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Dance, Music, People

Tommy Moffit's Last Gift

Mary Lou McGurk with the Irish Musicians Union banner.

Mary Lou McGurk with the Irish Musicians Union banner.

Mary Lou McGurk’s memories of beloved Philadelphia Irish musician and radio host Tommy Moffit go back to when she was a little girl, dancing to his music at the Philadelphia Irish Center with the McDade School.

Later on in life, she got to know him better when he turned out to be good friends with her in-laws.

But probably the way McGurk knew Moffit best was in his role as one of the founders of the Philadelphia Ceili Group, the highly regarded organization dedicated to Irish traditional music and dance. McGurk, now president of the Ceili Group, has served as the stage manager for the group’s annual festival since 1980. Back then, and for many years almost until his death in 2010, the soft-spoken man from Roscommon was the festival’s amiable emcee. “We’d sit backstage between acts, and talk,” she says. “I knew him for a long time.”

Like many who knew Moffit, McGurk misses her old backstage pal. Happily, Moffit left behind something to remember him by.

Something really big.

It’s a green, gold-fringed banner with an ornate orange Celtic harp in the center—the standard of the old Irish Musicians Union of Philadelphia. Moffit was the last official president of the group, which held sway in the Irish musical community in the first half of the 20th Century. Moffit presented the banner to the Ceili Group about five years before his death.

“He just came to our board at that time, and he said, ‘I found this banner. Would you like to have it?’ We jumped at it.”

The banner, about three feet by five, would have been carried by members of the union in the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, McGur

k says. In those days, she adds, “everybody needed to be in the union—they wanted to be, of course. Ed Reavy, Tommy Caulfield, Ed Cahill … all of the old greats were in it.”

Because Moffit was the last president, McGurk says, he wound up with the banner.

The thin, delicate artifact is preserved in a large, weighty case, handmade by Ceili Group members Brian and Lorraine Quinn, McGurk says. The problem? Where to put it. “It’s just very large. It’s a wonderful gift but we didn’t know where to put it.”

Until relatively recently, the Ceili Group stored the banner in one of the cramped, dusty rooms next to the ballroom stage, where tables and chairs are stacked and stored. “It was in its case, but it was just leaning against the chairs,” she says.

And so it sat for several years, concealed from public view, McGurk says. “We kept saying, ‘What are we doing about it?’”

A couple of years ago, when the Irish Center refurbished its second floor, the Ceili Group was invited to hang the banner there. But that was no good, either, McGurk says. “We were angling for a spot, but it’s just too heavy for the walls upstairs, too.”

Opportunity came knocking about a year ago, when the Irish Center received a grant to install a new elevator leading from ground level on Emlen Street up to the second floor entrance to the ballroom. Along with the new elevator, the Irish Center refurbished the sitting room just off the elevator vestibule. Visitors who take the elevator have to pass through the sitting room to get to the ballroom. And there, front and center in the sitting room, hangs the delicate banner. It’s the first thing you see when you enter the room.

That spot, McGurk, seems “perfect.” Folklorist Mick Moloney was one of the first to see the banner when he was in town in November for a concert and lecture. McGurk recalls, “He looked at it and said, ‘This is an amazing piece of history. You’re lucky to have it.’”

History aside, the banner also serves as a reminder of the man who gave it. Whenever McGurk sees it, she thinks of him. “He was,” she says, “a wonderful, wonderful man.”

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Dance, Music, People

Tommy Moffit’s Last Gift

Mary Lou McGurk with the Irish Musicians Union banner.

Mary Lou McGurk with the Irish Musicians Union banner.

Mary Lou McGurk’s memories of beloved Philadelphia Irish musician and radio host Tommy Moffit go back to when she was a little girl, dancing to his music at the Philadelphia Irish Center with the McDade School.

Later on in life, she got to know him better when he turned out to be good friends with her in-laws.

