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Aon Sceal?

[cincopa 10740797]Well, she may not have brought home a third crown (the London Rose took it for a second year in a row), but the Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic Rose of Tralee, Mairead Conley, made a big impression when she competed a week ago in the international Rose of Tralee pageant, one of the largest festivals in Ireland.

Maureen O’Dwyer, who lives in Galway, emailed www.irishphiladelphia.com to praise Mairead. Here’s what she wrote:

“I have been watching the Rose of Tralee here in Galway with family, and all of us just think the Philadelphia Rose has been the most refreshing and brilliant ever. Never mind the Rose of Tralee: She just shines as a fab and great person … if you don’t win you have really won in other ways … good luck, Mairead!”

We agree. Mairead, who holds a degree in sociology from Temple University, serves as deputy director of community programming at the Irish Immigration Center, is on the board of directors of Irish Network-Philadelphia and is a singer, was feted by her friends this week at the Immigration Center. But, as you can see from the picture, she was back at work immediately—sashed, but no tiara.

In this video, Mairead reprises her talent.

Taking the Mommy Track
We recently ran into Laine Walker Hughes–she of the 1000-watt smile and the killer fiddle playing—who told us she’s left Paddy’s Well to concentrate on being a mom (she and bandmate/husband Joe Hughes have a young son) and her job as music teacher and band coordinator at Norristown Area High School.
“I even have a little group of fiddlers who are really great,” she said.
Paddy’s Well’s new fiddler is Paraic Keane, a Dubliner who comes from a noted Irish musical family: His father, Sean, was a member of The Chieftains, and his uncle James is such a well known box player, there’s even an instrument named after him (the Keane box).
Penn State Vs. Notre Dame
We happened across a rousing locker room speech video from Penn State on Facebok and had to find out more about it.
No, it wasn’t JoePa.
Turns out, there’s a serious rivalry brewing between Penn State and Notre Dame–at least, among the managers and staff at the Kildare’s Irish Pubs that have opened up in State College and in Indiana near the two big football schools.
So we asked Kildare’s marketing guy, Frank Daly, who is also a member of the Celtic rock band, Jamison.  “This is a pretty cool story,” he told us. “The GM of Kildare’s at Notre Dame, Jay Murphy, was a peer of the GM of Kildare’s Penn State, Eric Humphrys, when both of them worked for Molly Branigans. We ended up hiring both of them to run locations that are close to two of the most competitive football schools in the nation. They have been going back and forth on who’s pub will do better, so I thought I’d stir the pot a bit. “
Expect a Notre Dame response soon.
It’s an Irish Thing
 
Conan O’Brien (no, he’s not from here) told reporters that he dropped his last name from  his new late-night show—calling it simply, “Conan”—because he wants to “get away from the whole Irish thing.”
Of course, he’s kidding. That’s what he does for a living.
What’s Aon Sceal? It’s pronounced ay-n sh-kayl and it’s Irish for “what’s new” (or, technically, “any story”). It’s your chance to see your name in bold face print. Send your news to us at denise.foley@comcast.net.
Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week and Beyond

They know there's plenty of craic coming up.

They know there's plenty of craic coming up.

A bonus this week: Nearly a month’s worth of ways you can be Irish in Philly. The reason: We’re taking the week off. All of us. At the same time. We’re not going to be wired for a whole week. And there are some festivals coming up in September you need to plan for.

First, here’s what’s going on while we’re gone:

On Friday, August 20, works by a group of Irish artists living in London who call themselves will be on display at Villanova University Art Gallery. The exhibit will be there for several months.

The Irish Club of Delaware County will give it another try—its second annual picnic by the pool, featuring Round Tower and good eats at the Knights of Columbus De LaSalle Pool in Springfield on Saturday. The first date was a rainout.

On Sunday, “Go Irish: The Purgatory Diaries of Jason Miller,” a one-man play, is coming for a one-off at the Irish Center in Philadelphia. Actor Bob Hughes plays Miller, and actor who was Oscar-nominated for his role as Father Damien Karras in the 1973 movie, “The Exorcist.” and a screenwriter and playwright who was was winner of the Pulitzer Prize that same year, for “That Championship Season.” At the time of his death,Miller was in the midst of mounting a revival of Inherit the Wind at Scranton Public Theatre and writing a television script about his former father-in-law, comedian Jackie Gleason.

