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Surrounded By Women

Kathy McGee Burns with Grand Marshall Sister James Anne Feerick

By Kathy McGee Burns

Being the President of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade is pretty neat and it comes with some great perks. One of them is choosing a Ring of Honor. This consists of extraordinary individuals who have achieved by their dedication to, and continuance of Irish traditions. I thought long and hard about this responsibility and found eight amazing women who fill the bill.

It is quite a thrill for me to have the President of Mount Saint Joseph Academy (my Alma Mater) in the Ring of Honor. Sister Kathleen Brabson, SSJ, has held this position since 2005. Although born in New York, she thinks of herself as a local woman having gone to Seven Dolors, Cecilian Academy, Chestnut Hill College (BS) and Villanova University (M.A. in Theology).Sr. Kathleen did venture away for continuing education classes to Fordham University and Boston College. Mt. St. Joseph is 153 years old, and in that time has instructed the daughters of immigrants (many of them Irish). The Irish have a great love of education. Although the Sisters of St. Joseph were founded in France, most of the nuns that taught me had Irish last names. Sr. Kathleen Brabson’s roots are Co.Cork (she thinks) via her mother, Audrey nee Burke. She traveled to Ireland and was enchanted by the experience and found the people to be welcoming and comfortable in their own shoes. She loved the antiquity of the countryside. One of her best days was spent at the cliffs of Slieve League, a tall mountain, 2000 feet, located on the side of a jutting peninsula in Co. Donegal. It was a misty day and the clouds clung closely to the mountaintop, as if Heaven and Earth were meeting. It was a lovely, spiritual experience. Sr. Kathleen is very approachable, affable and an invaluable asset to Mt. St. Joseph. She is also very gracious (a trait she learned from her mother), thoughtful and people-centered.

Bernadette Browne, giving, humble and tenacious, is one of seven sisters and one brother. Her parents, gone but forever loved, were Danny (Ballybofey, Co. Donegal) and Philomena nee Monaghan ( Co.Down). Bernadette has set her sights on filling the shoes of her father, which she really doesn’t need to do because she has big shoes of her own. She has a Bachelors Degree from the University of Pennsylvania and a Masters in Engineering from Penn State. An entrepreneur, she is the founder and CEO of Office Infinity. Bernadette is a doer: 2nd VP of the Donegal Assn; Board Member of Hall of Fame, Commodore Barry Club, Philadelphia Donegal Gaelic Football team and the go-to person if you need a job done or a donation given. Of course, her favorite song is “ Danny Boy”.

The Brehon Society is a Philadelphia-based professional association of law among people of Irish ancestry. Brehon Law is ancient. Some say it goes back to the Bronze Age. According to Michael Ragan in his treatise, Brehon Law,”Woman stood emancipated and eligible for the professions, rank and fame.” Philadelphia Court of Common Please President Judge Pamela Pryor Dembe is the Past President (2002-2004). She said that when they first formed the Brehons, in 1976, one of their purposes was to address the lack of the Irish being selected to serve as judges. Well, 35 years later, Judge Dembe is pleased that many of their student members are women and “We now have a hefty cadre of Irish women judges in the area.” Judge Dembe is a graduate of Temple University, School of Law. She has roots in Mayo and Tyrone. She is married to David Dembe, a Law Professor, avid sailor and retired lawyer. She has 4 grown children: Cecily, Eli, Aaron and Alison. She sees herself as outgoing, energetic and decisive…maybe even bossy! But after all, one doesn’t become President Judge by being demure! Retired Judge Ed Bradley says that, “Judge Dembe is an outstanding jurist, noted for her sound judicial temperament and extensive knowledge of the Law. Pamela Dembe loves many things Irish: music, literature, knitting and of course, the Law. Most of all, she loves visiting Ireland.

Denise Foley, funny, caring and kind (oh, so kind) is not only my good friend but is probably one of the most entertaining people I know. She is the daughter of Thomas (whose roots are Massachusetts via Newfoundland via Wexford or Waterford) and Grace Heary (with roots in Inishowen, County Donegal). Denise was always inquisitive and asked many questions of her relatives, “Where do we come from?” Her Aunt Grace would reply indignantly, “It doesn’t matter! We’re Americans now.” Denise, in her youthful wisdom, started writing things down and when she got a computer, she started looking things up. Denise, equipped with a B.S. in Journalism from Temple University, is one of the founding editors, with Jeff Meade, of www.irishphiladelphia.com. This is a hyperlocal website designed to bring the Philadelphia region every tidbit of Irish news, views and to-do’s. Denise does this with sincerity, wit and directness. Not an event goes by without Denise’s imprimatur. Married to Ed Rogan, they have a son, Patrick, age 24.

