rollerblading, non-religious priest whose choice of career bewilders Father Ted Creely “Dougal, how did you get into the church in the first place? Was it, like, ‘collect 12 crisp packets and become a priest?’”

Dougal’s failure to grasp even the rudiments of his calling endeared him to viewers.

Dougal: God, I’ve heard about those cults, Ted. People dressing up in black and saying ‘Our Lord’s going to come back and save us all.’
Ted: No, Dougal, that’s us. That’s Catholicism.
Dougal: Oh right.

But the wackadoodle priest was almost too beloved. When the series ended in 1998, O’Hanlon took his stand-up act on the road and almost quit the business when well-meaning Dougal fans wanted him to be “a cuddly priest”, not the “everyman sliding toward middle age, a man confused by the world around him” he is in both his act and in real life.

“There are certain traces of me in Father Dougal,” admits O’Hanlon, who also says he based his character on “watching dogs a lot. Dougal has a lot of dog-like naivete.

“When I first started doing stand-up I was more wide-eyed and more confused than I am now. But I still think one of the things I like about comedy is the naivete and innocence, and it’s not something I’d like to lose entirely either—this way of looking at the world from an almost almost alien perspective. For me it’s true, I genuinely am confused. The reason I love stand-up is that it’s a way to deal the nonsense.”

He eventually left the road but stayed in the business, doing two more series. He had more dramatic role in the British show, “Big Bad World,” and then he was “sucked back into fluffy sitcom land” with “My Hero,” about an alien who falls in love with a human nurse, “a shameless ripoff,” of Robin Williams’ career-making “Mork and Mindy.”

Aside from the steady paycheck and the “companionship,” series work has its perks. “You’re pampered. People bring you fruit. That doesn’t happen in stand-up,” says O’Hanlon. “Standup is more of a solitary existence. The writing side of it as well. You spend a lot of time navel gazing. That’s one reason that all of us [he, Moran and Tiernan] are happy to go on the road together.”

You can see “The Fellas” on Wednesday night, starting at 7 PM, at the Trocadero at 1003 Arch Street. See our calendar for the details.

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.

Arts

New Local Irish Web TV Show To Debut

Sarah, left, and Mary Conaghan filming at Philly's City Hall.

Sarah, left, and Mary Conaghan filming at Philly's City Hall.

On Monday night at 8 PM, you can type in www.phillyirelandconnection.com on your browser and see the premier episode of a new local internet TV channel.

It’s the brainchild of sisters Sarah and Mary Conaghan of Delaware County. “We’re planning to cover events and organizations in the area,” says Sarah, a nursing student at Delaware County Community College. “For our first episode, we’re doing a feature on the Irish Center and the history behind it, and a piece on the Tyrone Ball which is coming up in April.”

The two young women were filming on Thursday at Philadelphia’s City Hall where Mayor Michael Nutter presented a proclamation honoring the Philadelphia Tyrone Society, which has a 100-year history in the city.

They’re putting it all together via WorldTV.com, a company started by two Dublin men that makes it easy to create your own web TV channel. Of course, it helps that Mary Conaghan is studying broadcasting at Temple University. “She’s very good with the camera and the technical side of it,” says Sarah. “I’m not. I have a very shaky hand.”

The sisters have been talking about launching an Irish-themed channel for about a year. “Everyone is on the Internet,” says Sarah. “I think it’s more of an interest for people than real TV. Someday I think they’re going to be combined. We just thought it would be neat to have a program featuring the Philadelphia Irish-American community.”

And they certainly know it. Their father, Tom Conaghan, is the founder head of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia and the Irish Cultural and Heritage House of Pennsylvania in Upper Darby, which serves the Irish immigrant community in the Delaware Valley and is a hub and meeting place for both recent immigrants and Irish Americans in the region. Sarah and her sister, Karen Conaghan Race, also run the Rose of Tralee pageant every year.

The PhillyIrelandConnection show will run weekly on Monday nights at 8 PM.

Arts, Music

Danu Dazzles at Zellerbach

There was a moment, just after intermission at their concert Saturday night, when members of the Irish band Danú took to the Zellerbach Theatre stage wearing the kinds of tacky Irish hats you might otherwise see on the street at the Wildwood Irish Festival.

The stunt got a good laugh and they proceeded to play a set of tunes while wearing the headgear—picture box player Benny McCarthy with a tatty leprechaun beard and guitarist Donal Clancy with an undersized green plastic derby. And that’s as green-beer Irish as the band was ever going to get as they presented two hours of solidly traditional Irish music, played with passion and consummate skill.

Zellerbach certainly is capable of handling large crowds, but the theatre somehow comes across as small and cozy. Consequently, the concert at times felt more like an intimate Irish music session—albeit played by musicians who are among the best in their field.

Lead singer Muireann Nic Amhlaoibh was in great voice. Her strong, smoky alto stands in contrast to the breathy sopranos who seem to front most other bands. She knows how to deliver a song, from the sublime (Tommy Sands’ “The County Down”) to the wonderfully ridiculous (“Only 19 Years Old,” a tale of regret told from the standpoint of a young man whose blushing bride turns out to have more in common with the Bride of Frankenstein).

Nic Amhlaoibh also is a master of the flute and whistle, and she gamely jumped between one and the other all night.

Of course, all of the members of Danú are acknowledged masters. Along with Clancy and McCarthy, bouzouki player Eamon Doorley and fiddler Oisin McAuley (brilliant on a “Breton Lullabye”) all provided shining moments.

Sitting in on bodhran was Glaswegian Martin O’Neill. His solo was mind-blowing.

A superb, sure-handed performance by all.