Jason Miller was passionate, talented, troubled and conflicted. He turned his back on Hollywood –it was not his style– to return to his native Scranton to care for his ailing mother and father. One of his Miller’s memorable roles was in the movie “Rudy” in which he played Notre Dame Head Football Coach Ara Parseghian. An avid Notre Dame fan, the greeting on Jason’s home phone was ‘Go Irish,” hence the name of the play.

Free movie night is back at the Irish Center on Thursdays through the end of summer. Kick back with a beer, a plate of Paul’s fabulous chicken fingers, and enjoy the show on the big screen in air-conditioned comfort.

Next Friday, August 27, The Celtic Tenors come to the Sellersville Theatre bringing their eclectic sound that has sold more than 1 million CDs worldwide.

Now this sounds yummy: On Saturday, August 28, the 8th annual Berks Celtic Oyster Fest takes place at St. Benedict’s Grove in Mohnton, PA. On stage will be RUNA, the Hooligans, Charlie Zahm, Trinity, John Whelan, Hamilton Celtic Pipe Band, and the Reid School of Highland Dance. There’s also an oyster-eating contest and a best men’s legs in kilts contest. Plus food and vendors and probably some oysters for public consumption.

But that’s just a taste of this particular weekend. Solas is appearing on Saturday night at Longwood Gardens. What a beautiful venue for this talented group.

And the Mairead Farrells Ladies Gaelic football club is holding a “Halloween in the Summer” costume party on Saturday night at Tir na NoG in Philadelphia to help raise funds for the team, which is going to be in great need of a trophy cabinet soon to hold all their well-earned honors. You go, girls!

And on Sunday, August 29, photographer Brian Mengini (you’ve seen his work on our pages) unveils his “Spirit of the Fallen” exhibit, photographs of dancers wearing wings who volunteered their time to honor Philadelphia’s slain police officers. Mengini is using the event, which features the Timoney Irish dancers and fiddler Laine Walker Hughes from Paddy’s Well and is being held at the Irish Center, to raise money to publish a calendar which he plans to sell to raise money for the Philadelphia Police Survivors Fund. Order your tickets here.

That takes us into September. For many people, it’s a bittersweet month. Summer fun is winding down and the kids are going back to school. But if you’re Irish, the fun is just starting. With September come festivals galore, starting with the second annual Brittingham’s Irish Festival in Lafayette Hill on September 5 featuring the ever-popular Paddy’s Well, Jamison, Oliver McElhone, Seamus McGroary, and Whiskey Folk, dozens of vendors, an outdoor beer garden, dancers, and plenty of activities for kids.

This is also a bang-up year for Irish and Scottish plays and on September 4, you can see actor Conor Lovett in Samuel Beckett’s one-man play, “First Love,” at the Suzanne Roberts Theatre in Philadelphia.

The Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival of Irish Music and Dance (September 9-11) this year features Grammy-nominated fiddler Liz Carroll, about whom one critic wrote, “[she] conjures up a dizzying mixture of the sweetest tones, the fastest runs, and the most dazzling display of musicianship imaginable.” Joining her during the Saturday night concert will be Daithi Sproule of the acclaimed Donegal group, Altan, who frequently collaborates with Carroll. There will be music all day in the Fireside Room and dancing in the ballroom, Irish product vendors, kids’ activities, dance demonstrations, and classes in everything from genealogy to Irish singing and crafts.

But before that, see a showing of “The Yellow Bittern: The Life and Times of Liam Clancy” on Wednesday night at the Irish Center to kick off this year’s festival, followed by Singers’ Circle on Thursday, featuring some of the area’s finest Irish singers.

The Green Lane Scottish Irish Festival is on tap for the same weekend. It will feature the Martin Family Band, the Hooligans, Burning Bridget Cleary, Tree, Norsewind, pipers, Highland and Irish dancers, great food, and that wonking big sea monster in the middle of the Green Lane reservoir.

The Young Dubliners are coming to town on Saturday, September 11, playing the Sellersville Theatre with The Barley Boys and later, on September 14, with the John Byrne Band at the World Café Live in Philadelphia (an Irish Network-Philadelphia get-together and the informal founding of Philadelphia’s new Dublin Society).

