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Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

This week is dominated by Gaelic sports. On Sunday, July 20, it’s football all afternoon at Cardinal Dougherty High School in the city’s Olney section, starting at 1 PM when the Young Irelanders face off against the Kevin Barry’s. At 2:30, a national team comprising Irish-American players from all over the country will take on the locals, the Eire Og club. It’s a “practice” for the national team, but don’t expect any of the Eire Ogs to take the gloves off. That game will be followed by a Junior B matchup: St. Patrick’s versus the Kevin Barrys.

If you’re planning to attend, understand that there are only a few places in the shade where you can pitch your lawn chairs. If you have a tent, bring it. And tote plenty of fluids and ice. It’s supposed to be a scorcher. And don’t forget the sunblock. You are Irish, after all. We don’t really tan, we just develop skin cancer.

Also on Sunday, the Philadelphia Donegal footballers (Four Provinces) face the New York Donegal team at Gaelic Park in New York at 4 PM.

On Thursday, July 24, the Continental Gaelic Youth Championship games kick off with a parade in West Chester prior to three days of matches involving kids from all over the country. It’s quite a coup for Philadelphia’s Gaelic Athletic Association to be hosting the games and an estimated 3,000 people are expected at the Greater Chester Valley Soccer Association in Malvern over the weekend. The GAA is turning the facility’s 14 soccer fields into 10 Gaelic sports fields, so you know there’s always going to be a game to watch.

Take some time out from sports to listen to some music and do a good deed too: On Saturday, July 26, Angelina Carberry and Martin Quinn will be appearing at the Coatesville Cultural Society. The following day at Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill, Team Ratty Shoes will be holding a benefit to raise money for research into multiple sclerosis, a crippling disease affecting mainly young adults.

The Irish Times pub and restaurant in Philly’s Queen Village has launched a new session with legendary fiddler Harold Dunn every Thursday night, starting at 8:30 PM. Queen Village is a happening place and Eamon Lyons’ new pub has great food and drink at great prices. And you can discuss the latest sport news with Eamon, who is often seen out on the field himself.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week and Beyond

“You—oo-oo, my brown-eyed girl. . .”

What? Oh, sorry, we just couldn’t help ourselves. Van Morrison is in town—Friday night at the Tower Theater, Saturday night at the Borgata in Atlantic City. Whenever we hear his name, we can’t help humming one of his biggest hits. Ticket prices to see the Belfast cowboy top out at $300 at the Tower and $500 at the Borgata. All we can say is “Sha la la la la la la la la la la te da.”

The good news is, there are cheaper ways to be Irish this week. Like heading over to Cardinal Dougherty High School in Philly on Sunday for the hurling championships. We’ve said it before and yet we see so few of you there—this is one action-packed game that is way more fun to watch than baseball. You can bring your beach umbrella, a couple of lawn chairs, and your picnic cooler and have a great old time—all for free. So head out to the field for the 2:30 PM match—and wear your Celtic-strength sunscreen. Read all about it here.

There’s still time to get tickets to hear the Three Irish Tenors at the Colonial Theatre in Phoenixville on Thursday, July 17. See our interview with the witty and talented Ciaran Nagle, a founding member of the group.

Then, on Friday, July 18, the inimitable Ceili Rain will be performing at the Tin Angel in Philly.

Check our calendar to plan your calendar for the next few weeks, which are jam-packed with Irish events. Coming up:

The 2008 Continental Gaelic Youth Championships come to West Chester, kicking off (literally) with a parade on Gay Street on Thursday, July 24. Young Gaelic sports players will be coming from around the country for this event to be held at the Greater Chester Valley Soccer Association Arena all weekend. It’s an honor for our area to be hosting the national finals for youth Gaelic games, so get out and support them! If you have the time, they’re looking for field marshals to make sure the games start on time, the teams are in place, and the referees are on the field (sounds like a job for a CEO, shift supervisor, or any Mom). If you can help, please contact Tommy Higgins at 215-275-0591 or email: tom_higgins2000@yahoo.com or John McDaid @ 267-226-8581, or email: johnbmcdaid@msn.com

On Saturday, July 26, you can hear Angelina Carberry (on banjo) and her husband, Martin Quinn (on button box) at the Coatesville Cultural Society. Trad music lovers alert: This a must-see!

