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How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

If I had the music in me, it would be fiddle tunes played in the Sligo style. For those of you who think all Irish music sounds alike (my husband is one of those), an evening listening to someone really talented playing in this highly ornamented, lively style will change your mind.

You have that chance on Saturday night at the Coatesville Cultural Society when the renowned Brian Conway will play, accompanied by Brendan Dolan on piano and flute. The Bronx-born Conway was encouraged by his musical parents, Jim and Rose, immigrants from County Tyrone. His first instructor was fiddler Martin Mulvihill of Limerick, one of the most acclaimed teachers of Irish music in America. His album, “First Through the Gate,” was named CD of the Year by The Irish Echo newspaper in 2002.

But you have to hear him—and you can, on his website. See if you don’t think that the Sligo style is something special.

Also on Saturday, the Celtic Cultural Alliance, those wonderful folks who bring you the Bethlehem Celtic Fest, will be holding their fundraising campaign kick-off at Bethlehem BrewWorks in the Christmas city.

You have plenty of sessions to attend right up to Thanksgiving, but save some room for next weekend’s Mid-Atlantic Oireachtas, the regional championships for Irish dance, which will be held in Philadelphia at the Downtown Marriott. See all of last year’s fun.

Enter the Haggis is also appearing at the World Café Live next weekend. They usually play to sellout crowds so make that call or go to the website today.

Next Friday is the official kickoff of the Christmas buying season. Consider gifting your loved ones with something Irish from one of the many Irish shops in the region. You can find them at our handy-dandy virtual mall. Support your local community! If you’re out at King of Prussia Mall on Black Friday, head over to Kildare’s where Blackthorn will be cheering up the crowd.

And you can get all the details on what’s happening, Irish style, on our kicking calendar. Today, tomorrow, and for who knows how far in the future.

Happy Thanksgiving from the staff of www.irishphiladelphia.com!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

Could this really be happening—a quiet week in the region’s Irish community? Or is our calendar not as smart as we think it is?

It’s true: While there are plenty of sessions around the region this week, the only big events are all on Sunday. And here they are:

At 1 PM, the Allentown Hibernians hurling team is holding a clinic for prospective new members. The Hibernians burst on the scene this past season at a great time: There are fewer players in the region because so many have returned to Ireland and only the Shamrocks remained and, like the Hibernians, many of the Shamrocks players are Irish-Americans who wanted to learn to play this rough-and-tumble game.

The Hibernians will be holding the event at the Lehigh Valley Velodrome.

If you’re in New Castle, DE, on Sunday, there’s a Celii-Set Dance Pot Luck Dinner sponsored by the New Castle County Irish Society. Delaware is the most Irish state in the US (the Irish are the number one ethnic group) so we’re going to guess they get a great turnout.

On Sunday evening, three people will be inducted into the Delaware Valley Hall of Fame in ceremonies at the Irish Center. Read the profile of Father John McNamee of St, Malachy’s parish and Billy Brennan, who runs the library at the Commodore Barry Club (The Irish Center), written by Hall of Fame President Kathy McGee Burns. The third honoree is the late Anne McFadden Donfry, a longtime volunteer in the Irish community.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Hey, Feile Samhain, everyone!

If you can get your hands out of that trick-or-treat bag for a few seconds this week, there are a number events that can help you feel Irish all over.

For example, the Mayo Ball, which is being held Saturday at the Irish Center. You don’t have to be from Mayo to go, either. I know, they invited me and I’m a Donegal gal. There’s guaranteed to be some great food and music. The Theresa Flanagan Band is playing (she’s a Donegal gal too—in fact, she’s president of the Philadelphia Donegal Association) and Tommy Flynn and the NY Show Band is also scheduled.

On Sunday, the not-to-be missed St. Malachy School Benefit concert kicks off at 4 PM with Mick Moloney and Friends. You never know who Mick is bringing with him—one year, Tommy Sands flew over from Ireland just for the evening. The concert takes place inside St. Malachy’s Church, which is stunningly beautiful and, like many churches, has seriously great acoustics. This is just one of the fundraisers that helps keep St. Malachy’s an independent school, not reliant on the Archdiocese, but it is by far the most exciting.

The only calendar snafu this week–and it happens every year–is that Sunday is also the Ceili for Kayleigh, the Blackthorn event to raise money for research into methylmalonic acidemia, or MMA, a rare disease that afflicts and local child, Kayleigh Moran.

If you’re up north, the all-guy singing group Celtic Thunder is playing at the Reading Eagle Theater on Wednesday.