Elizabeth Kerr is a young woman with an old soul. She is inspirational, unsinkable and lilting. Liz is a Political Activist dedicated to the cause of a United Ireland. In her days at Cardinal Dougherty, she invited Pearse Kerr (an ex-political prisoner in Belfast) to be her history project. Guess who she’s married to? Her family roots are in Galway. Liz never stops growing! She has a B.A. from the University of St. Francis, an RN from Philadelphia Community College and is presently working on a master’s degree in English from Arcadia. One of her friends said that Liz has a wonderful heart. How apropos, because she is a nurse on the heart transplant team at Temple. Liz is one of the founding members of LAOH Bridig McCroary, Div.25.and their officer for “Freedom for all Ireland”. The Kerrs have two children, Dana and Brendan, and they lost a son, Patrick, at age 15, to a skateboarding accident. They turned tragedy into triumph by starting a college scholarship fund for skateboarders, and dedicated a safe environment for youth called Patrick Kerr Skate Park. Do you think all of this is why Liz Kerr is “unsinkable”?

Eileen Lavin is the founder of Tara Gael, an adult Irish dance group. Tara Gael represents the kings and queens of Ireland, and that is exactly how Eileen sees her dancers. And they are that….having won the Marie Burns Award for 5 out of 8 years. Dancing came late for Eileen. When she was a senior at Cardinal Dougherty High School, her father begged her to at least take one class. She took that class with the Master, Ed Reavey, at Emmett’s Place, and one class turned into a lifelong commitment. She shared this love with her husband, Al, who passed away last year. She taught him how to dance and they did so, side by side, for 18 years of marriage. Eileen’s roots are Mayo and Donegal. She loves being around the Irish because they are an open, happy and warm group of people that she easily identifies with. Eileen, is herself a beautiful woman in many ways; patient, loving and understanding.

In Dublin, 1827, Catherine McAuley opened a refuge to provide shelter and to educate the young, rural women who came from all parts of Ireland. She later became the first Sister of Mercy. In 1861, this Order of Nuns, came to Philadelphia to establish the same kind of protection to working girls. They also offered visitation to the sick and comfort to prison inmates. This year, the Sisters of Mercy will celebrate 150 years of service to Education, Charity and Health Care. Sr. Christine McCann is the President of the Sisters of Mercy Mid-Atlantic Com-
munity. Sr. Christine says that she and her fellow sisters stand on the shoulders of those pioneer women who served an immigrant population. Sr. Christine family is from Tyrone and Antrim. She feels the sense of History and Story: the connection between her role here in America and that of Sr. McAuley in Ireland. Sr. Kathleen Lyons, Director of Senior Services, says Sr. Christine is a great inspiration to her and the 1,026 women that she guides. She provides leadership, insight, and commitment to the mission of the Sisters of Mercy..to serve God’s people. “A woman of great faith and action, Sister Christine McCann is a true daughter of Catherine McAuley”.

Honorable Kelly Wall, Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County, is a dedicated, driven and no-nonsense Judge. Okay, nepotism prevails in this choice because Kelly is my daughter but it is totally justifiable. Kelly put herself through college by bits and pieces, mostly going at night while working days. She finally decided to follow her heart’s desire: finishing her last year at Temple University, she left for Indiana University, School of Law, where she graduated Magna Cum Laude. Kelly became a Partner at Miller, Turetsky and practiced family law, but once again, her heart told her she needed to set her goals on a Judgeship. She carefully persevered through the steps which would get her to the courthouse: Supervisor of Whitemarsh Twp, Board Member of Northwest Human Services, Solicitor for Children and Youth, etc. Well, she got elected thanks to her persistence and the help of her eight brothers and sisters. Can you imagine the thrill of robing your daughter? Kelly Wall has a 13-year-old son, Liam. She is a member of the Donegal Association and a Brehon.

“A joyful heart is the normal result of a heart burning with love. She gives most who gives with joy.” Mother Teresa

Joy is what I see when I look upon the lovely, lithesome face of Sister James Anne…Joy for God, Joy for family and Joy for us. On March 13, a this beautiful woman will lead the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade as Grand Marshal.