On Sunday, July 27, do your good deed for the day by supporting Team Ratty Shoes (it’s a Blackthorn reference) in their quest to raise money for research into multiple sclerosis, a crippling disease affecting mainly young adults. Random Blonde will perform (yes, they’re Irish and they’re rocking) and for your $30 per person donation, you get free eats and draft Miller Light. All the fun will be at Brittingham’s Irish Pub and Restaurant in Lafayette Hill (which is now smoke-free!). Hang around till after dinner and hear Oliver McElhone at 7:30.

While you’re perusing the calendar, check out the month of September. We’ve posted the dates but not all the details for two major annual Irish events in the area—the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s Irish Traditional Music and Dance Festival and the North Wildwood Irish Festival. And check out our photos of all the fun you could be having if you got off your duff and went.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Want a little Amish with your Irish? On Saturday, June 28, consider heading to Lancaster where you can not only get your fill of Amish treats (help me out here—what are they?) you can enjoy a weekend of caber tossing, highland flinging, border collie sheepherding, and oh, lots of Irish stuff too. There will be more than 50 musical sets at the annual Celtic Fling and Highland Games, at the Mt. Hope Estate and Winery in Manheim. It’s not as far away as you think!

This weekend is also a great opportunity for kids 8 to 17 to brush up on their Irish language and culture at the Gaelscoil in Lawrenceville, NJ, a two-day program sponsored by the AOH Mercer County Division 10.

For some real excitement, on Saturday our winning footballers, the Donegal GFC (Four Provinces) go up against Sligo in New York’s Gaelic Park. Since Seamus Sweeney’s team has knocked down all the rest of their opponents so far, we have every hope the shut-out will continue.

Bristol Borough’s Celtic Day is in its twelfth year and the festivities are all on Sunday in Lions Park off Radcliffe Street in this little town on the Delaware. The Bogside Rogues and the Malones (including our pal, Fintan Malone) are on the bill, along with Irish dancers and vendors.

Ahead: On July 17, The Three Irish Tenors will be appearing at The Colonial Theatre in Phoenixville. Look for an interview with Dublin tenor Ciaran Nagle next week, right here at www.irishphiladelphia.com.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Philadelphia's Rose of Tralee, Colleen Gallagher, will give  up her crown on Friday night.

Philadelphia's Rose of Tralee, Colleen Gallagher, will give up her crown on Friday night.

If a pretty girl truly is like a melody, then Friday, June 20, will be quite a musical evening at the Hyatt Regency on Columbus Boulevard in Philadelphia. The Rose of Tralee Pageant, sponsored by the Irish Immigrational and Pastoral Center of Philadelphia, a nonprofit organization based in Upper Darby that provides assistance and social services to Irish immigrants in the Philadelphia area. The event is also the IIPCP’s main annual fundraiser.

Philadelphia’s current Rose, Colleen Gallagher, 22, an actress and singer who grew up in Bryn Mawr, will turn over her crown to another young woman who will travel to Ireland this summer to compete in the International Rose of Tralee pageant. It’s one of Ireland’s largest festivals.

Also on Friday evening, there are not-to-be-missed performances by the Pearl River Ceili Band and local traditional musician Caitlin Finley at the Irish Center. The event is a fundraiser to send the young people to Ireland to compete in the Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann—otherwise known as the world championships of Irish music—in Tullamore, County Offaly, in late August. These kids are the future of Irish traditional music in the US—let’s get out and support them.

On Sunday, after the Mass at the Irish Memorial, head down to the Penns Landing waterfront for a day of Irish frivolity with bands like Blackthorn and Paddy’s Well, Irish food (like shepherd’s pie from Mike Driscoll’s Finnigan’s Wake) and vendors. (You can also see and hear Caitlin Finley playing with her band, Pat the Budgie.) This annual festival is one of a number of ethnic events at Penns Landing this summer (and we like to think it’s the most fun because it’s, well, Irish).

There are more major events coming up that we’ll tell you about next week. Or you could look them up on our calendar, which sees all, knows all, and tells all. What a blabbermouth.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Do some flag waving on Saturday. After all, it’s Flag Day. It’s also the day that local documentary filmmaker John Foley debuts his paean to the American Flag, “The Color Bearers,” at the Independence Living History Museum on S. Third Street. The Celtic connection: One of the stories Foley tells is of Col. St Clair Mulholland and the 116th PA Irish Brigade. Born in Ireland in 1839, Mulholland and his family emigrated to Pennsylvania when he was seven years old. Wounded four times in the Civil War, Mulholland was given the Congressional Medal of Honor for his bravery in the battle of Chancellorville.