And next Friday, November 7, the Ulster American Society is hosting the Northern Ireland Film Festival at the National Consitution Center in Philadelphia which will run through Saturday. Among the films: “A Dander with Drennan,” a documentary that follows folklore expert and trad musician Willie Drennan in search of local characters and history; an episode of Rick Steves’ Europe Through the Back Door, from PBS, exploring Northern Ireland; “Blood Ties,” about an American family in search of its Ulster roots; “Charlotte’s Red,” about a talented 7-year-old painter named Charlotte and her career-burglar father; and the Oscar-nominated short, “Dance, Lexie, Dance,” about a single parent struggling to balance night shifts with his lively 10-year-old daughter who dreams of being a Riverdancer.

Check our calendar for more details. Oh, except for Tuesday. It will be out voting. Hope you will too!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Perhaps the best way to be Irish this week is to attend the October Feis sponsored by the Dennis Kelly AOH Division 1 in Havertown, which benefits the “Heroes Homecoming Fund,” a charity that offers help to financially needy injured soliders from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. See our story about this wonderful benefit.

Also on tap this weekend, friends of Emmett Ruane will be holding a “wake” for Emmett’s Place, a small pub in Oxford Circle that has been a mainstay of Irish entertainment for 37 years. Emmett is retiring, and many of those friends are musicians who’ve played at his place over the years, who will be performing starting at 7 PM Saturday and going into the wee hours. If you enjoy Irish dancing, you can pretty much count on burning lots of calories doing sets.

On Sunday, at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy, there’s a benefit, with live music by Paddy’s Well, to raise money for a Havertown plumber named Tony McDermott who has been battling cancer since last year and unable to work. Your $25 will help support the family of this Creeslough, Donegal native: his wife Bernadette, and two daughters, ages 5 and 7. If you’re unable to attend, you can send donations to the McDermott Family Benefit, Box 823, Havertown PA, 19083.

One of Ireland’s finest traditional musicians, John Carty, will be performing on Sunday night at the Coatesville Cultural Society—a very comfy and intimate venue—with guitarist Donal Clancy, who is now actively touring with the group Danu. Singly, they are remarkable performers; together, wow.

On Monday, Irish novelist Tom Phelan will give a talk at Villanova University’s St. Augustine Center on Ireland’s “forgotten heroes,” its World War I soldiers who fought in the British army. Phelan, whose novel, The Canal Bridge, tells the story of these soldiers who were not welcomed home as heroes, will discuss the conditions these soldiers—and there a quarter of a million of them—faced in the trenches and the reception they got at home.

On Wednesday, the group, Crowfoot, will be appearing at the Blue Ball Barn at Alapocas Run State Park in Wilmington, DE. This group melds musical influences from England, Ireland, Quebec, and the Appalachian mountains into a distinctive style.

There are also several performances of the Brendan Behan play, “The Hostage,” at the Roselle Center for the Arts in Newark, DE, this coming week.

Of course, we all know that Samhain is coming (that would be Irish for Halloween, or, strictly translated, summer’s end), so be sure to have some goodies on hand to keep the wandering souls of the faithful departed at bay. Halloween is an Irish invention; the ancients used to leave gifts of food for the dead during this magical time when the laws of space and time were suspended. They carved out turnips to look like protective spirits and lit candles to help guide the spirits home. This was also the time when the “wee folk” pulled pranks on unsuspecting humans, though in those days, no toilet paper or soap were involved.

As always, check our calendar of events, and don’t be surprised to see it trick-or-treating at your door next week. It’s thinking of going out as CNN.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

It’s another of those weekends: So much to do, so little time. Here are your choices. . .

On Saturday:

Hear some great Irish bands at a benefit for the families of slain Philadelphia police officers Patrick McDonald and Isabel Nazario at the Bridesburg VFW. The event starts with a mass at 11 AM.

Watch screenings of the latest film from Irish-American filmmaker Shawn Swords which will be running continuously from 5 PM at Rembrandt’s Restaurant in Philadelphia. Swords, who previously produced a documentary on local Celtic rockers Blackthorn, had turned his focus on the American Bandstand era in Philadelphia and the payola scandals in “Wages of Spin.”

Enjoy McDermott’s Handy (Dennis Gormley and Kathy DeAngelo) at the Celtic Café concert series at the Medford Friends Meeting House in New Jersey, starting at 7:30 PM.

Help the LAOH Trinity Div. 4 raise money for AOH charities at Sacred Heart Parish Hall in Clifton Heights, Delaware County. The Old News Band provides the soundtrack, starting at 8 PM.

Tap your feet and clap your hands to Tony DeMarco, noted New York fiddler in the exuberant Sligo style, at the World Café Live in Philadelphia at 8 PM.

But don’t stop there. On Sunday:

Put on your dancing shoes for a ceili at the Polk Township Fire Hall in Kresgeville, PA, starting at 2 PM.

