Browsing Category

People

People

Remembering Ed Gallagher

Ed Gallagher

Ed Gallagher

If you were with Ed Gallagher, you were in for a good time. His sense of humor was legendary. He made everyone feel like they were included in the fun.

A retired federal law officer, the longtime pillar of the Philadelphia Irish community, member of Ancient Order of Hibernians Joseph E. Montgomery Division 65 in Upper Darby, and member of the executive committee of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association passed away January 2.

The Irish community will go on, and certainly the parade will go on, but Ed’s passing leaves a hole in peoples’ lives. We spoke to a few of Ed’s acquaintances from the parade committee, who shared their remembrances.

Walter Garvin, Jr.

Executive Committee

I knew him very well for the past say 15 years. And, omigod, yes, he was hysterical. He lit up a room—he was the life of the party. He was a guy who held nothing back. He would tell you what he was thinking, and make you enjoy it. He was a very people-loving person. He invariably included people that he never met before and treated them like they were very old friends.

He was a gentle man who loved people, and he loved his family. He saw the fun in everything. He was just a pleasure to be around and to be part of his life.

We recently had a meeting of the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association. It was happy because we knew Ed, and sad because we weren’t going to be seeing him again.

At his viewing, I was with some of his cohorts, and everybody talked about what a good guy he was, and how much fun he was. He spread it around. He didn’t keep it to himself.

Michael Bradley

Parade Director and Past President

I’ve known him since 1990. The very first time I flew to Ireland, he was on the same trip I was on. He and his friend Jack McNamee. It was like a party in the plane. Everyone was singing.

Twenty years later, I got involved in the parade, and I ended up on the board with them. I hadn’t seen them (Gallagher and McNamee) them in 20 years, but they remembered the tip and they brought it to my attention. I didn’t remember.

He was a good guy. The only motion he would ever make was the motion to adjourn to the social hour.

I think he gave the air about himself that he really didn’t care about the board meeting—let’s go to the bar and get a drink. But he was really more complicated than that. He was getting out, and he was going to enjoy himself, but deep down to the core, he was one of the greatest guys I’ve ever met.

He really was devoted to his wife daughters and grandchildren. He was always talking about them. He was a real character. He’ll be missed, I guarantee you that. We’ll miss his humor desperately.

Kathy McGee Burns

Board Member, Recording Secretary and Past President

He was a very dapper gentleman. He wore a derby hat all the time, and he wore tweed jackets. He would always have a pocket handkerchief. He loved that feeling about himself, that style.

He always made the motion to adjourn. At the last meeting, we just suspended making the motion because it had been Ed’s for so long.

He and his wife Emily, who is the loveliest woman, attended every event the parade had. They always celebrated every event.

You could describe him as a hail fellow well met. James Joyce used that phrase in “Ulysses.” It means you behavior is hearty and congenial. I’d say that about Eddie Gallagher.

News, People

The Irish Guy Behind “Hair O’ The Dog’

DJ Dan Cronin with his wife, Maria.

DJ Dan Cronin with his wife, Maria.

Dan Cronin was a party thrower from way back. So way back his first parties were, well, illegal.

“Throwing parties is a natural thing for me,” says Cronin of Mount Laurel, NJ, who heads a technology consulting firm and is the mastermind behind the black-tie do known as “Hair O’ The Dog” that every year draws out Philly’s hippest for a New Year’s Eve-style frolic.

HOD, as it’s known, takes place tomorrow night (for the 20th year in a row) at the Philadelphia Sheraton Downtown. While the theme is Gatsby, the beneficiary of its largesse—it’s part fundraiser—is The Claddagh Fund, founded by Ken Casey of the Dropkick Murphy’s which raises money for underfunded nonprofits in Boston and Philadelphia.

Cronin, who looks like the Irish version of TV chef Guy Fieri, grew up in the Bronx and North Jersey, the grandson of Irish immigrants from Cork and Donegal. He attended Dusquesne University in Pittsburgh, one of the top Catholic colleges in the US. “I was a DJ in college,” he says. “And I took my DJ money, converted the basement of the house where I was living into a bar, with a dance floor and lights, and I would pay police to make sure there was no trouble. . .I was running a speakeasy, basically. I didn’t have a license, no one was of age. . . .”