On Friday (yes, we got a little ahead of ourselves), the Philadelphia Donegal GFC, AKA Four Provinces, will meet Cavan (head-on, we’re sure) at Gaelic Park in New York.

Next Tuesday, if you’re near Princeton, head over to Looking Glass Park to hear a terrific group of Irish musicians from Tucson, AZ, called Round the House, playing in concert. But if you miss them, don’t worry. They’re also playing at various locations in the area, including at the Suzanne Patterson Center in Princeton on Wednesday night, and accompanying the dancers at the Philadelphia Thursday Night Contra Dance at the Glenside Memorial Hall. On Saturday, June 21, you can hear them in a great setting: Four Dogs Tavern in West Chester.

Don’t forget on Tuesday night, June 17, the US Air Force Heritage Aire Celtic Ensemble will be giving a free concert at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy.

And plan carefully for next weekend. On Friday night, Philadelphia’s new Rose of Tralee will be selected at a gala held the Hyatt Regency on Columbus Avenue in Philadelphia. On Saturday night, support your local young Irish musicians by attending a fundraiser at the Irish Center to raise money to send our Fleadh winners to Ireland to compete. Many musicians will be there, including winners Caitlin Finley and the Pearl River Ceili Band.

And on Sunday, the Penns Landing Irish Festival—bands, food, beer, vendors, and always a good time. Pray for Celtic-friendly weather. See our story.

Check out our calendar for more details. It’s been checking you out for a while.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Like to spend a day speaking Irish? Then sign up for the 2009 Satharn na nGael to be held May 31 at the Miquon School in Conshohocken. You’ll also get a sampling of Irish music, poetry, customs and folklore. Language classes are held in the morning and afternoon, interspersed with informal workshops. Sessions are offered in tin whistle, concertina, uilleann pipes, and even Irish language on the Internet.

This year you can also see and hear two topnotch Irish traditional musicians , Micheál Ó Raghallaigh (concertina) and Ivan Goff (uillean pipes). Even if you don’t spend the day speaking Irish, you can pay $10 and hear them in an evening concert that starts at 6 PM at the school. The two will also be playing next Saturday, June 7, at the Coatesville Cultural Society.

If you knew the Irish Center “when,” you might want to consider having lunch there on Sunday. Billed as the “Young at Heart” event, the Center is offering a meal at 2 PM for those 55 and older (we resemble that) so you can see the new changes at the center (it’s looking gorgeous), reminisce, and dance. If you need a lift, contact Geraldine Quigg (215-884-4948) or Nancy Cantwell (215-483-7990).

There are a few sporting events ahead. On Sunday, the Philadelphia Donegal GFC (Four Provinces) is facing the Down GFC in Gaelic Park in the Bronx. The following Saturday, they’re taking on Derry.

Scythian is playing on Friday, June 6, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Also that day, the always-fun Celtic Festival that AOH Div. 1 holds in Mont Clare, PA.

The Fourth Annual Celtic Festival is being held on June 7 at Historic Cold Spring Village in Cape May, NJ with the usual bagpipers, Celtic music, craft vendors, and an all-day Irish buffet (and it’s way more than a six pack and a potato, trust us).

Not to be repetitive, but the Frank McCourt musical, “The Irish and How They Got That Way,” will be at the Walnut Theater until the end of June.

Coming up: Rose of Tralee pageant on June 20 and the rocking Irish Festival on Penns Landing on June 21.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week and Beyond

It is, dare we say it, a little quiet on the Celtic scene as May washes and blows out of here, leaving us shivering and longing for one of those humid Philly springs we’ve come to know and love. Or not.

But leave it to Blackthorn to leave it on the upbeat. This popular Celtic rock group is holding its annual Memorial Day bash at Canstatters’ German Club in Northeast Philadelphia on Monday. You can enjoy Irish music and German food and beer (appropriate, since we learned from CBS-3’s Larry Mendte that among immigrants in Pennsylvania, the Irish were most likely to marry Germans, creating people, well, like himself, and my cousins, the Costellos). Also on the bill—the Hooligans and some great weather, according to CBS-3’s Kathy Orr (we believe everything she tells us).

Looking ahead, the Irish stuff picks up in June and doesn’t stop. Sadly, this year, if you want to follow Philly’s Donegal Gaelic Football Club (AKA Four Provinces), you can only watch the action at Gaelic Park in the Bronx, New York. This is a great team, last year’s championship winners, and they’re going up against Down GFC on June 1. We’ll miss those Sundays at Cardinal Dougherty High School. But this is the big time for our guys.