On September 18, try something a little different–the Gloucester City 2010 Shamrock Festival, which starts at noon in Proprietors’s Park on the Delaware waterfront. Gloucester City is a couple of minutes from Philadelphia over one bridge or another and is a lovely, often overlooked little city with a long Irish history (and plenty of Irish pubs). Jamison and the Broken Shillelaghs are only two of the bands scheduled to play, and there’s plenty of kid stuff to do, great food to eat, and a beer garden. Hey, maybe next year we’ll plant beer seeds in our garden!

The Cape May County AOH Div. 1 holds its annual Irish Weekend September 23-26 in N. Wildwood, the largest Irish festival on the east coast, which lasts for four days and covers N. Wildwood like gravy on Irish stew. It includes a boxing match, a ceili, 5 K run, 1 mile walk, a pipe band exhibition, and music galore, including Paddy’s Well, the Broken Shillelaghs, Bogside Rogues, Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfetones, the Sean Fleming Band, and many more. It’s wall-to-wall vendors, great food, and craic. We have the whole schedule up on our interactive calendar.

There’s craic galore at the Bethlehem Celtic Classic which is held the same weekend as Wildwood’s fest every year. But in Bethlehem you also get big guys tossing hammers and cabers, border collies doing their stuff, a haggis-eating contest, lots of dancing and singing by groups like Barleyjuice, John Doyle and Karan Casey, Timlin and Kane, Bua, McPeake, the Makem and Spain Brothers, Enter the Haggis, the Glengharry Boys, the Jameson Sisters, Burning Bridget Cleary, and more. You’ll find a link to the entire schedule on our calendar.

We’ll be back soon and update you on anything new. Enjoy the last of August! We know we will!

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Barleyjuice will be having fun in Wildwood this weekend ... you can too!

Barleyjuice will be having fun in Wildwood this weekend ... you can too!

Big goings-on at the shore this weekend: The inaugural Irish Summer Fest in Wildwood kicks off on Friday night with the critically acclaimed Celtic Crossroads show at the Wildwoods Convention Center, repeated on Saturday night.

This whole weekend you can see a wide variety of Celtic artists, from the popular Barleyjuice and Raining Hearts (the enormously talented daughters of Barleyjuice’s Kyf Brewer), Roger Drawdry and the Firestarters, Nae Breeks, an ensemble pipe and drum band, and Philly and Dublin’s own John Byrne Band, who’ve been tapped to play for former British PM Tony Blair when he receives the Liberty Medal in Philadelphia in September. It’s also your chance to hear Boxty, a duo made up of Miltown Malbay’s Fintan Malone and Kevin Brennan, formerly with Van Morrison.

There are also workshops in everything from tin whistle to bodhran, vendors, food, Irish dancers and story telling for the kids by Terry Harris, author of “The Loneliest Leprechaun” and Sean McCabe.

Part of the proceeds from the event will go to Access to Art, a local nonprofit that brings music, dance, and art to residents of Cape May County; The Forgotten Irish Fund, which aids Irish immigrants to Britain; and the Irish Way, a study abroad program for American students interested in learning about Irish history and culture.

This is the last weekend for Bethlehem’s Musikfest, where Barleyjuice (wow, they’re busy!), Enter the Haggis, and Blackwater will be on stage on Saturday.

On Sunday, the tone is serious. The Mayo Association of Philadelphia is holding its annual Out Lady of Knock Mass at the Irish Center in Philadelphia. This year there will be a special dedication of an Our Lady of Knock stature sculptured in Knock, County Mayo, before the Mass begins. A dinner follows after the Mass.

A basilica stands on the ground in Knock where, in 1979, five people said they saw an apparition of Our Lady, St. Joseph, and St, John the Baptist at a small parish church. Behind them was a lamb, the symbol of Christ, on an altar.

On Wednesday, August 18, you’re in for a treat—The High Kings will be doing two shows at Brittingham’s. The first may be sold out (call and check) but they’ve added a second, 10 PM show. If you’ve seen them on PBS, here’s your chance to see them up close and personal.

On Friday, Villanova opens an exhibit called “The Quiet Men,” paintings by a group of Irish artists working in London whose works reflect the “outsider” nature of being an Irishman in England. The Irish Times newspaper called it “powerful work,” and it will be on display through October 6. On September 10, there will be an artists’ reception and artist Brian Whelan will discuss the paintings.