He laughs. In 1995, now a law-abiding citizen, Cronin called on his party-making skills again to “accelerate the growth” of his new Philly-based business (Chorus Communications, which he founded with childhood friend Robert Molinari) by inviting local telephone engineers and union guys who, he reasoned, would then feel kindly toward this little tech company and steer business their way. “We figured if we had parties we could get these guys tuxed up, get them a little drunk and befriend them,” says Cronin. “Well they loved it, and they helped us for quite a few years.”

Don’t get Cronin wrong. That first HOD wasn’t just a cynical ploy to get business. He had fun too—he was single then, and there were well-dressed, successful women–and he made friendships as well as deals. “To this day I still have relationships with some of the guys I met at those early parties,” he says.

That first year, 75 people paid $40 to get into the Circa Restaurant and Nightclub, now closed, at 15th and Walnut. Since then, the guest list has grown to 1,000 or more, all fun lovers who want to get dressed up and party without fighting the New Year’s Eve amateur crowd. “Actually, back in 1985 when we decided to dot his, people said, ‘Dude, you’re out of your mind. Not way is this going to be successful, Everybody blows their whole wad on New Year’s. They don’t want to go to another party and they don’t have the money,’” recalls Cronin. “But there’s always a way to get done what you want to get done financially, and everybody likes a good party.”

HOD has become a Philly institution and, in 1996, Cronin, influenced by motivational guru Anthony Robbins, added the “give back” aspect to his party—and to his life. “By then we had a pretty nice business and I heard my inner self knocking on the door saying, ‘You promised that if you became successful you’d give back,’’ Cronin recalls. “I became a Big Brother and sponsored a little kid and we added the charity aspect to HOD.”

Every year, HOD raises money for a different charity, from AIDS research and 9/11 survivors to, with a nod to Cronin’s Irish roots, Habitat for Humanity in Belfast and, this year, The Claddagh Fund, which recently expanded into the Delaware Valley where it financially supports organizations that serve children, veterans, and recovering substance abusers. “We probably give anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000 to our charities every year,” says Cronin, who serves on the board of the Irish American Business Chamber and Network in Philadelphia.

An event firm now throws the party and Cronin isn’t the only DJ spinning records. The lineup this year includes popular Australian DJ Havana Brown whose “We Run the Night” with Pit Bull hit number one on the worldwide charts; DJ Bizz; the band The Business, a Philly fave; Bryan O’Boyle, late of Mr. Greengenes, another long-running favorite Philly band; and performer Jade Starling of Pretty Poison.

Despite running a successful business–and an equally successful event–he’s  out there DJing on the side, often for Irish crowds. He did his thing at the Philadelphia Fleadh, a showcase for Irish and Irish-American music produced by American Paddy’s Productions, last June in Pennypack Park, and was the DJ at American Paddy’s “American Celtic Christmas” event this December in Bensalem.

“I’m very diverse and have an unparalleled range as a DJ,” says Cronin, who grew up in a family that played Irish music (and who does a more than passable Irish accent, thanks to his Cork cousins). “If someone wants to hear ‘The Town I Loved So Well,’ I know to ask if they want the Phil Coulter version or the Shane McGowan version.”

So don’t think of Cronin, now married and the father of three, as someone who relegates his fun to one night a year. “I have a reputation as a party guy and I’m still a party guy,” he laughs. And  now he’s available for your party too.

Music, News, People

Do You Believe in Magic?

John Byrne and Kim Killen taking their bows with the Celtic Flame dancers.

John Byrne and Kim Killen taking their bows with the Celtic Flame dancers.

Dancing candy canes, ballerinas, a fiddler who can play behind his back, on the floor, and airborne, and Santa. . .oh, and snow indoors. You really could believe in magic at An American Celtic Christmas, the Irish-American show featuring Jamison Celtic Rock, John Byrne, and Kimberley Killen at Bensalem High School last weekend.
Celtic Flame School of Irish Dance and Bucks County Dance Center along with singer Carley Fuhrmeister and DJ Dan Cronin and holiday-themed short films by Bensalem students added to the spirit that drew more than 1,000 people to two shows. Jamison’s Frank Daly and C.J. Mills produced the show, which benefited the Bensalem Education Association.
We were there (and it’s going to be part of our family holiday traditions from now on). Check out our photos.

