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Dance, Music, News

The 2011 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Festival in Pictures

The lads of Albannach dropped by.

The lads of Albannach dropped by.

Yea, a mighty wind whipped through the land. In a flash and in the twinkling of an eye, darkness descended over the floor of the Valley Forge Convention Center.

Not the least bit put off by the gloom, the Celtic tribal band Albannach took to the stage and banged their drums. And it was good. Really loud, but still really good.

The good news about the annual Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Festival: There was no snow or ice. The bad news: The massive windstorm that swept through Montgomery County on Saturday blew out all the power to the convention center. But even here, there was a silver lining. Celtic people kept on pouring through the gates. Bands continued to perform onstage. And with battery-powered lights marking the way, bargain hunters cruised the vendor floor in search of claddagh rings, thistle brooches, kilts and swords. They lined up for meat pies, Welsh cookies and Highland Creamery ice cream.

When the lights did finally come on, a roar went up from the crowd. And that’s the point: Even with a power-out, there was still a crowd, and it grew as the day went on. It was pretty sizeable on Sunday, too.

We captured memories of both days. To see what we saw, play the interactive photo essay up top. To see photos with captions, click here.

Dance, Music, News

Video Highlights: 2011 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Music Festival

The pipes were calling

The pipes, the pipes were calling. And these two little Campbell School dancers were having none of it.

We were there for the whole weekend. We saw what you did. We know who you are.

Seriously, we tried to capture all of the essential elements of the 2011 Mid-Winter Scottish & Irish Music Festival in a video retrospective. Washington Memorial Pipe Band, the insane drummers of Albannach, our favorite juggler, and dancers of both the Scottish and Irish persuasions—we have it all.

For Saturday, we piled it all into one big honkin’ video; for Sunday, we broke things up a bit. If you were there, relive the experience. If you weren’t, well, let us fill you in on what you missed. (And make plans for next year.)

Thanks to Bill and Karen Reid for another great party.

Click on the arrows to right and left of the video frame to see all the videos.

Dance

Video Special: Philly’s Irish Dancers Step Out

Getting ready to compete.

Getting ready to compete.

You’ll be eating turkey in the comfort of your own home. The hordes of Irish dancers competing in the Mid-Atlantic Regional Oireachtas will be downing their Thanksgiving feast in a Center City hotel or one of the surrounding restaurants. Maybe that’s the Irish dance equivalent of carbo loading.

Whatever, they’ll have a couple of days to work off all that stuffing and pumpkin pie. Once the competition starts, those kids (well, most of them are kids) will be dancing their legs off pretty much non-stop. When they’re not competing in the halls, they’ll be practicing in the hallways.

In celebration of this high-stepping festival, we put together a playlist of over 30 videos highlighting Irish dance in the Philadelphia area. We’ve tried to show every school. If we’ve missed any, let us know, and we’ll see if we have a video in our now vast collection. If it’s there, we’ll add it.

Happy watching!

Dance, Music, People

A Flood of Generosity for Flood Victims

Rath deHouth and Ann McGee sold tickets for some beautiful baskets.

Rath deHouth and Ann McGee sold tickets for some beautiful baskets.

An evening of music and dancing at the Irish Center last week raised more than $2,000 for the people of Kingston Springs, Tennessee, who lost their local elementary school in the floods that wreaked havoc on Nashville and the entire Cumberland River area in May.

It was a gesture of thanks from a group of 52 Irish Philadelphians who found themselves in Kingston Springs after last May’s flooding turned back their tour bus which was taking them to Memphis for a visit to Graceland.

When the group holed up at a BP station, the tour band—local musicians Fintan Malone, Luke Jardel, and Pat Kildea—set up their instruments and started to play. Many of the Philly tourists were dancers, so an impromptu ceili went into full swing—and it was recorded for YouTube by a Texas tourist who was also stranded.

A nearby merchant sent sandwiches and cases of water to the dancers and some of the local residents joined in the fun, dancing and singing as the rain fell.