But probably the way McGurk knew Moffit best was in his role as one of the founders of the Philadelphia Ceili Group, the highly regarded organization dedicated to Irish traditional music and dance. McGurk, now president of the Ceili Group, has served as the stage manager for the group’s annual festival since 1980. Back then, and for many years almost until his death in 2010, the soft-spoken man from Roscommon was the festival’s amiable emcee. “We’d sit backstage between acts, and talk,” she says. “I knew him for a long time.”

Like many who knew Moffit, McGurk misses her old backstage pal. Happily, Moffit left behind something to remember him by.

Something really big.

It’s a green, gold-fringed banner with an ornate orange Celtic harp in the center—the standard of the old Irish Musicians Union of Philadelphia. Moffit was the last official president of the group, which held sway in the Irish musical community in the first half of the 20th Century. Moffit presented the banner to the Ceili Group about five years before his death.

“He just came to our board at that time, and he said, ‘I found this banner. Would you like to have it?’ We jumped at it.”

The banner, about three feet by five, would have been carried by members of the union in the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, McGur

k says. In those days, she adds, “everybody needed to be in the union—they wanted to be, of course. Ed Reavy, Tommy Caulfield, Ed Cahill … all of the old greats were in it.”

Because Moffit was the last president, McGurk says, he wound up with the banner.

The thin, delicate artifact is preserved in a large, weighty case, handmade by Ceili Group members Brian and Lorraine Quinn, McGurk says. The problem? Where to put it. “It’s just very large. It’s a wonderful gift but we didn’t know where to put it.”

Until relatively recently, the Ceili Group stored the banner in one of the cramped, dusty rooms next to the ballroom stage, where tables and chairs are stacked and stored. “It was in its case, but it was just leaning against the chairs,” she says.

And so it sat for several years, concealed from public view, McGurk says. “We kept saying, ‘What are we doing about it?’”

A couple of years ago, when the Irish Center refurbished its second floor, the Ceili Group was invited to hang the banner there. But that was no good, either, McGurk says. “We were angling for a spot, but it’s just too heavy for the walls upstairs, too.”

Opportunity came knocking about a year ago, when the Irish Center received a grant to install a new elevator leading from ground level on Emlen Street up to the second floor entrance to the ballroom. Along with the new elevator, the Irish Center refurbished the sitting room just off the elevator vestibule. Visitors who take the elevator have to pass through the sitting room to get to the ballroom. And there, front and center in the sitting room, hangs the delicate banner. It’s the first thing you see when you enter the room.

That spot, McGurk, seems “perfect.” Folklorist Mick Moloney was one of the first to see the banner when he was in town in November for a concert and lecture. McGurk recalls, “He looked at it and said, ‘This is an amazing piece of history. You’re lucky to have it.’”

History aside, the banner also serves as a reminder of the man who gave it. Whenever McGurk sees it, she thinks of him. “He was,” she says, “a wonderful, wonderful man.”

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Dance, News, People

They’re Dancing Like Stars!

Lisa Sweeney and Danny Conway trip the light fantastic.

In January, 16 people volunteered for a dance competition that would raise money for the Delaware County Gaels, the region’s largest Gaelic sports club. More than  200 young athletes–footballers and hurlers–travel all over the country and to Ireland to compete, which, as you can imagine, gets expensive.

Some of the 16 had danced before. Others suspected they might have two left feet. Some weren’t sure they had even one left foot. At least one didn’t really volunteer.

That would be Bob Albino. He was “volunteered” by his boss, whose sons play for the Delco Gaels.

“He texted me one night. ‘Hey, Bob, I signed you up for “Dancing Like a Star,’” said Albino, after a grueling couple of hours on Sunday cha-cha-ing at the studio of the Cara Irish Dancers in Drexel Hill. “After I found out what it was, I said whoa, I’m going to be the only Italian. He said, ‘You’re probably going to be the only one that’s not Irish.’”