People

Villanova to Display “The Children of Sandy Hook”

Chuck Connelly

Chuck Connelly

The last time we spoke with the world-renowned East Oak Lane artist Chuck Connelly, back in April, he had recently completed a poignant collection of portraits depicting 20 small children, all of the canvases bound together in an imposing 10- by 12-foot wooden frame. They were the children of Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., whose lives were cut all too short last December at the hands of a disturbed young man armed with a Bushmaster XM15 semi-automatic rifle.

Connelly was frustrated by his inability to move the massive display out of the old barn where the imposing work was stored, and into a far more fitting public space. Preferably in Newtown—but failing that, anywhere people could stand in front of this ambitious, larger-than-life undertaking, and literally come face to face with the victims as seen from an artist’s unique perspective. Each portrait springs from the depth of Connelly’s own sorrow and anger, a modern-day wailing wall.

At the time, in spite of repeated efforts by neighbor, friend and author Marita Krivda Poxon, there were no takers. Connelly was disheartened but undaunted. “I’m not done until I get this someplace and people stand in front of it,” Connelly said at the time. “That is my goal. It needs to be somewhere.”

Now, as the solemn one-year anniversary of the school shooting approaches—it’s December 14th—Connelly is about to get his wish. His “Children of Sandy Hook” will be on display from December 9 to 16 in the Villanova University Art Gallery, located at the university’s Connelly Center. On the 14th, Connelly will be the guest of honor at a gallery reception.

Stuart Tate, the carpenter who put the frame together, took it all apart again, gingerly moved the portraits out of the barn, and dropped them off at Connelly’s rambling house earlier this week. On Saturday morning at 10, Connelly and Tate will load of the portraits into a truck and deliver them to the Connelly Center for final assembly. “He (Tate) is gonna put it together. I’m gonna help, and the guy who runs the gallery, he knows woodworking, and he’ll be able to help.”

For now, the portraits are scattered throughout Connelly’s cluttered house, virtually every room of which is stacked with canvases of various shapes and sizes, all leaning against the walls like decks of cards. One glance, and you know right away that Chuck Connelly doesn’t ascribe to any particular school. Forget realism. Forget abstraction. Connelly belongs to only one school, and its all his own—that’s one of the reasons his work is so famous and highly regarded. He paints whatever suits his mood. He has no plan. Whatever comes off the brush is just what it is.

In one room, you might stumble upon a huge canvas bedecked with loosely nonrepresentational geometric patterns. In another room, you could find a portrait of a woman who sells pies. Or perhaps one of countless renderings of his rotund, obviously spoiled calico cat, Fluffy. Fluffy is clearly one of Connelly’s favorite subjects. The fact that such an original thinker keeps a cat with such a commonplace name is just one more visible symbol of his incongruity. Don’t even think about trying to pin him down.

In many respects, his kitchen is a lot like the rest of the house. Above the dark wood wainscoting hang more paintings. A clown. A flower. A bird. Strings of miniature lights hang across one window. There are neat little stacks of cat food on the counter next to the sink. A bottle of ibuprofen. And another bottle, multivitamins.

Next to the wall, there’s a well-worn utilitarian wooden table, surrounded by mismatched chairs. On the table, an overripe banana in a bowl. A bag of nacho chips. Potatoes in a plastic mesh bag. A box of store-brand turkey stuffing. Saltines.

And a carton of Timeless Time cigarettes, a cheap Korean brand.

One of those cheap cigarettes is almost always dangling from his lips. His undisciplined mop of graying hair is perpetually enwreathed in a halo of blue-gray smoke.

We’re in the kitchen with Poxon, talking about the upcoming exhibition. It’s the immediate cause of Connelly’s almost palpable anxiety. He’s guardedly optimistic, but things could still go wrong. He’s been disappointed before. You could take him for a cynic, but that’s too simple. George Carlin once said, “Scratch any cynic and you will find a disappointed idealist.” That’s probably a more accurate assessment of Chuck Connelly, a man consumed by his passion for truth and beauty, in a world to often devoid of both. But for now, just for a moment, he appreciates the opportunity to have at least this ambition fulfilled.