Next Saturday, the Second Annual Irish Picnic sponsored by the Irish Club of Delaware County will take place at the Knights of Columbus de LaSalle Pool in Springfield, Delaware County. The event, which was rained out earlier in the summer, features the band, Round Tower, a DJ, food, and vendors.

Check out the calendar for all the details.

Columns

Aon Sceal

Deborah Large Fox leaves no ancestor unturned.

Deborah Large Fox leaves no ancestor unturned.

Local lawyer-turned-genealogist Deborah Large Fox has launched a brand new organization for people looking for their Irish ancestors. The new Irish American Family History Society will meet once a month at the Voorhees branch of the Camden County Library System on the first Thursday of each month.

Fox, whom we profiled here, says she formed the group because most general genealogical organizations can’t address the special needs of researchers tracing their Irish roots—that is, to find family members whose records no longer exist thanks to fire, flood, or Ireland’s turbulent history.

“Irish family historians need to connect to each other to share research strategies,” says Fox. That means a lot of mutual aid—and craic.

“So many genealogists spend their days stuck in archives,” said Fox. “Irish family research is a vibrant, people-centered activity. Remember, the Irish tradition was an oral one. Discoveries, and friends, are made each time Irish researchers get together. Rarely does a meeting go by without a member making a major discovery with the help of others.”

Meetings are informal. Beginners and experienced researchers are welcome. For more information, email the IAFHS at deborahlargefox@gmail.com.

Off to Ireland

Mairead Conley with the first of her crowns.

Mairead Conley with the first of her crowns.

Mairead Conley, both the Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic Rose of Tralee, headed off this week to compete with Roses from around the world to bring home the crown in Ireland’s most popular pageant. Mairead is the deputy director of Community Programming at the Irish Immigration Center in Philadelphia. She holds a degree in sociology and spent a year living in poverty with Mercy Volunteer Corps.

She’s also a runner and a singer and harbors a secret desire to work for the FBI. And she’s only 25. (We were never that together at 25.)

If you’d like to see how she does, you can watch her on streaming video at www.rte.ie or join Mairead’s fellow Irish Network-Philly pals at Tir na Nog at 16th and Arch Streets in Philadelphia where manager Ken Merriman will be broadcasting the show live on August 23 and 24 from 3 to 6 PM.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

You have two chances to see the Celtic Crossroads show!

You have two chances to see the Celtic Crossroads show!

Musikfest starts this week in Bethlehem and while there are plenty of musical genres and major stars to hear (they have Norah Jones, Martina McBride, Richie Havens—he’s sold out already–Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Doobie Brothers, Adam Lambert, and many more), we’re going to give you the Celtic lineup here because this is Irish Philadelphia. All the details are on our interactive calendar, which can send messages to your smart phone to remind you. So 21st century!

August 6, 9 PM: 2U, the U2 tribute band.
August 8, 3 PM: Burning Bridget Cleary
August 9, 7 PM: Scythian
August 10, 1:30 PM: Seamus Kennedy
August 10, 3 PM: Malinky
August 10, 5 PM: Seamus Kennedy
August 10, 9 PM: Scythian
August 11, 5:30 PM: Celtic Cross
August 11, 7:30 PM: Munnelly
August 11, 9:30 PM: The Hooligans
August 12, 7 PM: Cherish the Ladies
August 13, 12 PM: Irish Stars (dancers)
August 14, 5 PM: Blackwater
August 14, 7 PM: Barleyjuice
August 14, 9 PM: Enter the Haggis

If you haven’t gotten your fill of Celtic sounds, there’s much, much more coming up this week and next. It might be best if we give it to you straight out by date:

Sunday, August 8: The Irish Cultural Club of Delaware is holding its annual feis and festival at St. Mark’s High School in Wilmington. They’re expecting 900 dancers, plus there’s an afternoon ceili (party) for everyone, vendors, food, and more.

Tuesday, August 10: The Saw Doctors are coming to the Sellersville Theatre.

Wednesday, August 11: Celtic Crossroads, considered one of Ireland’s best stage shows, gives a free performance at TD Bank Ampitheatre in Bensalem.