As it turns out, he’s not. His partner is Latina. She’s Diana Garcia, an Herbalife distributor and fitness buff whom one competitor described as “born doing the cha cha.”

Albino, who works for the US Department of Defense in Philadelphia, said he was surprised—and yet not surprised—that his boss volunteered him. “He knew he could get a lot of people out here to watch me and he was right. We have 25 people coming,” laughed Albino. “They just want to razz me.”

They’ll be joining about 700 more people who paid $40 a ticket for dinner and dancing—someone else’s dancing. The “Dance Like a Star” event, hosted by CBS3’s Jim Donvan, is Friday night, February 24, at the Springfield Country Club, and it is sold out. Not one ticket left. And dancers are encouraging friends, family and even strangers to vote for them online—each vote costs $1. That pretty much assures that the kids are going to Chicago this year for the Continental Youth Athletic Games championships. More than 100 players competed in the event, held in Boston last year, and the under-14 footballers brought home a trophy. The Gaels have also traveled to Ireland for the Feilie Na nGael, a competition for boys and girls under 14, sponsored by the Gaelic Athletic Association.

The competitors, who have had professional training since the practices began in January, come from all walks of life. Kilkenny-born Enda Keegan, for example, is a musician who spends most of the week in New York where he’s a fixture in the Irish music scene. Keegan ought to have an edge. His wife is a professional dancer in Philadelphia. Has she helped him? “She could be God and it wouldn’t help me dancing,” admitted Keegan with a laugh. His saving grace, he said, is that he’s paired with Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia, who has ballet training. “She’s good and she’s helping me out,” he said.

If you frequent Cawley’s Pub in Upper Darby, you may have seen Chuck Cawley behind the bar, practicing his moves. “I’ve been cha-cha-ing everywhere,” said Cawley, who admits his dancing experience is largely limited to weddings. On Friday night, he’ll have a bus waiting at Cawley’s on West Chester Pike to transport the throngs coming to root for him and his partner, Lisa McAteer. McAteer admitted that, like Cawley, she too dances everywhere. “I think my fiancé is getting sick of the music,” she said, laughing. “I’ll be doing it when I go into the shower. He hears the banging and he knows I ran out of room!”

Karen Boyce McCollum is juggling and dancing at the same time. She’s juggling three children and a fulltime job in the communications department of a major Philadelphia pharmaceutical firm with as many as five nights of dance practice with her partner, Delco Gaels assistant coach Gabriel Brogan. “I’m doing this because my nieces and nephews play for the Delco Gaels, not because I have tons of extra time,” she admitted. “You have to know the people running this. They are all good people. They always have treats for us when we practice on Sunday. Donuts or lunch. Nothing really good for our cha-cha outfits.”

Though “Dancing With the Stars” contestants seems to lose more weight than the competitors on “The Biggest Loser,” McCollum said that despite dancing most days of the week, she hasn’t lost an ounce. “Is it because they bring us donuts every week—I’m not sure,” she joked.

All the contestants have one warning for the audience: Don’t expect Astaire and Rodgers. Don’t even expect Jerry Springer and Kym Johnson, considered by many the worst pairing ever on TV’s Dancing with the Stars.

But at least one thinks many of the competitors sell themselves short. “It’s been amazing watching the transformation since January,” said Siobhan Lyons. “If you saw everyone on the first day, we were a mess. Now, everyone can dance.”

 

Check out the competitors in our photo essay. 

Arts, Dance, Music

A Festival of Videos

Dan Isaacson

Dan Isaacson in concert with his band Simple System.

A lot can happen in three days and nights.

And let’s be honest, we couldn’t be everywhere, my partner Lori Lander Murphy and I.

Or could we …

Looking at the videos we collected at the 2011 Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival, it certainly seems like we must have violated some of the fundamental laws of space and time.

You are traveling through another dimension—a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That’s a signpost up ahead… Your next stop: The Twilight Zone!

OK, so maybe it wasn’t as far out as all that.