“I’m grateful,” he says, “but I’m not done yet. I’ll really be grateful when it’s all done and up there. I’ll worry until it’s up on the wall, and there you go.”

How the cause of “Children of Sandy Hook” came to be taken up by Villanova is a bit complicated. Unbeknownst to each other, Connelly and Poxon were working along parallel paths. Connelly met a guy at a party, who knew another guy in a position of authority on campus. At the same time, Poxon had made connections through the Irish Studies department that ultimately led to the president of the university, Father Peter M. Donohue, who is also an artist. And the head of the gallery, Father Richard G. Cannuli, is a painter of icons. Between Connelly and Poxon, they scored a long elusive triumph.

“This president is Irish, and I think he liked the whole thing,” says Poxon. He could see that it’s a sacred time, it’s Christmas, and it would get the students to think about this. And there are some students from Newtown, and they’ll be there.”

Connelly, for one, hopes they’ll be there. He hopes a lot of people will be there, and he hopes they will come to understand that his memorial to 20 lost children is very different from anything he’s ever done. It came from a different place. And for a brief moment his mood shifts to one of optimism.

“This, I dreamed up out of my head. It was created by this tragic incident,” Connelly says. “Now, it’s become real. Now, people are involved. That’s the miracle.”

News, People

Big Crowd, Big Night for the Donegal Association

2014 Mary from Dungloe Kelly Devine accepts hugs from friend and 2013 Mary, Moira Cahill.

2014 Mary from Dungloe Kelly Devine accepts hugs from friend and 2013 Mary, Moira Cahill.

Perhaps the most striking thing about the Philadelphia Donegal Association’s Mary from Dungloe pageant is that the winner always seems genuinely astonished and surprised. No one goes on the stage expecting to win. The contestants seem to enjoy each other’s company, even cheer for each other. In this, the “Marys” have a lot in common with the winners of the local Rose of Tralee and the Miss Mayo contests.

In short, in addition to their undeniable accomplishments and talents, the winners happen to be nice.

Judging by the expression on Kelly Devine’s face when she became this year’s Mary from Dungloe Saturday night at the 125th Donegal Ball, she was, well … genuinely astonished and surprised.

And in a quick interview after an exhausting round of picture taking with friends, relatives, outgoing Mary from Dungloe Moira Cahill, and all the other contestants—and a serenade by the Philadelphia Irish Center’s Vince Gallagher—the 2014 Mary proved to be just what you’d expect her to be: Nice.

“I was a little shocked,” said Devine, former marketing major at St. Joseph’s University and currently a junior account executive at Brownstone PR. “I just wanted to come to the ball and have fun, to have a good time. And it was very easy to talk to the other girls here. It was like hanging out with my girlfriends. This is just the icing on the cake.”

Like Cahill, Devine is a longtime competitive Irish dancer, trained at the Coyle School of Irish Dance. She started at age 7. A back injury sidelined her at age 20, but she helps teach other dancers at the Coyle School. She credits Cahill for pushing her to compete. “Moira talked me into it. She’s been very supportive. She is a very good representative for the Donegal Association. I’m trying to live up to her.”

The pageant is typically one of the most dramatic moments at the Donegal Ball, but there were many other high points—including the selection of Carmel Boyce for the first Irene Durning Award, named for a beloved longtime member of the association. The award recognizes local people of Irish descent—they don’t have to be members of the Donegal Association—for their kindness and generosity in the Irish community, and for being a devoted supporter of the Mary from Dungloe contest. The standards are pretty high, and if you know anything at all about the Philadelphia Irish community, a lot of people meet or exceed those standards. Carmel Boyce, a leading figure in the community, sets a pretty high bar herself.

All in all, a great night for the Donegal Association, probably one of the best attended balls in recent memory. So many people crowded into the Irish Center ballroom, they had to bring in extra tables and chairs.

We have many, many photos from that night. Check them out.

Dance, People

“Quite a Weekend” for Móira Cahill

Moira Cahill

Moira Cahill

On Saturday night at the Donegal Ball, Móira Cahill ended her one-year reign as the Philadelphia Donegal Association’s Mary from Dungloe, with grace and poise—and an infectious grin that never seemed to leave her face all evening. At the end of the night, when Kelly Devine, her good friend from the Coyle School of Irish Dance, became the 2014 Mary, there was cause for even more joy.