On Friday, June 6, look for Scythian, those crazy guys from Washington, DC, at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. That’s also the day the AOH Div. #1 holds its annual Celtic Festival in Mont Clare, PA.

If you aren’t festivaled out, the Fourth Annual Celtic Festival is being held on June 7 at Historic Cold Spring Village in Cape May, NJ with the usual bagpipers, Celtic music, craft vendors, and an all-day Irish buffet.

Our Donegal footballers are going up against Derry that evening at Gaelic Park.

Closer to home, make plans to head down to Coatesville on June 7 for a remarkable pairing: concertina player Micheal O’Raghallaigh (pronounced ME-haul O’Riley) and uilleann piper Ivan Goff.

And, of course, the Frank McCourt musical, “The Irish and How They Got That Way,” will be at the Walnut Theater until the end of June.

You’ve got plenty of time to get rested up for the Rose of Tralee pageant on June 20 and the rocking Irish Festival on Penns Landing on June 21.

Check out these and other Celtic events on our calendar, soon to be a major motion picture.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Jam-packed is the word for this week. Lots of Celtic craic and, of course, much of it at the same time.

If it’s not washed out, tonight (Friday, May 16) is Irish night at the Phillies. Along with the Toronto Blue Jays, you can see the Bogside Rogues, singers Vince Gallagher and Timmy Kelly, a host of Irish dancers—but no green hats on the Phils. We hear from a reliable source that since the team lost while wearing green hats, they’re not wearing them again. At least, not during the season.

There’s a $4 discount if you use the word “Irish” when ordering tickets. If you haven’t been to Citizen’s Bank Park, it’s great fun, even if you couldn’t care less about baseball.

Saturday at noon, the Camden County Emerald Society Pipe and Drums is holding its Irish Festival at the RiverWinds Community Center in Thorofare, NJ. There will be a pipe band competition, of course, but also a fire truck pull, so it sounds like a great day for kids. The adults aren’t left out either—there’s also a beer garden, craft vendors, and great live music presented by Blarney, Birnham Wood USA, and the Broken Shillelaghs.

That night, plan on being at the Irish Center for a one-man show by the amazing Sean Tyrell, who will tell the story, in words and song, of lesser-known Irish hero John Boyle O’Reilly. “Cry of the Dreamer” traces Reilly’s journey from early childhood set against a backdrop of famine, revolution, Fenianism and penal servitude for life in Australia and his great escape from there to the US where he became a newspaper editor and poet. It’s a coup to have this show in our area. Tyrell plans to take it wherever Reilly went: Dublin, London, Fremantle, Liverpool, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston.

On Sunday, head over to Park Polanka in Bensalem for the annual Bucks County Irish Center Irish Festival. Then make time to watch the Allentown Hibernians in their first match ever against the Philadelphia Shamrocks at Cardinal Dougherty High School in Philadelphia. The game is hurling and starts at 4 PM. Read our story.

At the Irish Center at 5 PM Sunday, Michelle Mack will be crowned the new Mary from Dungloe. An Irish dancer and assistant director of residence life at Holy Family University, Michelle will travel to Dungloe, County Donegal, Ireland, in August to compete in the international contest.

If you’re in or near Gloucester City, NJ, a lovely candlelight Celtic service is planned at the First Presbyterian Church of Gloucester City, with Celtic hymns, harp music, and healing prayers.

On Monday night, all you set dancers should head over to the Knights of Columbus Hall in Glenside where the fabulous Matt Cunningham band from County Galway will be providing the get-up-and-dance music.

On Tuesday, May 20, The Swell Season (Oscar winners for best movie theme, Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglov from the movie, “Once”) will be performing at the Tower Theater to a sold-out house. Opening for them is Fergus O’Farrell and Interference, a little known but profoundly influential group from Ireland making its first appearance in the US.

The great King of the Pipers, Paddy Keenan, will be playing at upstairs at the World Café Live in Philadelphia on Wednesday, May 21. On May 22, Keenan will be giving both piping and whistling workshops at the Irish Center.

Also on Wednesday, soccer fans can head on over to Fado Pub in Philly to catch some live action between Manchester United and Chelsea. Well, live on TV. It’s the 2008 Championship Final. Word of warning: Everyone needs to behave themselves.

“The Irish and How They Got That Way,” a musical by Frank McCourt, is still playing at the Walnut Street Theater and will be there till the end of June.

You’ll find all the details and even some maps on our calendar, which really wishes it had called early for tickets to see The Swell Season. Oh well, it might be getting in to the sound check.