Help raise money for the Inis Nua Theatre Company at a special performance of “Trad,” a play written by Mark Doherty at Fergie’s Pub on Sansom Street in center city. Inis Nua is the only theater company in the city to produce the best of plays by Celtic playwrights. Everything starts at 6 PM.

And it’s not over yet.

On Monday, Monsignor Bonner High School in Drexel Hill will be hosting the players from St. Malachy’s College in Northern Ireland in a basketball game (the last one in 2006 ended in double overtime, so prepare for excitement). Donations will be sent to a scholarship fun at Archbishop Ryan High School in the name of slain Police Officer Patrick McDonald. The Dennis Kelly AOH Div. 1 in Havertown is sponsoring the event, which starts at 7 PM.

On Wednesday, brush up your Gaelic at an Irish language meet-up at 7:30 PM at The Irish Times in Queen Village.

Also on Wednesday, the Roselle Center for the Arts in Newark, DE, begins a run of “The Hostage” by Brendan Behan, which concludes on November 8.

And don’t forget: On Thursday, John Carty and Donal Clancy will be playing at the Moorestown Community House in Moorestown, NJ. If you miss them there, they’ll be playing at one of our favorite venues, The Coatesville Cultural Society in Coatesville, on October 26. Carty is one of Ireland’s finest Irish traditional musicians. Clancy (of the famous Clancy family) is touring with the group, Danu.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

I sure hope you’re well-rested, because you have an lot of Irish stuff to do this week and you’ll need the energy.

Saturday is so jam-packed, it ought to have a few more hours. AOH Division 87 is holding its annual golf outing fundraiser Saturday at Byrnes Golf Course in Philadelphia, which includes a barbecue lunch. On Saturday night the Bristol AOH is holding a release party to celebrate its CD, Hibernian Sessions, a recording of all the great bands that have played at Bristol’s AOH. Some of those great entertainers will be there Saturday night: the Birmingham Six, The Shantys, Jamison and Bogside Rogues. There will also be Irish dancing and vendors. All proceeds go to AOH charities. See our story here.

Also on Saturday night: Join the Crossroads Irish Dancers at Our Lady of Grace School in Penndel where they’ll join up with local group, Celtic Crossroads, for an old-fashioned ceili. (Don’t know how to do ceili dances? Don’t worry, they’ll teach you!)

Or head over to Bucks County Community College for a night of Irish music, dance, and storytelling with the Martin Family Band and storyteller Tom Slattery.

Sunday, in the most Irish state in the US, Delaware, you can enjoy all the music, dancing, and great Irish wares at the 15th annual New Castle County Irish Festival in Wilmington. Things are bad all over—we all need to enjoy ourselves, and this is one way to do it.

On Monday night, you have a rare opportunity to hear legendary singer and piper Finbar Furey at The Shanachie Pub and Restaurant in Ambler. Read our exclusive interview with Furey here.

Next Friday, at The Irish Center in Mt. Airy, enjoy some great music at the Brian Boru Pipes and Drums Fundraiser to benefit the Fox Chase Cancer Center and Music Education Fund to Preserve the Music of Our Celtic Heritage. On the bill, Albannach, an energizing group that puts the perk in percussion. If you love drums, as some of us do, you gotta be there.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Another big week for the Irish, with a great mix of events.

If I weren’t still laid up with a broken ankle, I might spend some of my weekend over at the Waterford Wedgwood Company Store in Limerick, where they’re having a pre-holiday warehouse sale. Since it’s a company-owned retail store, there’s already a 30% markdown, and store manager Andrea Vandervoort tells us some pieces are reduced an additional 50%. I’d go, but I’m in a wheelchair and the financial risk of “you break it you bought it” is too great. But you able-bodied people ought to take advantage. Christmas is coming, and if your investment account looks like you’re back down to the Holy Communion money, you can’t afford to turn down this kind of bargain.

This is also the weekend of some important good-deed doing. On Saturday morning, you can head over to Valley Green, part of Fairmount Park in Chestnut Hill, for the sixth annual Fighting Irish 5K and 1 Mile Walk. There’s a raffle prize of a free round-trip to Ireland (which can cost up to $1000 or more these days) and proceeds benefit St. Malachy’s School in North Philadelphia. Also on Saturday morning, you can help earn a place in heaven by helping the region’s Ancient Order of Hibernians assembled meals for shut-ins at Aid For Friends in Northeast Philadelphia. The AOHers collect the food and prepare it as part of the Hibernian Hunger Project, a local charity that has gone nationwide.

On Monday, all you McDuffers should be out at the Paxon Hollow Golf Club in Broomall for the Masters of the Green Golf Tournament. Proceeds from this charity even benefit the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade. (Hey, all that green stuff costs green stuff.)