To repay the kindness, tour coordinator Marianne MacDonald and musician Luke Jardel planned a benefit (“The Gas Pump Ceili Benefit”) at last Thursday’s Rambling House event at the Irish Center.

The people of Kingston Springs responded when photos from the benefit were posted to the city’s Facebook page. Here are a few examples:

“Fabulous!! We heard so much about your visit, yet no one could really tell us who you were or where you came from! Thanks so much for your positive approach during the flood and leaving a positive memory behind. Thanks for entertaining the stranded.”—Laurie Cooper, City Manager

“Thank you… I wish the flood didn’t happen but it was wonderful for us all to come together. Seems like things stopped ( everyday worries) and people came together like they should. What beautiful hearts you have!”—Jennifer Baer Reese

“Thank you all so much for your generosity, kindness and those much needed smiles your created May 2!”—Marie Spafford

We have photos from the benefit. Click on the photo at upper right to view a photo essay.

Dance

Day of the Dancers

Coyle dancers

Little Coyle dancers get a bit of coaching.

If you love Irish dance, most of the major Delaware Valley-area dance schools take to their tappy little toes at the annual Penn’s Landing Irish Festival. The 2010 festival was no exception.

Irish dance schools such as McDade, Timoney, Rince Ri, Cara, Coyle,
McHugh, Cummins, Celtic Flame, Gibson, Campbell, 2nd Street, Emerald
Isle, and Christina Ryan-Kilcoyne performed in the music tent and at the
main stage.

Some of the schools chose to wear the full regalia, flouncy wigs and all; others chose to dress for the weather … which was, of course, really hot.

Festival-goers just plain loved it all, either way.

Here are a few quick peeks at their performances.

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Dance, People

A Heart as Big as Her Smile

Rosemarie and Mairead

Rosemarie Timoney and daughter Mairead.

A native of Clady, County Derry, Rosemarie Timoney began Irish dancing the age of four and won the South Derry Championship at the age of 17. In 1961, she came to the United States and five years later, she founded the Timoney School of Irish Dance in Glenside in 1966 as a way to share her love of dance—its fun, camaraderie, and its place in the history of the Irish culture.

Her classes are not just about teaching dancing, but about giving the children the confidence to always be and do their best. Her students don’t compete, but they do support the community. Her dancers have performed at nursing homes, hospitals, for handicapped children and school assemblies, as well as festivals all over.

The 1997 Grand Marshal of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade who also does color commentary during its broadcast on CBS3, Rosemarie is wife, mother of five, grandmother of nine, and has been described as “a virtual library of all things Irish in the Delaware Valley.”

She’s also tough—that must come from her years of playing camogie, the ladies’ version of the Irish game hurling, once described as a cross between hockey, lacrosse, and assault with a deadly weapon. She has traded that for much tamer bowling—she now plays with the St. Luke’s Mother’s League.

Rosemarie Timoney also has a heart as big as her smile. As someone who knows her once said, “It’s useless to try to give Rosemarie anything. She just gives it to someone else she thinks needs it more than she does.” She collects donations of clothes and other items for her thrift shop which benefits her hometown church in Ireland.

And though it will make her blush to hear it, she is beloved. In fact, when you talk to her her family, her dancers, or even the children she crosses to safety in her crossing guard job at Copper Beech Elementary School, the one phrase that comes up again and again is, “we just love her.”

Dance, People

Meet the Dark Lord of the Dance

Adam McSharry

That's Adam McSharry at right, looking dark and evil.

If you’re going to see Michael Flatley’s “Lord of the Dance” at the Merriam next weekend, you’ll know Adam McSharry when you see him. He’s the bad one. The total loser.

Not a bad dancer, not a real loser, but The Dark Lord, “Don Dorcha,” who, no matter how well he dances, can never defeat The Lord of the Dance in this classic story of good and evil set to syncopated hard shoes.