Wednesday, August 11: Continuing in the “free concert” theme, Shannon Lambert-Ryan and RUNA will be performing at Walk a Crooked Mile Books in Mt. Airy.

Friday August 13-Saturday, August 14: Primo time to be in Wildwood for sun, sand, sea, and Celtic music (threw you off with that hard C, didn’t we?). Irish Summer Fest goes on all weekend at the Wildwoods Convention Center with Celtic Crossroads (see above), the John Byrne Band, Barleyjuice, Raining Hearts (they’re the multi-talented daughters of Barleyjuice’s Kyf Brewer), Boxty (Fintan Malone and Kevin Brennan—Kevin’s a former bandmate of Van Morrison), and many, many more. There will be food, a marketplace featuring Irish crafts, workshops and the usual fun and frivolity when two or more Irish folk are gathered together.

Columns

Aon Sceal?

[cincopa 10736225]We learned this week that local Irish folk sensation, The John Byrne Band, has been booked to play the presidential reception at the National Constitution Center for this year’s Liberty Medal ceremony. Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair is receiving the award, which is given annually to “men and women of courage and conviction who strive to secure the blessings of liberty to people around the globe.” Previous winners have included former US Presidents Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, U2’s Bono, Nelson Mandela, Mikhail Gorbachev, James Watson and Francis Crick (they discovered DNA), Sandra Day O’Connor and Colin Powell. Blair was chosen for the award for his role in the Northern Ireland peace process, so it seems fitting that he’s serenaded by an Irish band. President Bill Clinton will be presenting the medal to Blair on September 13. If you haven’t been invited to the president’s reception for Blair (our invite must have been lost in the mail), you can catch John Byrne at Slainte on Market Street on Monday nights and at the Wildwood first annual Irish Summer Fest next weekend.

All That Glitters

Philadelphia’s 2010 Mary from Dungloe, Keira McDonagh, arrived back in town from the week-long pageant in Ireland with something shiny. No, alas, not the crown. That went to the Edinburgh Mary, Jemma Ferry. But Keira came back with a more lasting memento: an engagement ring! No whirlwind romance story to tell. She’ll be marrying her longtime beau, Center City attorney Justin Gdula, sometime next year.

Immigration Center to Honor Immigration Activist

Anne O’Callaghan, executive director of the Welcoming Center for New Pennsylvanians and a tireless advocate for immigrants, will be the recipient of the first annual Mathew Carey Hibernian Award at a gala on Saturday, October 30, at the Hyatt on Penns Landing, sponsored by the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia. Born in Ireland, O’Callaghan was trained in Ireland (University of Dublin School of Medicine, Oswestry and North Staffordshire School of Physiotherapy) as a physical therapist and practiced and taught for 20 years after coming to the US in 1970. She founded a software development company that serves the home health care industry. Since 2003, the Welcoming Center has focused on helping new immigrants find both services and employment in Pennsylvania and Philadelphia in particular. Mathew Carey, whose name the award bears, was an Irish immigrant from Dublin who came to Philadelphia where he became the Revolution’s biggest ally in the press. He started his own bookselling and printing in 1775 in Ireland, moved to Paris to escape the authorities (he was a fiery polemicist) and it was there he met Ben Franklin, then ambassador to France, who also knew a thing or two about publishing and rabble-rousing. He started many publications in Philadelphia but is probably best known as the publisher of the Douay-Rheims Bible, the first Roman Catholic version of the Bible to be printed in the US. Carey is buried in St. Mary’s Church graveyard on Fourth Street in Philadelphia—not far from John Barry, father of the American Navy–and his portrait hangs in the church.

New Consul General in New York

Noel Kilkenny will succeed Niall Burgess as the Irish Consul General in New York. Kilkenny is the former Irish ambassador to Estonia. We’re fairly sure he’s not the banjo player from Mayo you can see in this video, but that would certainly make some stuffy official events very entertaining if he were. Prime Minister Brian Cowen introduced Kilkenny (the consul, not the banjo player) during Cowen’s recent visit to New York.