On Tuesday, British-but-Irish guitarist Ged Foley (Patrick Street) will be performing at The Blue Ball Barn in Alapocas Run State Park in Wilmington.

On Thursday, you can meet Irish crime novelist Declan Burke at Fergie’s Pub in Center City where he’s debuting his latest novel, “The Big O,” to the American public. We’re reading it now, and if you love Elmore Leonard, you’ll enjoy this Irish version of the marriage of humor and murder. Appearing with Burke is Canadian crime writer John McFetridge, author of “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere” and “Dirty Sweet.”

On Friday, the Cavan Society holds its 101st Ball at the Springfield Country Club. Music will be provided by the Vince Gallagher Band.

All this week, you can also catch Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” at Villanova.

And a little bit of website business: You know you can add your own event to our calendar, right? Just click on the calendar on the home page, then click on the hotlink that says “Notify us about your Irish event” and it will take you to a page with a form you can fill out and some detailed instructions. And if you haven’t figured it out yet, we use the calendar to write “How to Be Irish in Philly This Week,” which covers the week from Saturday to Friday. Why? Because we usually write it early Friday morning (we do have day jobs). So if you have an event that’s going to occur on, say, Friday, you need to get it on the calendar or to us by the previous Friday at the latest. Thursday is even better. How To Be Irish In Philly is our best-read article every week, so it gets your event before more eyes.

It’s so popular, in fact, that the world’s best event calendar is a little jealous. So head on over there to make it feel better.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Thinking about heading up to Bethlehem for the annual Celtic Classic this weekend? Want a lift? The University of Pennsylvania Irish Club is offering a ride on Saturday morning, September 27, from 37th and Spruce on the Penn campus. The rented school bus leaves at 10, so get there around 9:45 AM. Anticipated return time is 6 PM. Cost is only $15.

It’s worth it. The beautiful city of Bethlehem hosts this convention of Celts of every stripe each fall, with a plethora of pipe bands, sheep dogs, Gaelic athletes, food, and traditional and rock music to keep you entertained for days.

If that doesn’t float your boat, there are plenty of other things that will. Villanova University has started a three-week run of Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey into Night,” about the dissolution of an Irish-American family and you can see starting this weekend.

On Saturday and Sunday, the Bucks County Visitors Center is hosting its second annual Ancestry Fair where you can learn about everything from searching your family history, old photo restoration, and scrapbooking. And it’s free.

On Saturday night, the band that the Fleadh built is coming to the Irish Center in Mount Airy. Beoga (the name is Irish for lively) is a five-piece band from County Antrim that met at a session at the All-Ireland Fleadh (music competition) in August 2002. In 2005, Beoga was nominated by Irish Music Magazine for the best traditional newcomers’ award. This promises to be one exciting evening of music. Prepare to clap and tap.

Also on Saturday, local Irish-American filmmaker Shawn Swords debuts his documentary on the Philadelphia music scene of the ‘50s, revolving around American Bandstand and the payola scandal, at the Wildwood By the Sea Film Fest. See our story for details.

On Sunday, you can go a little British with Rachel Unthank & The Winterset with Devon Sproule at the World Café Live. This wonderful all-girl group “with Geordie accents,” had their album, The Bairns, described thus in The Observer: “a bewitching, dream-like, down-to-earth masterpiece.” We’re sold. We’d go just for the Geordie accents.

Physicist-turned-poet (or is it the other way around?) Iggy McGovern will be reading his work at Villanova on Monday, September 30, at the St. Augustine Center at 4:30. Mcgovern is associate professor of physics at Trinity College in Dublin. His poetry relies on both humor and rhyme and he was, among other honors, the winner of the 2004 RTE Rattlebag Poetry Slam.

On Wednesday October 1, starting at 7:30 PM, you can see and hear Kevin Burke and Cal Scott (the stunning blend of Sligo fiddle and guitar) at the Moorestown Community Center in Moorestown, NJ. Burke is a graduate of the much acclaimed Bothy Band and Scott is a multiple-threat instrumentalist, composer, and arranger. They’ve played this area many times and to packed houses.

And we would be remiss if we didn’t mention Octoberfest at McGillins that starts this week. Yes, lots of German brews and food at the oldest Irish pub in the city, on Drury Street. You might find yourself rubbing shoulders with lots of tourists who read Gourmet Magazine’s list of 14 Coolest Bars in the US. Gourmet editors called McGillins one of their favorites, noting it “has plenty of old-time character.” It should. It was founded in 1860 and its current owners have operated it for the last 50 years. Congrats to our friends at McGillins, who have been generous with their recipes, sharing them with us for the last nearly four years.

Our calendar, which has been busy trying to figure out how it can qualify for government bailout money, has all the inside information on these events and more. Check it out.