But we think it was still cool.

You decide:

Here ‘s this year’s video playlist.

Dance, Music

The 2011 Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival in Pictures

Shannon Lambert-Ryan

Shannon Lambert-Ryan of Runa, the opening band at the Saturday night concert.

Anna Ryan was up to her elbows in thin reeds, patiently twisting and turning the slender stems into something delicate and uniquely Irish in its symmetry: St. Brigid’s crosses. Now and again, kids would make their way over to the table in the Philadelphia Irish Center’s Barry Room, gracelessly grab reeds like hands full of pickup sticks and, with patient instruction from Ryan, begin to learn how to craft something sacred from nothing more than spaghetti-like strands of dried grass.

Ryan looks forward to the Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival, which celebrates Irish culture through music and dance, of course, but also through the arts, history, genealogy and more.

Ryan has been a fixture at the event for years. “I don’t know how many years it’s been,” she says,” when asked about her ties to the festival. “It’s been over 10 years, anyway.”

For many of the organizers and participants, it’s been at least that long—and often longer.

And yet, it never gets tired. You see a lot of the same faces year after year, but the thing about the Ceili Group festival is this: It’s feels like a kind of Celtic renewal. Fluters and dancers, harpers and artisans flock to the Irish Center every September in the way Monarch butterflies return to Mariposa. Or maybe it’s like a Philadelphia Irish version of Burning Man—except with banjos and hard shoes instead of naked people who paint themselves silver.

Whatever.

We captured the spirit of the thing in photos.

Here ya go.

Dance, Music

Make Plans Now for the 2011 Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival

Matt Ward will sing out at this year's singers' session.

Matt Ward will sing out at this year's singers' session.

The annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Festival is just a little over a month away, but the excitement is already building.

The festival runs from Thursday, September 8, through Saturday, September 10, at the Philadelphia Irish Center in Mount Airy. Planning continues now at something of a feverish pace for a jam-packed program of Irish music, dance and culture.

One of the highlights of this year’s festival is the Saturday night concert by three members of a superb Irish ensemble, The Pride of New York—Brian Conway, Brendan Dolan, and Billy McComiskey.

“(It’s) a great band out of New York City that usually includes Joannie Madden,” says the Ceili Group’s Anne McNiff. “Joannie will be out of the country in September and unable to join her bandmates for the festival concert. We were just thrilled to have “the boys” and know that everyone can look forward to a great show.”

The hot local band Runa, featuring singer Shannon Lambert-Ryan, is also on the bill, as are dancers from the Coyle School.

The long weekend opens with singers’ night, dedicated to the late longtime festival chairman Frank Malley. “The first singers night was held at the Mermaid Inn as a ‘prefest’ event and was such a success that he (Malley) brought it in as a regular part of the lineup,” says McNiff.

The great Irish singer Matt Ward, one of Malley’s favorites, is in this year’s lineup. Local singers include the well-known singing publican Gerry Timlin, together with longtime favorite Vince Gallagher and the talented Terry Kane, who sings in both English and Irish.

On the following night, a terrific band from Baltimore, Dan Isaacson’s Simple System, is featured in fireside concert.

For those who want to hone their Irish music performance skills, Saturday offers a wide array of workshops, taught by some of the best in the business:

  • Brian Conway (fiddle)
  • Billy McComiskey (accordion)
  • Dan Isaacson (pipes and whistle)
  • Danny Noveck (guitar)
  • Matthew Olwell (bodhran)
  • Terry Kane (Irish singing)

Other workshops include:

  • Brendan Dolan – Irish Music: Gems from the Moloney Collection
  • Tracing Your Irish Roots, the Ins and Outs of Genealogy with Lori Lander Murphy
  • The true story of Duffy’s Cut, presented by Frank Watson
  • A workshop on Sean Nos (old style) dancing with Kelly Smit for dancers at all levels
  • An Irish Language workshop with Leo Mohan
  • Knitting and spinning demonstrations
  • An informational talk on Commodore Barry by Frank Hollingsorth and Billy Brennan
  • “How to be Irish in Philadelphia” with Jeff Meade and Denise Foley
  • Tin Whistle for Beginners with Dennis Gormley
  • St. Brigid’s Cross making
  • Irish Folk Tales for Children with Basha Gardner.