A Bucketload of Beckett

If there were a Guinness Book of World Records’ entry for “actor playing the most Samuel Beckett roles” the honor would probably go to Conor Lovett of the Gare St. Lazare Players Ireland, who, his PR release says, has racked up 17 roles in 23 different Beckett productions. Figuring out that math made our brains hurt (math always makes our brains hurt), but we’re looking forward to seeing Lovett in his next Beckett incarnation. He’ll be bringing a one-man performance of Beckett’s “First Love” to the Philly Fringe Festival September 3-5 at the Suzanne Roberts Theatre on Broad Street. Info on tickets is on our interactive calendar.

Kildare’s Pub’s Global Strategy: One College Town at a Time

We like to think of Kildare’s Pubs as a local phenomenon. And since chiropractor and former restaurant dishwasher Dave Magrogan built his first one in West Chester in 2003, they’ve pretty much been a fun place to pretend you’re in Ireland while never leaving the Philly area. But over the past few years, Kildare’s has been quietly importing itself to other parts of the world. Like Scranton. Can’t you just see the guys and gals from “The Office” playing Quizzo one night at Kildare’s Scranton? (Hint, hint to Dave: Catch Carell before he leaves the show.) Today, there are Kildare’s Pubs in Newark, DE, Chapel Hill, NC, and, pretty soon, you’ll be able to go to a Kildare’s after seeing Penn State crush some opponent or another in State College, PA, or after seeing Notre Dame crush some opponent or another in South Bend, IN . This college town strategy seems to be working. Magrogan has a few other irons in the fire, including Doc Magrogan’s Oyster House and Harvest Seasonal Grill, a brand new restaurant in Glen Mills, PA.

Aon Sceal, roughly translated from the Gaelic, means “What’s new?” So, what’s new with you? Let us know and we’ll tell everyone. Email us at denise.foley@comcast.net.

Columns

Aon Sceal?

Transport will be several steps up from this.

Transport will be several steps up from this. iStock image by Steve Jacobs.

It’s not too late—or too early—to think about a trip to Ireland. Or, at least, to see where your ancestors lived when they came here.

You can get the full Irish immigrant experience—except for the “No Irish need apply” part—September 18 and 19 in New York City, the gateway for millions of Irish immigrants. “The Irish Immigrant Experience” will take you by motorcoach to The Tenement Museum, which introduces you to life as our ancestors experienced it in many migratory waves. The building at 97 Orchard Street was built as a tenement in 1863 and was home to nearly 7,000 working class immigrants. Two books—“97 Orchard Street, New York: Stories of Immigrant Life” by Linda Granfield, and the just released “97 Orchard Street: An Edible History of Five Immigrant Families in One New York Tenement” by Jane Ziegelman”—will help you prepare for the trip.

There will be a visit to St. Patrick’s Cathedral for Sunday morning mass, a trip to the Ellis Island, which opened its doors in the early 1900s, and houses the Ellis Island Immigration Museum, and the Statue of Liberty. For $299 per person, you’ll stay at the Doubletree Jersey City, have dinner at O’Connell’s Pub in Jersey City with your own personal musicans—the Malones: Fintan Malone and Luke Jardel.

To reserve a seat or for more information, contact Marianne MacDonald at (856)236-2717 or rinceseit@msn.com or contact Johanna Greene at Mayfair Travel at: (215)331-8880 (office), (267)255-4417 (cell) or johanna@mayfairtravel.com.

Speaking of the Malones

This local musical group—Fintan Malone and Luke Jardel—are organizing their first tour of Ireland November 12-19. Along with sight-seeing, you’ll be treated to music wherever you go in the counties of Clare, Galway, Mayo, Kerry, Limerick, and Tipperary. Among the highlights: a stay in Spanish Point, Miltown Malbay, county Clare, birthplace of Fintan Malone and the site of his family pub, Tom Malone’s, one of the most famous musical pubs in Ireland (a focal point of the Willie Clancy School trad music event in July); a trip around the breathtaking ring of Kerry, and a tour of Limerick and the sights made famous in the late Frank McCourt’s celebrated memoir, “Angela’s Ashes.”

Price per person, based on double occupancy, is $1,499 and includes roundtrip airfare from Newark to Shannon, six nights lodging, daily full Irish breakfast (guaranteed you’ll be ordering porridge by the third day), and deluxe coach transport, among other things.

Contact Ian Duffy, Royal Irish Tours, 1-866-907-8687, or email ian@royalirishtours.com.