Sister James Anne Feerick, daughter of Jim and Anne (nee Caulfield)  and Sister to five brothers is no stranger to the parade. She has amazing memories of it since she was seven years old. The Feericks always participated in this event. As members of Transfiguration Parish (West Philadelphia) buses were available to take families to Broad Street. Her Dad and brothers would march with the Holy Name Society; she would dance with the Sean Lavery Dancers and Mom would watch from the sidewalk. They would even watch the New York Parade and on special years, actually go there with a side trip to Rockefeller Center.

Music was an on going joy to Sister James Anne. She was a violinist in West Catholic High School’s orchestra and even appeared on the Will Regan Hour with her brothers; Jim on piano and Mike and Sister on violins.

On Sundays the Feericks would visit their Grandparents in Camden. They had a Victrola  and they would listen to the likes of Ruthie Morrison and John McCormick.

Dance was another love in her life. When Sr. James Anne, a member of the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, first started teaching, she took a course aimed at helping students with poor coordination. The recommendation was dancing. She immediately started a class in Irish dance.

One of her proudest accomplishments is her role of Chaplain to the Mayo Association. I recently attended the unveiling of the statue of Our Lady of Knock.It had been commissioned in Ireland and now sits in a lovely custom-built niche.The entire piece stands about 8 feet tall and Our Lady stands in front of a beautifully painted scene of a church, children, Sts. John and Joseph and the Lamb of God. It is a spectacular piece of art as well as a Spiritual icon. Sr. James was aglow with the presentation of the service. As chaplain she welcomed Our Lady with song, prayer and community. All of us who were present at the Irish Center will long remember the spirituality of that day.

Rosaleen Megonegal, President of the Mayo Association looks on Sr. James Anne as a true friend. “Her caring and loving words bring a deep and spiritual awareness to our members. Nothing is too much for her to handle and despite her busy schedule, she is willing to help. Sr. James Anne, truly an inspirational woman.”

Michael Bradley, the Parade Director, says, “She has never sought the limelight. Sister James Anne sets a great example for us to follow. She is kind, caring and a treasure to the Irish community.”

Fr. John Flanagan, her past student (1st grade) and now President of Roman Catholic High School, was one of the many who nominated her for Grand Marshal. “Sister James Anne’s example, work ethic, faith filled life and her genuine Saintly life speaks volumes about leading a life of Joy and service to God and his people.” He also said the Sr. James has provided him personally with the spiritual strength, prayers and example to sustain his life as a priest.

As for me, I will be humbled to share my first year as President of this great parade with a woman of her faith, stature and dignity.

 

 

 

News, People

Philly Parade Director Accepts O’Hara Award

Philly Parade Director Michael Bradley and John Caramanico, president of the Cardinal O'Hara Alumni Association.

Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director was one of two 2011 recipients of the Cardinal O’Hara Alumni Spirit of O’Hara Award.

Michael Bradley received the award on Sunday, March 7, after a Mass at the high school where he sent his two sons, Mickey and Colin, and where he and his wife, Linda,  have been a longtime volunteers.

Villanova head football coach Andy Talley was the guest speaker at the awards breakfast, attended by more than 100 people.

We were there and have photos.

 

Music, People

Up Close and Personal with the Dropkick Murphys

Dropkick Murphy's Tim Brennan.

If you’re thinking about switching energy suppliers, you might want to consider the Dropkick Murphys. This Celtic punk band did two shows this week at Philadelphia’s Electric Factory and it couldn’t have been a more apt location for this wild, working man’s group born in the basement of a barbershop in Quincy, Massachusetts in 1996.

It didn’t take long for the Dropkicks to bust out of suburban Boston. They were signed by Hellcat Records in 1998 and by the early 2000s you didn’t need to be a punk aficionado to have heard them. Their reworking of an old Boston Red Sox song, “Tessie” made the soundtrack of the Drew Barrymore-Jimmy Fallon movie “Fever Pitch” and it continues to be played at Red Sox games after the team wins. (It was Red Sox closer Jonathan Papelbon’s walk-up song too—and he occasionally performed a little jig when it played). A second tune, “I’m Shipping Up to Boston” with lyrics by the late Woody Guthrie, was featured in the 2006 Academy Award-winning Martin Scorsese film, “The Departed” and on an episode of “The Simpsons” called “The Debarted.” If you attended the Boston Bruins-Philadelphia Flyers 2010 NHL Winter Classic in Fenway Park in Boston, you would have heard them perform it live, though if you’re a Flyers fan, you might not have cheered.

You certainly wouldn’t have crowd-surfed or leaped into a writhing mosh pit, but that’s what fans were doing at the group’s two shows this week. We know because our own Brian Mengini was there, taking notes (he interviewed lead guitarist, accordian player and vocalist—and former DKM merchandise guy–Tim Brennan before the show). Most important, he took photos!