Still, a lot of people didn’t know—at least, not before the Donegal Ball—that Cahill had won the Ladies Under 20 competition Friday at the 2013 Mid-Atlantic Oireachtas. The Oireachtas (ERR-uhk-tuhss) is a major Irish dance championship, held each year over the Thanksgiving holiday in Center City.

“I danced hornpipes and reels, and if you’re recalled, you do a contemporary set dance. I performed ’The Blackthorn Stick’,” Cahill recalled as the evening’s festivities at the Philadelphia Irish Center wound down. “I danced hard shoe and soft shoe. My whole competition was on Friday.”

Cahill, 20, has been dancing for 15 years, and competing for 14. She has always been a very good dancer, as evidenced by her 4th place finish at the Oireachtas two years ago, and her second place last year. But none of her success has come easily. It has required seriously hard work and dedication.

“It takes a lot of practice. I was going to practice four to five times a week,” Cahill said, tiara and heels off, kicking back in a lounge off the Irish Center ballroom—finally taking a well-earned break. “It also takes a lot of mental preparation.”

As a result of her first-place finish, Cahill is qualified to compete at the 2014 North American Irish Dance Championships in Montréal in July, which she said she is likely to attend.

For now, though, it’s a time to briefly sit back and take it all in. And it’s a lot to take in, Cahill said, again with the smile. “It’s been quite a weekend.”

News, People

Former Eagles GM Named Philly Parade Grand Marshal

Jim Murray

Jim Murray

Jim Murray, the former general manager of the Philadelphia Eagles and founder of the first Ronald McDonald House for families of seriously ill children in Philadelphia, has been named grand marshal of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

The theme of the 2014 parade is: St. Patrick, bless the contributions of Irish Americans to our nation.

Murray, of Rosemont, is president of Jim Murray Ltd.., a sports promotion and marketing firm and was the Eagles’ GM when the team went to Super Bowl XV and the team made the NFL playoffs four times. He, along with owner Leonard Tose, hired popular coach Dick Vermeil.

Born in West Philadelphia, Murray is a 1960 graduate of Villanova University and an ex-Marine who got his start in sports with the Tidewater Tides of baseball’s South Atlantic League. He was also assistant general manager of the Atlanta Crackers, an affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals and was also a sports information director at Villanova.

Along with the Ronald McDonald House, Murray’s philanthropic work includes launching the Eagles Fly for Leukemia campaign.

The father of five, he and his wife Dianne have four grandchildren.

The 2014 parade is scheduled for Sunday, March 16.

Music, News, People

Raymond Says Thanks

Raymond Coleman, saying thank you.

Raymond Coleman, saying thank you.

The only thing better than hearing Raymond Coleman sing is to hear him duet with some of the region’s best performers—and his brother, Mickey.

That was the thank-you gift—along with some delicious free hors d’ouevres–the Tyrone-born Coleman gave his supporters on Thursday night at “Raymond Coleman Appreciation Night” at The Plough and the Stars on at Second and Chestnut in Philadelphia.

The thank you? It was for the guitars and equipment that their donations helped Coleman to buy after all of his gear was stolen from his van more than a month ago. “Now he has a better PA system than I have,” joked Mickey Coleman, a singer-songwriter who is making a name for himself on the New York music scene.

“The reason we’re here is because you helped me out,” Coleman said, before starting his show with the song, The Hills of South Armagh. He singled out Jamison’s Frank Daly for launching the crowd-sourcing campaign online that raised more than $3,000 for Coleman in 24 hours.

“It took me a minute and a half on my phone while my kids were getting ready for the school bus,” said Daly, who performed a couple of songs with Coleman on stage on Thursday night.

Also on the duet schedule: The Hooligans’ Joe Kirschen, founder with his wife, Kim, of The Love Lounge Studios online concert series which features local talent like Coleman; Bob Hurst of the Bogside Rogues; and John Catterall of the King Brothers. Fiddler Erin Loughran, who has her own school of Irish music in New York, also performed. And there was even some spontaneous dancing.

We were there and took a few pictures, which we like to do.