Also for the kids: face-painting and balloon animals.

Vendors also will be on hand with food, gifts, and more.

All of that, plus you never know when Irish music will spontaneously break out.

Tickets for the festival are on sale now. Visit the Philadelphia Ceili Group Web site for details.

Dance, News

Dance for Dreams

Emily Teitelbaum. Photo by Brian Mengini.

When she was little, Emily Teitelbaum’s parents couldn’t get her interested in anything on TV. She couldn’t care less about “Barney.” But ballet? One day her mother, Terri, caught her then two-year-old daughter standing in front of the set, eyes locked on the screen. “It was a production of the Royal Ballet that just happened to be on,” says Terri. “She stood there transfixed for an hour.”

Emily, now 17, started her first ballet lessons at three. Today, the junior and honor student at Moorestown High School in Moorestown, NJ spends roughly 20 hours a week on her toes, taking classes and practicing. This summer she’ll be training with the Joffrey Ballet in New York.

Declan Crowley was 6 when he had his dance epiphany. His parents had gone to see “Lord of the Dance” in New York and brought back the tape of the Michael Flatley show that turned Irish step dancing into a global craze. He played it over and over.

Crowley’s not sure why the dancing—a combination of quick foot movements like tap, with a straight, stiff upper body like a soldier marching—grabbed him. But, once he saw it he knew it was something he had to do. He had to dance. And someday, he had to perform in “Lord of the Dance.”

“It’s all I ever wanted to do,” says Crowley, 20, now a student at Holy Cross College in Holyoke, MA. Eventually, he was traveling twice a week from his home near Saratoga Springs, NY, to Westtown, NJ, to take lessons at the Broesler School of Irish Dance, founded by world champion Irish step dancer Kevin Broesler. Twice a silver medalist at the World Championships and a All-Ireland winner, Crowley last year achieved the last part of his dream: He was signed to the cast of Flatley’s latest blockbuster, “Feet of Flames,” and went on tour to Taiwan.

On Saturday, June 18, these two young dancers who have given their all to their passion and dreams will be on the same stage at the Painted Bride Art Center in Philadelphia for “Dance for Dreams,” a gala dance performance to benefit Hope Dances, a program that brings dance to special needs children.

Founded in 2010, it’s a melding of two things dear to the heart of founder Brian Mengini: dance—he’s a dance photographer—and Dominic, his 9-year-old son, who was diagnosed at the age of 4 with sensory processing disorder (SPD), a neurological condition that makes it difficult for him to take in and process sensory information about his environment and his body.

“One day it just hit me—dancing works on coordination, it’s exercise, it promotes body awareness, and there’s a social aspect to it too,” says Mengini. “This is perfect for special needs kids. It’s a safe place for kids to go and find their center, almost like meditation. “

He and his wife, Sandy, who are also the parents of six-year-old Micheala, talked it over and decided to do a small test-run, using a Wii dance program called “Just Dance Kids.” The Menginis invited kids from their network of special needs families and held a “Wii Dance Party,” which became a monthly event. At a launch program in January, Pennsylvania Ballet soloist Ian Hussey and Michael Patterson, a ballet teacher at the Barbara Sandonato School of Ballet in Philadelphia, along with some advanced students gave an introductory ballet workshop. (Patterson is one of Emily Teitelbaum’s teachers.)

Declan Crowley in "Feet of Flames"

The proceeds from the “Dance for Dreams” gala will go to fund a school at the Performance Garage in Northern Liberties in Philadelphia where Patterson will be one of the instructors for “Hope Dances.”