Here’s Brian’s interview. See his photos here.

 

What inspired you to pick up the accordion?

When I became a teenager, probably 14 or 15, I started getting re-acquainted with the Irish music that I had heard from my grandparents when I was a kid and I got really into it, especially the Pogues, and wanted to be able to play along to it with something other than a guitar.  So, I bought a tin whistle and taught myself how to play that.  At the time, I was playing drums in a band with some friends and I was at practice one day in my friend’s basement and his father had an accordion and I was like, “does he use that?” and he said no, its been in the basement forever.  So I asked him if I could borrow it and I took it home and just kind of fiddled around for a while and started learning some songs and now here I am playing it for a living.

Now what’s been your biggest obstacle or hurdle in terms of transitioning from the merch end into the band?

No obstacles. I mean, ever since I was a kid, I knew I wanted to play music and the fact that the guys in the band recognized that although I was slinging their t-shirts that I could still play a few tunes and asking me to play with them, that was just an honor and the fact that I am here today as the lead guitar player, quote unquote, is unbelievable and the fact that I can say I started out as an assistant to a merch guy for the band is pretty…rags to riches.

Where was the first show you did with them as a guitarist?

I don’t remember exactly where it was.  We went over and did a UK/European tour. That was the first one where I was playing guitar and Jeff DeRosa [DKM’s news member] was in the band.  It seems like it was so long ago but it wasn’t that long ago.

What groups would we find on your iPod?

There is a lot of different stuff then you would think.  I mean there is the obvious ones like the Pogues and the Clash but there’s a lot of the Stones and Chuck Berry and Ryan Adams and Hank Williams.  Everything from older country stuff to whatever great new independent bands are out there.

How is it performing in Boston for St Paddy’s Day?

It’s amazing.  We tour and all then to come back home and do a show, it’s amazing.  You’re family and friends are there.  It’s a great energy.

Are you guys doing the Boston parade?

No, this year we are just going to watch.  With all the things we have going on around it, we are going to take it easy and just watch it this year.

What’s the biggest difference between the new CD, “Going Out In Style,”  and “The Meanest of Times?”

Musically, I feel that we have matured.  Also, for this album, we brought on a producer to do things vs us just doing it ourselves.

Do you feel that you will go that route again?

Yes, definitely.  I think it is great.  We are very happy with it!

It’s been 4 years since the last record dropped.  Before that, it was about every 2.  Why did this one take longer?

We had a fairly significant line up change.  One of our guitar players ended up leaving the band.  So I had to switch my instruments around and we acquired Jeff DeRosa, our newest member.  We took a little while to make sure Jeff new all the old songs and everything.  Then we started writing.  But people wont have to wait that long again.  I can promise that.

What’s your favorite track off the new album?

Broken Hymns.  It’s not your typical Dropkick song or what you are used to.  It’s a lot slower.  But I like it.

What’s your favorite Irish drinking song?

I really like Waxie’s Dargle – the Pogues version from “Red Roses from Me.”  There are a lot of Dubliners songs that are awesome as well.

If you could share the bill with one band, any genre, which would it be?

It’s funny because we’ve gotten to a point where a lot of the bands that we would have said, we’ve gotten to tour with. We’ve toured with the Pogues and the Sex Pistols.  It would never happen because there is no way a band could ever open for them but I would say the Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band.  They would blow us off the stage.

When did you guys find out you were performing at the 2010 NHL Winter Classic?

There were discussions about it but we found out probably a couple weeks before hand and I mean just like anything else that we’ve been involved with whether it be the Red Sox or “The Departed” or whatever, the fact that people even bounced our names around with the idea of inviting us to show is incredible.  We were honored to be a part of that.

What is the process when DKM creates new material?  Do ideas just come to you or do you go after a certain topic or subject matter?

As far as lyrics go, Ken & Al… we hope that inspiration strikes them as far as song writing and now and again some of the rest of us will have lines or something that we will throw in there.  I deal mostly with the music writing.  As far as how the songs come about, whether it starts with a vocal melody or a line or a guitar riff, someone will bring something in and we just try to flush it out as a band sometimes.  Sometimes someone will come in with a complete song or sometimes it’s just a part.  But, we’ve worked with each other long enough that we can sort of finish each other’s ideas when it comes to that stuff musically.  As far as writing songs, we just say let’s write some songs and we all get in a room and try to hammer it out.