“I never win,” admits McSharry, a native of Birmingham, England who’s played the villain on several continents. “But when I get out there in character during the battle between the two armies on stage, when I’m doing the final duel with the Lord of the Dance, we go to it on the stage and our duel brings each of us to our best. I’m completely focused. Even though I know I’m not going to win, I’m trying to convince audience members that I am going to win.”

A year ago, he considered leaving the troupe and putting Don Dorcha behind him. “I had job interviews ready but then. . . .” He joined Flatley’s other traveling show, “Feet of Flame,” which drew 80,000 people when it played in England and 20,000-30,000 for each of its eight shows in Taiwan. That changed his mind. “I said, ‘What am I thinking? I’m really happy here. This is the job for me.’”

So he took up his evil ways again. “I love it. I’ve been playing this role for eight years. I think it’s another side of me,” he says with a laugh.

Like many Irish dancers, McSharry started very young. At three, his mother had him in lessons and at four he was on stage at his first feis. “It came naturally,” he says. “My mother danced, my uncle danced. My father, when he moved over from Ireland (Leitrim) and was dating my mother (Downpatrick), he was picking her up at dancing class and one guy on the team that was going to the world championships had to drop out so they taught my father to dance, they went to the Worlds and came in second. My sister, Grace, is a great, great dancer. It’s in our blood.”

But he never thought of dancing as a profession until, ironically, he caught a performance by Michael Flatley on TV at the Eurovision Song Contest. “I must have been 14 or 15 and I thought, wow, would you look at that. But I just carried on in competition for a while, doing well [top three in every major competition in Britain, Ireland, the US, and the World Championships; in 2003, he performed for President and Mrs. George Bush] when I got a phone call an they said, ‘There’s a place in Lord of the Dance for you if you like it.’”

He was stunned. So, at the age of 18, he headed to Wembley, England, got fitted for a costume, learned the steps and went on stage. That year, “Lord of the Dance” entered the Guinness Book of World Records for most sold-out performances—19. Nothing like starting at the top.

He even danced opposite Flatley himself in the Taiwan production of “Feet of Fire.” He admits he was in awe.

“The whole cast agrees, he’s always going to be the one you look up to. If he says do it like this, or this will help you get the best out of your character, you listen. He gave me good tips on how to make the best of my bad guy routine. Being on stage with him is different from anything I’ve ever done before. The energy rush is incredible.”

When McSharry isn’t dancing, he’s doing whatever it takes to support his dancing. He and a few members of the troupe play soccer when they have time off. “It really keeps you fit.” And when he’s home. . . he works construction.

A stage star, a championship dancer, doing construction? Really? “Really,” he says. “It’s a good workout. It keeps you active all day, it helps build upper body and leg strength and you’re killing two birds with one stone. I could sit at home and go to the gym, but this way I’m getting paid and getting a workout.”

He may be a professional bad guy, but stupid he’s not.

“Lord of the Dance” will be at the Merriam Theater, 250 South Broad Street, Philadelphia, for six performances May 14-16.

Dance

Local Dancers Hit the World Stage

Rince Ri dancers

Rince Ri champions, from left, Marielle Baird (she's seventh in the world) of Upper Southampton; Kerry Freas of Warrington, and sisters Tara and Emily Schmidt of Newtown.

Marielle Baird, who dances with the Rince Ri Dance School in Southampton placed seventh in the in the Cumann Rince Naisiunta (CRN) 2010 Irish Open Championships in Dublin last week, a competition open only to the best dancers in the world.

The standard of dancing was sky high so this was great,” says Rince Ri founder and instructor Olivia Hilpl who accompanied four of her qualifying dancers to the City West Hotel, where the international contest was held.

The Rince Ri dancers qualified at a regional competition in Harrisburg in January.

Cumann Rince Naisiunta is a major Irish dancing organization founded in 1982 by a group of Irish dance teachers. The group’s regionals were held at the Philadelphia Irish Center in 2009.