Irish Music on the High Seas

Galway musician Gabriel Donohue, who has been appearing frequently at the Philadelphia Irish Center, is one of the headliners on the Irish music cruise, Concerts at Sea, Eastern Caribbean escape January 29-February 5, 2011. He’ll be joined by the Irish Rovers, Archie Fisher, the Makem Brothers, and half a dozen other Irish musicans who will turn this Holland America cruise ship into the tune boat. The ports of call include Fort Lauderdale, Half Moon Cay, Turks & Caicos, San Juan, Puerto Rico, St. Thomas and the US and the US Virgin Islands.

Prices range from $1499 to $2979 (there will no “steerage” on this vessel) whch doesn’t include airfare. If you love Irish music and hate cold weather, contact Irish Music Cruises at 1-888-564-7474 or info@irishmusiccruises.com and get lots of one and none of the other, at least for a week.

Heading North

The Ulster American Society’s 2011 Northern Ireland Tour is tentatively scheduled for June 3-12. A brochure should be available this week. This leisurely 10-day, 9-night tour, with stays in Ireland and Scotland, will showcase Northern Ireland’s premier attractions and rich Irish and Scots-Irish cultures. Estimated prices start at $1,495 per person (land only). For more information, contact the Ulster American Society—which is headquartered here in Philadelphia—at info@ulsteramerican.org or (267) 328-6123.

Got news? Had a recent promotion, promoting your latest event? Do tell. Contact us at denise.foley@comcast.net.

Columns

Aon Sceal?

Image from "Spirit of the Fallen": by Brian Mengini

Image from "Spirit of the Fallen": by Brian Mengini

The loss of six Philadelphia police officers over a two-year period—killed in the line of duty—profoundly affected Phoenixville photographer Brian Mengini, who specializes in dance photography (some of his clients include the Mann Center for the Performing Arts, the Royal Ballet, the Brandywine Ballet, and www.tutu.com). He has a cousin in law enforcement and one of his early Irish ancestors served on the Philly police force. So he decided to utilize his talent—and his connections in the world of ballet—to create a tribute to the fallen officers. “The Spirit of the Fallen”—a series of black and white photograph of dancers wearing angel wings—is the subject of an exhibit and gala opening on August 29 at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia. All the dancers—from a variety of ballet companies in and around the Philadelphia area—volunteered their time. Money raised from the event will pay for the initial printing of a “Spirit of the Fallen” calendar, the proceeds from which will go to the Philadelphia Police Survivor’s Fund. If you’d like to be a sponsor, go to the event website. So far, Laine Walker Hughes, fiddler from Paddy’s Well, is signed up to perform at the August 29 event.

Dublin In the Rare New Time

If you trace your family roots back to Dublin’s fair city, where the girls are so pretty, you may be interested to know that there’s a movement afoot to add a Dublin Society to the six county societies (Cavan, Derry, Donegal, Galway, Mayo, and Tyrone) already in Philadelphia. Many of the Dubliners we know—including Siobhan Lyons of the Irish Immigration Center, singer-songwriter John Byrne, fiddler Paraic Keane, publican Fergus Carey (of Fergie’s Pub and others), and Ken Merriman, manager of Tir na Nog in Center City—are all fairly recent immigrants, so Philly may officially be welcoming the “new wave” of the Irish diaspora. No matter how far back you trace your Dublin roots (my great-great grandfather, Frederick Wiley, was a Dubliner), you can show up at the September 14 performance by the Young Dubliners (very clever, those Dubs) at World Café Live, featuring the John Byrne Band. Tickets to the performance are $20, but you insiders can get some cheaper from our local man from Dublin, John Byrne, by emailing him at info@johnbyrneband.com.

 

Kiera McDonagh

Kiera McDonagh

Good Luck to Philly’s Mary from Dungloe

 

Kiera McDonagh, Philly’s reigning Mary from Dungloe, left for Ireland this week to compete in the international pageant in Dungloe, County Donegal. There are 14 young women competing for the title and a week’s worth of activities, including a “bonny baby” show, a road race (Keira’s a runner so she may be competing, sans sash and tiara), raft racing on the lake, and, finally, the selection of the 2010 Mary from Dungloe at midnight, Sunday, August 1. It took Keira a long time to come up with an act for the talent portion of the competition (she’s a member of the Mairead Farrells Philadelphia ladies Gaelic football team, but she rejected showing her passing and blocking skills). She did tell us what she’s doing but it’s a secret. Just be assured, everyone will be thrilla-ed.