What’s the most grueling part of making a new album?

I mean we went into the studio in October so probably in August we would go to the practice space in Boston and we would be there for probably about 10 hours a day, just playing acoustics.  We wrote some stuff at Matt Kelly’s house, our drummer’s house in his kitchen just playing acoustics.  So for the first two months, we were probably just playing everything for hours and hours and hours on acoustic guitars.  Then, a couple of weeks before we went into the studio or a month before we went into the studio, we started doing everything louder like it was going to be and fleshing everything out there.  So I mean, the process as far as pre production then going into the recording studio was fairly grueling I guess you can say but ya know, it’s what we do. It’s what we like to do so we’ll sacrifice a couple of months of us sitting in a room with no windows and writing songs in order to get a final product.

For St. Paddy’s Day weekend, what are some of the things to do or some of the things to hit in Boston?

There is so much stuff you can do.  If there are history buffs, there are plenty of historical sites around.  For Dropkicks fans, there are plenty of places that we talk about in songs.  It’s good to go out and see the whole city.  The city itself is small so you can see a lot in a small amount of time.  Then venture on down south to south Boston and it has plenty to offer. That’s for sure!

You guys are playing the House of Blues for the St. Patrick’s holiday.

We’re doing three shows at the House of Blues – Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.    Saturday, we are doing an arena show in Lowell, which is going to be incredible and then on Sunday, we are doing a small club show just outside of Boston.

What’s the best place for a pint in Boston?

We always have good times at McGreevy’s.  Also, there are a bunch of good dive bars in south Boston.

You were saying earlier about your process for creating new content. Have you guys ever just showed up at a party or somebody’s house and just jammed?  I saw a video on YouTube with the lead singer and the guitarist from Shinedown, were at a party in someone’s house and were doing some songs acoustic, like a cover of Simple Man.  It was very cool and pure.

No, you know what; we’ve never done that before.  I think that would be a fun thing to do though.  I feel that would be a fun thing to do as we are writing new stuff, like if you have ever seen that documentary on Jerry Seinfeld and he’s getting rid of his old material and just writing all this new stuff. So, while he is writing it, he is popping into these tiny clubs and doing sets just to test out the new stuff.  I would love to do something like that if we were writing a new record and just showed up to a couple of bars in Boston and played some acoustic sets.  That would be amazing! Good idea!

Which is your favorite team – Celtics, Bruins, Sox or Flyers?

The Celtics.

Better food – clam chowder or Philly cheesesteak?

Philly cheesesteak.

Brian Mengini is a professional photographer–and a music lover–from the Philadelphia area. Visit his website at http://www.bmengini.com/.

 

News, People

Party Before the Parade

CBS3's parade team members, anchor Susan Barnett and meteorologist Kathy Orr.

As always, it was a great party, the calm—sort of—before the storm that is the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Philadelphia which marches down the Parkway on Sunday, March 13.

But CBS3 meteorologist Kathy Orr told the happy crowd at the CBS3 studios on Thursday night that they can leave their umbrellas at home. But dress warm. “It’s going to be cold, but dry,” she said to great cheers. These were the people who marched in the rain last year, so cold seems like a step up.

John Dougherty of IBEW Local Union 98—the electricians—underwrites the pre-parade party at the CBS3 studios every year. The parade is televised live on CBS and usually repeated again on St. Patrick’s Day on CBS3 and sister station, CW Philly.

You can see who was there and what fun was had in our photo essay.

Music, News, People

Irish Radio Show Fundraiser: Big Success

A little boy named Owen picked the winners--with the help of emcee and Shanachie owner, Gerry Timlin.

It was standing-room only at the Shanachie Pub in Ambler on Sunday afternoon, as act after act took the stage to perform in the second Shanachie fundraiser to benefit the Sunday Irish Radio Shows on WTMR-800 AM.

After the music had stilled and all the donated prizes had been won or auctioned off, Marianne MacDonald, host of the “Come West Along the Road” show, estimated that the benefit had raised more than $3,000. It’s not the $35,000 the shows—including the Vince Gallagher Hour—need to stay on the air, but it goes into the pot that grew over the past six weeks with on-air and other fundraisers.

MacDonald, who organized the benefit with the help of many hands, had an all-star lineup on stage, including the John Bryne Band, Timlin and Kane, The King Brothers, Fintan Malone and Tom McHugh, with special guest from New York, singer Donie Carroll, a Cork man whose latest album includes musical assistance from leading lights such as Gabriel Donohue, Joanie Madden (of Cherish the Ladies”), singer Jimmy Crowley and Marian Makins of Philadelphia. Carroll was accompanied on stage by Dublin fiddler Paraic Keane, who now lives in Philadelphia and plays with Paul Moore and Friends.