But the event is more than just a fundraiser—it’s a serious and entertaining look at all forms of dance featuring well-known dancers from around the East Coast, including Crowley (the only Irish stepdancer); Delaware County siblings Jeffrey and Lisa Cirio who are soloists for the Boston Ballet; Zachary Hench and Arantxa Ochoa, principal dancers with the Pennsylvania Ballet; Dylan G-Bowley and Chanel DaSilva of the Trey McIntyre Project, a company founded by one of the leading young dance choreographers in the country; Rennie Harris—Rhaw, a Philadelphia hip-hop choreographer, and Tap Team Two & Company, a street tap (hoofing) company.

Emily Teitlebaum expects the performances to “be incredible,” but she’s not nervous. “I’ve actually been in the Pennsylvania Ballet’s ‘Nutcracker’ so I know what a professional show is like,” she says.

Emily is actually living proof of Mengini’s belief that dance has the power to help children overcome obstacles. Like Dominic Mengini, Emily Teitlebaum also has SPD. In her case, it affects her body awareness. “I mainly had trouble with the feeling in my arms,” she says. “I worked really hard to gain strength in them.”

“Part of the problem is that Emily couldn’t feel exactly where her limbs were, which is very difficult for ballet,” says Terri Teitelbaum. “Of all the things to pick. We would towel off her arms and legs in the morning so she could feel them better. But her teachers at Barbara Sandonato School—Barbara and Michael, who were both with the Pennsylvania Ballet—were really helpful. They would instinctively position her arms and rub them, so her brain would have a memory of where she was putting her limbs.”

Eventually for Emily, ballet took the place of occupational and physical therapy, helping her, she says, to “grow out of” SPD, something that’s possible with early intervention.

Declan Crowley too credits his dancing for more than just killer legs and cardio fitness. “The discipline of dancing helps with so many things,” he says. “It worked like cross training for me when I played lacrosse in school. It gives you motivation. No one is very motivated to do homework, but if you have dance practice at 7 it has to be done, you have no choice.”

Ironically, says Mengini, his son Dominic hasn’t shown an interest in dance, even when it just involved Wii. “He’s pretty busy with horseback riding, swimming and soccer so he’s doing alright,” he laughs.

The “Dance for Dreams” Gala is slated for June 18 at 7:30 PM at the Painted Bride Art Center, 230 Vine Street, Philadelphia. Tickets are $25 each and can be ordered online.

Dance, Music, News

Hot Fun in the Summertime

Not all the dancers belong to a dance school.

Not all the dancers belong to a dance school.

Memorial Day is seen as the official start of summer. But for those of us following a slightly different calendar, summer doesn’t truly begin until the annual Penn’s Landing Irish Festival.

This year’s festival kicks off Sunday at 12 noon, going all the way to 8 p.m., at the Great Plaza at Penn’s landing, Columbus Boulevard at Market Street.

If you’ve never been, here’s why you should go…

Music (and lots of it, all day long), with Blackthorn, Jamison and the Hooligans headlining on the main stage.

Dance, with so many of the Philadelphia area’s schools of Irish dance prancing all over the place that we can’t list them all.

Food and drink, including traditional Irish noshies like shepherd’s pie, along with water ice, ice cream, and appropriately seasonal liquid refreshment.

Vendors galore, so you can pick up all of the T-shirts, hats, mugs, home decor, jewelry and other goods necessary to confirm in the eyes of all the world that you are, yes indeed, Irish.

Kiddie stuff, including face-painting, of course.

Atmosphere. Yes, Penn’s Landing lacks shade and technically, kids aren’t supposed to wade in the fountains (but they do anyway), and it can get a little hot out there along the river. But, hey, you’re along the river, which you can bet will be dotted with pleasure boats, some of which stop dead in the water to take in the music emanating from the main stage.

OK, so we’ve told you. But if you still need convincing, let us show you. Check out our photos from past years.