 

Emily Weideman

Emily Weideman

California, Here She Comes

 

Emily Weideman, recording secretary of the Donegal Association of Philadelphia and a member of the Inspirational Irish Women Awards committee, will be leaving the area on July 31. She accepted a job as Residence Life Coordinator, at San Jose State University in San Jose, California. Until recently, she held a similar job at Holy Family University in Philadelphia. Emily was the 2009 Mary from Dungloe and worked on this year’s Rose of Tralee event. Her departure leaves a gaping hole in several of the region’s most active Irish organizations.

 

That's Coleen McCrea Katz, in her tiara, right behind Food Network star Paula Deen, dancing on stage in Savannah.

Coleen McCrea Katz, in her tiara, right behind Paula Deen

Philly’s Own Future Paula Deen?

 

Coleen McCrea Katz, who helps organize the Donegal Association’s Mary from Dungloe competition every year, was herself in the spotlight (tiara and all) a couple of months ago. In fact, y’all, she was on stage, singing and dancing with Food Network star, Paula Deen. Coleen was one of nearly 6,000 women who entered The Real Women of Philadelphia cooking contest. The Philadelphia actually refers to the cream cheese—each dish has to contain at least two ounces of the Kraft product. While she didn’t win (though you can see her luscious recipes here), she and a group of 35 women decided to travel to Savannah to cheer on the 16 semi-finalists. She really couldn’t afford to go, she says, then “my darling hubby”—Larry Katz—told her to “cancel our 30th wedding anniversary getaway” so she could make the trip. (No wonder she’s held on to him for so long!) The women, most of whom met on the competition website, wore matching “Real Women of Philadelphia” t-shirts and performed a song-and-dance routine they’d developed on the stage of the Lucas Theater, with special guest dancer, Paula Deen herself. “I had the time of my life,” says Coleen.

Happy Fourth of July from Ireland

When “Carmel’s Crew” takes part in the Susan B. Komen 3-Day Walk for a Cure in October, they’ll be handing over donations from a very unusual fundraiser—a Fourth of July barbecue held by the family of Carmel Porter Bradley in her hometown of Raphoe, County Donegal. Bradley, who was diagnosed with breast cancer a year ago, will be making the 60-mile walk herself, starting on October 15. Healthy now, she and her family—husband Louie, twin sons Shane and Conor and a daughter, Fiona– were in Ireland over the Independence Day holiday because Louie is the president of the Delco Gaels Gaelic Football Club, which was playing in an international Gaelic football competition. Her family and friends in Ireland raised more than $2,000 during this very American holiday celebration to support the walkers who call themselves “Carmel’s Crew.” Each participant must raise $2,300, so the fundraising isn’t done. You can help support Carmel’s Crew this Saturday at a karaoke beef-and-beer at Paddy Rooney’s in Havertown. Says friend and one of the Delco Gael’s team moms, Colleen Rafferty Boyce: Carmel “has just been such an inspiration really through all of it-so strong and positive and an absolute wonderful person all around.”

Update on Kingston Springs, Tennessee

A recent Irish Center benefit raised more than $2,000 for the people of Kingston Springs, TN, who lost their only elementary school in last spring’s flooding. The bulk of those donations came from a group of Philly Irish tourists who were stranded in the small town by those raging waters and were treated with such kindness by the people they encountered. (They offered immediate payback: The group, with its own musicians in tow, put together an impromptu ceili that had locals dancing and singing in the rain.) Tour leader, Marianne MacDonald, WTMR-800AM Sunday Irish radio host, has been in touch with the town manager of Kingston Springs. “She told me that they’re going to use the money to purchase school materials that were lost in the floods so we’d like to raise a bit more money,” she said. If you’d like to make a donation, contact Marianne at rinceseit@msn.com.

What’s Aon Sceal? It’s pronounced ay-n sh-kayl and it’s Irish for “what’s new” (or, technically, “any story”). It’s your chance to see your name in bold face print. Send your news to us at denise.foley@comcast.net.