As usual, Shanachie co-owner Gerry Timlin, when he wasn’t singing, was performing the role of emcee and auctioneer.

We were there and, as usual, took pictures for those of you who weren’t. View the photo essay.

News, People

Local Heroes

Irish Echo "40 Under 40" honoree Orla Treacy and her fiance, Ryan Bailey.

Three up-and-coming Philadelphia area professionals were named to the Irish Echo’s annual “40 Under 40” list, which recognizes the achievements and potential of Irish and Irish-Americans under 40.

Honored at ceremonies last week were a lawyer and Irish community leader from Wexford, an immigration activist and a champion ladies Gaelic footballer who is working to reduce gun violence in Pennsylvania.

Here are our local heroes:

Laurence Banville, an attorney who was born in Wexford, Ireland, is general counsel and partner in the firm Alliance Equals LLC in Philadelphia, president of Irish Network-Philadelphia, and sits on the board of Irish Network USA. He has also been named to the Irish Legal 100, an annual publication that recognized Irish and Irish-American lawyers.

Mairead Conley is the reigning Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic Rose of Tralee. She is also deputy director of community programming at the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia, treasurer for Irish Network-Philadelphia, and active in the Reform Immigration for America campaign. She is a member of the selection committee of the Inspirational Irish Women awards, a joint program of the Irish Center and the Irish Immigration Center. Conley also received the Young Irish American Leader of the Year Award.

Orla Treacy is operations director of CeaseFirePA, Pennsylvania’s leading gun violence prevention organization dedicating to reducing and preventing gun violence through education and advocacy at the community level. A graduate of Mount Saint Joseph Academy in Flourtown and the University of Pennsylvania, she is also a found member of the Mairead Farrell Ladies Gaelic football team in Philadelphia, which recently won the Ladies Senior Division in the North American Championship in Chicago.

Treacy’s escort for the award ceremony, held at Rosie O’Grady’s in Bayonne, NJ, was her boyfriend, Ryan Bailey. The next day, Orla tells us, Bailey popped the question and became her fiancé. Double congratulations!

Other Philadelphians honored in past years included Sarah Conaghan, director of the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee Centre; Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Philadelphia; Karen Boyce McCollum, a singer and associate director for corporate communications at Cephalon, a pharmaceutical company; and Theresa Flanagan Murtagh, a musician, attorney, and former president of the Donegal Association of Philadelphia.

View  some photos from the event.

News, People

An Irish Primrose Debuts at The Flower Show

The Kennedy Irish Primrose known as "Inisfree."

Shakespeare’s Ophelia warned her brother about treading down the “primrose path,” a phrase the Bard used more than once in his plays to refer to the pleasant path to self-destruction. But to the Irish, a primrose path meant something quite different. It became traditional to plant primroses around the entrance to one’s cottage to protect against evil fairies.

“And it must work,” says Kilkenny nurseryman Pat FitzGerald. “Have you met any?”

You’re certainly not going to encounter any evil fairies at FitzGerald’s nursery in Oldtown, Stoneyford, in southeastern Ireland, built on the farm where FitzGerald grew up. And you will find primroses. As a child, FitzGerald recalls picking wild primroses by the fistful in the Rath, or Neolithic ring fort, on the property. He and his siblings used to “play hideaway” in the fort, which was covered in primroses, violets, and bluebells and which he rescued from its bramble prison when he founded the nursery in 1990.

“But I’d never grown a primrose till three or four years ago,” FitzGerald told me a few weeks ago on the phone from Ireland. “They were so familiar I guess I treated them with a little bit of contempt.”

Then he met an amateur primrose breeder and retired dentist named Joe Kennedy, a Carlow man living in County Antrim, who has been collecting old Irish varieties of primula—the flower’s Latin name—some dating back to the late 19th century. Out of hardy Irish stock of a perennial primrose known as Garryard, Kennedy had bred some unusual plants with very dark foliage that makes them look almost sensual. They’re a reminder that the primrose’s only magic—its only use—is to look pretty. And they do.

FitzGerald is bringing some of these dark wonders with him to debut at the Philadelphia International Flower Show, which opens this Sunday, March 6, at the Philadelphia Convention Center. Though the theme this year is “Springtime in Paris,” Tourism Ireland is a show sponsor so, among the outdoor Paris cafes and the replicas of Versailles, there will be a tribute to the iconic Irish oak, now an endangered species. FitzGerald will introduce and talk about the Kennedy Irish Primroses on Tuesday, March 8, at 4 PM in the Subaru Gardener’s Studio. (And yes, he’s brought some to sell.)

Appropriately, each of the new primroses carries a name linked to Irish poet William Butler Yeats. The first, Inisfree, comes from Yeats’ poem “The Lake Isle of Inisfree,” and is a mat-forming variety with deep red and yellow blooms with very dark purple foliage. The second, Drumcliffe, named for the village graveyard where the poet is buried, is a rosette forming variety with a creamy white flower that opens with a slight touch of mauve.

And the timing is appropriate too, says FitzGerald. This year marks the 50th anniversary of the inauguration of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, whose family comes from County Wexford. “But this collaboration between a Fitzgerald and a Kennedy to bring old Irish primroses to America is a typically Irish coincidence,” jokes FitzGerald.

Kennedy and FitzGerald are working on 36 more primrose selections, the next of which may be unveiled next year in a variety of colors, including yellow, white, peach, and pink with intensely dark purple foliage.

Patrick FitzGerald

When he started his company more than 20 years ago, FitzGerald had no idea that his was going to be anything more than a local business. In fact, he didn’t even start out to be a nurseryman per se. After college, he set up his first nursery as a workshop for people with special needs, affiliated with the Brothers of Charity. “Our work was to train people with disabilities, brain injuries, and various forms of mental disability to work in the commercial nursery.”

Then, January 2009, he discovered the social network. Facebook. Twitter. Blogging. He got himself Facebook and Twitter accounts and writes a blog called “My Plant” at Blogspot. Suddenly, his plants were showing up in the US, particularly a shrub called ceanothus, a small tree or shrub in the buckthorn family. His variety is called Tuxedo because it has black leaves—actually, a dark chocolate color with striking red stems and lavender blue flowers. And his carex—a kind of grass—called Everillo is making the rounds on other plant sites and blogs.

“The amount of people I’ve made connections with because of it is amazing,” says FitzGerald. “The first place to find out about plants these days is Facebook. People who are in the business are now scouting it. I’ve been using it pretty actively for 18 months now and spreading the word about our plants, and I don’t think it would have happened any other way. We don’t have the budget to take ads in major magazines. In my experience, getting plants into nurseries has never happened this fast. Going to a trade show would cost me something like 1500 euros and I sometimes would come back scratching my head and wondering, ‘Did anything really come of that?’ Social network sites are like a permanent trade show—your door is permanently open and the good and the bad come in.”

Others have noticed. FitzGerald’s company was short-listed for the Irish Times 2011 Innovation Awards in recognition not only of its unique plant cultivars but for the “unique and cost effective route” it took to access world markets.

But posting on Facebook isn’t his main focus, says FitzGerald, “You still have to do the day job. It doesn’t watch the dishes.” And that means getting his primroses ready for the American market. They’re being produced at his lab which is about 20 miles from the old Kennedy homestead in Wexford. Just another one of those typical “Irish coincidences,” he laughs.

Arts, Music, People

From Máirtín de Cógáin With Love

Máirtín de Cógáin is launching his new CD "From Cork With Love"

Those of us in the know are already well aware that the best tea comes from Cork, and goes by the name “Barry’s,” but Máirtín de Cógáin has discovered during his travels around the U.S. that it’s not always easy to get a proper cuppa. So, he has determinedly set his sights on remedying that by “educating as much of America” as he can with a little story he calls “How to make proper tea!” and wisely including it on his new CD, The Máirtín de Cógáin Project’s “From Cork with Love.”

If anyone can pull off a feat of such cross-cultural magnitude, it’s this two time All Ireland Storytelling Champion.

A true Renaissance man of the arts, Máirtín de Cógáin takes the concept of the triple threat a few threats further:  in addition to dancing, acting and singing, he is also a playwright, a songwriter, a bodhrán player and a master seanachie.  And with just the slightest of omissions (he‘s saving the dancing for the next CD), those talents are exuberantly displayed on “From Cork with Love.”

The album, recorded live at The Celtic Junction in St. Paul, Minnesota, last April, is a listen with an extremely high addiction factor.  There’s no use in even pretending otherwise; from the songs, to the tunes, to the stories—which were all chosen to reflect an aspect of the heart & soul to be found in County Cork—the CD should come with its own repeat button.

The Cork native, who relocated to Minnesota several years ago with his American wife, explained that the album is both a love letter to Cork, and an expression of the love that is to be found there. “It’s the way it is with immigrants, you lose a lot when you leave home. This is my tribute to songs that have been lost, as well as to songs that haven’t been lost.”

“There is a lot of coyness and romance about Cork. I met my wife Mitra there. She’s from Los Angeles, and had come to do a wee year abroad in a foreign land…and you couldn’t be more foreign from Los Angeles than when you’re in Cork.

“I won her heart with a brush dance. After that, she was putty in my hands. And, most importantly, she had all the ingredients for a proper cup of tea, including the Barry’s tea bags.”

Some signs are not meant to be ignored.

“I grew up in a house where there was always a pot of tea brewing.  There would be 4, 5, 6 or 10 people drinking from it. Lots of tea leaves. I don’t branch out much from Barry’s, but Lyons isn’t too bad. And then you have PG Tips and Red Lion, as well.”

But it’s not always about tea. After graduation from university, de Cógáin traveled around the world. “I was totally defunct of ideas about my future…like most of my fellow graduates.  I always stuck in everything in college.”

It was while in New Zealand that de Cógáin did his first paying gig, and from there it was on to Australia.  Upon his return to Ireland, de Cógáin found work for his multifarious talents in acting (the film “The Wind That Shakes the Barley” for which he also sang the theme song), playwriting (“De Bogman” in which he also stars, performing 20 characters in under an hour) and performing (he was a founding, and existing, member of The Fuschsia Band and also formed Captain Mackey’s Goatskin & String Band with Jimmy Crowley).

And de Cógáin the storyteller was also honing his skills as a seanachie, a talent that comes from his father, “a great storyteller himself. I really love telling stories when you hit the mark.  I do try to have a story or two wherever we go that’s suitable. I was never amazing at school, but my short term memory is amazing. If I hear a story, and retell it the next day, I’ll remember it. I’m kind of like a mockingbird that way.  It also helps in acting.”

Now there is the launch of The Máirtín de Cógáin Project and its CD, where he is joined by fellow Minnesotans Brian Miller and Norah Rendell, as well as special guest, fiddle player Nathan Gourley.

“I first met Brian when I was in college, and he came over to study in Ireland.  We played together over there, and then on my very first day in Minnesota, I went into Kieran’s Pub in Minneapolis, and Brian was playing there.

“I’ve been chasing Brian for years to perform with him, and I finally caught him. And along with Brian came Norah. They have such a fierce love of Irish music, and they understand the intricacies of how things work.  Both of them are very dedicated, and great to work with.”

And, no surprise here: it was in Cork that the now-married Brian and Norah met and fell in love.

The song that set “From Cork With Love” in motion, “Away Down the Marina,” was one that de Cógáin got from his musical partner and fellow Corkman, Jimmy Crowley. A love song with “verve and excitement,” it tells the story of a couple who courted along a walkway called The Marina on the River Lee.  It’s a trysting spot not much used today, but perhaps with the release of the album,  it will be rediscovered by a new generation of lovers.  And, as a tribute to his wife, de Cógáin very sweetly changed a line in the first verse from “My pretty Irish queen” to “My pretty Persian queen.”

It’s these little stories behind the songs that add to the winning appeal of “From Cork With Love.” The oldest song on the CD is “The Star of Sunday’s Well,” which was composed by Cork writer (and lawyer) William B. Guiney and dates to the 1870’s.  Introduced to the recording of Donal Maguire’s version by Brian Miller, de Cógáin also counts Jimmy Crowley’s influence in his learning of it. “It’s great to get the old songs,” he enthused.

Among the newer compositions is one that I count among my own personal favorites: “Bridie and the Pole.” A song that de Cógáin heard sung at a wedding in 2009, “it’s very topical at the moment. It’s a social documentary of what’s going on now” in the aftermath of Ireland’s Celtic Tiger.  And a rollicking good song, with a Polish polka worked into the instrumental interlude.

With songs from Jimmy Crowley, one from John Spillane, the song “Timahoe” that he got from his father (who got it in 1960 from Peter Thompson who got it in 1957 at the Lisdoonvarna Matchmaking Festival), it’s no wonder that de Cógáin expresses his “great joy in putting together the album and getting it out there.”

“I’m looking forward to touring the album shortly…it’s a moveable feast,” de Cógáin said. “Full reflections, songs, stories, tunes, love songs.”

A moveable feast, and a satisfying banquet.

For more information on Máirtín de Cógáin, or “From Cork With Love,” check out his website:  http://www.mairtinmusic.com/