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Do You Hear Singing in the Library?

The beautiful Sarah Agnew making beautiful music.

The beautiful Sarah Agnew making beautiful music.

By Gwyneth MacArthur

On October 13, 2007, Sarah Agnew and some talented companions performed a benefit concert for the Bucks County Celtic Library. Organized and MCed by the library’s Tom Slattery, who did a wonderful storytelling performance, this annual event was held in the beautiful auditorium of Bucks County Community College.

The audience was treated to a reception afterwards that featured foods from Scotland, Ireland, and Wales.

On display were plentiful books, CDs, and videos from the Celtic Library’s collection, covering such things as cooking, art, poetry and history. Many looked so interesting that, lacking my library card, this photographer was caught by a lady librarian actually photographing pages of Irish poetry! (Don’t tell my kids!)

The entire collection is cataloged online and everything is available through interlibrary loan. Meaning that if you see something you like, you don’t have to make a trip to get it. It will be delivered right to your own local library! Although I suspect that the trip is well worth the effort, just for the chance to put your hands on so many interesting treasures in one place.

Music, People

Tom Munnelly, Ireland’s Greatest Song Collector, Dies at Home in County Clare

Tom Munnelly and his wife, Annette, peruse the book of essays written in his honor.

Tom Munnelly and his wife, Annette, peruse the book of essays written in his honor.

Tom Munnelly, called “Ireland’s greatest folksong and folklore collector,” died Thursday, August 30, after a long illness, in Miltown Malbay, County Clare. He was 63.Though a Dubliner by birth, Munnelly moved to this mecca of Irish music with his wife, Annette, in 1978, and became chairman of the Willie Clancy Summer School, the largest gathering of Irish traditional musicians in the world held annually the first week of July.

Referred to as “the last song collector” in a 2006 RTE Radio 1 documentary, Munnelly began collecting and recording traditional music in 1964 and had been a collector and archivist of Irish folk music at the University College of Dublin since 1975. He became well known for recording the music and stories of the travellers, Ireland’s itinerant ethnic minority. (One of the most familiar current traveler musicians is piper Paddy Keenan, who appeared several years ago at the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s annual music festival.)

 Munnelly co-founded The Folk Music Society of Ireland (Cuman Cheoil Tire Eireann) and was the first fulltime collector of the National Traditional Music Collecting Scheme, a project initiated by the Irish Department of Education, later folded into UCD’s Folklore Department.

After his move to Miltown Malbay, he started The Folklore and Folkmusic Society of Clare and was chairman and founder of the Clare Festival of Traditional Singing. He also recorded in excess of 1,500 tapes of folksong and folklore, which is the largest and most comprehensive collection of traditional song ever compiled by any one person. Not only that, he transcribed, indexed, and cataloged every note.

This May, many of the leading lights of Irish studies and music published a collection of essays celebrating in Munnelly, called “Dear Far-voiced Veteran: Essays in Honour of Tom Munnelly.” It was presented to the frail Munnelly at a ceremony, attended by his wife and family, at the Bellbridge House Hotel in Spanish Point, County Clare. This June, Munnelly received the honorary degree of Doctor of Literature (DLitt) from the National University of Ireland at Galway in recognition of his contribution to Irish traditional music.

“He is the best collector of folklore that ever existed,” said musician Fintan Malone of Cheltenham who anchors the Tuesday night session at The Shanachie Pub in Ambler and who is a native of Miltown Malbay. “Tom was a good friend of ours. He was a very witty man, with a dry sense of humor. Very gentle, generous, very intelligent and dedicated to collecting folklore. He was very well-liked.”

Malone, who was in Miltown last July for “Willie Week,” said that he saw Munnelly then at Tom Malone’s, the pub Malone owns with his brother,  and he looked very gaunt. “I was taken aback. He had been ailing for a while,” Malone said.

Paul Keating, artistic director of the Catskills Irish Arts Week  first met Munnelly at the 1976 Festival of American Folklife produced by the Smithsonian Institution for the Bicentennial.

“The world of Irish traditional music lost one of its most dedicated academic voices today when Tom Munnelly left us,” Keating told irishphiladelphia.com. “I was aware of the high regard he had for traditional musicians and they for him because of his work on their behalf.  As a song collector and folklorist, he had the personal touch that separated him from the ordinary collector who thinks their job is to put things down on tape or print and so he will be fondly remembered for years for touching so many lives and helping to keep the traditional way of life alive.  His battles weren’t always easy but he was a fiercely determined Dubliner who wasn’t easily deterred and that was his way until the end. “

Irish studies teacher and traditional Irish singer, Virginia Stevens Blankenhorn co-taught song seminars with Munnelly (an passionate advocate for sean nos singing) at the Willie Clancy School for two years in the mid-80s.

“These weeks are among my happiest memories. Tom was such fun to be with, always looking for a laugh, always ready to skewer silly ideas, but always (at least in class) with tact and kindness,” said the California native, who now lives in Ireland. “It was no mean achievement to win the trust and regard of both the traditional communities in which he worked and the academic world – especially the latter, given his intolerance for hot air. Irish traditional song has been uncommonly blessed in having Tom as its chief champion and advocate, and I am so sad that heaven claimed him before I could see him again.”

Funeral services for Munnelly will be at St. Joseph Church in Miltown Malbay at 1 pm Saturday,September 1, followed by burial at the Ballard Road Cemetery.

Music, People

Farewell to “The Bard of Armagh”

In Ireland in 2003. From the Makem Web site.

In Ireland in 2003. From the Makem Web site.

“Tommy Makem was my hero and the reason I wanted to perform,” says Tyrone-born musician Gerry Timlin, co-owner of Ambler’s Shanachie Pub and Restaurant, who in June visited the man known as “The Godfather of Irish Music” and “the Bard of Armagh” for the last time at his home in Dover, NH.  Makem, 74, died Wednesday, August 1 and, after a three-day wake, was buried August 9 in Dover. He had been diagnosed with lung cancer in May 2006.

Timlin has shared the stage with Makem and The Clancy Brothers many times and Makem became his mentor when Timlin arrived in the US with his guitar, a beautiful singing voice, and irreverent humor in the 1970s.

“I loved his wit, his commitment, and his bravery. He came to the US and made a path for the rest of us and with the Clancy’s carved out a course for us to follow,” says TImlin, who was in Ireland when Makem died. “He created new venues for us and helped us all make a living doing the one thing we all loved. Without him the world of music will never be the same.”

Makem was “the consummate performer,” says Timlin. In fact, Makem died with gigs on his schedule stretching into November.  Though a solo performer, for much of his career, this banjo-playing baritone performed with friends Liam, Tom, and Paddy Clancy. He’d come to New York from Ireland with Liam, and  they initially both embarked on acting careers until fate and their love for music drew them together for the magic that was the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem.

Many people were introduced to Irish music by Makem and the Clancys and, at least among the listening public, they are perhaps known best for what every Irish performer thinks of as the crowd-pleasers, the drinking songs like The Jug of Punch, Irish Rover, and Finnigan’s Wake. But Makem was a trad musician at heart. “He sang all kinds of folk music,” says Timlin. His mother, Sarah, was a renowned folk singer who collected traditional Irish folk tunes that might have otherwise been lost.

Traditional purists have tended to be dismissive of the way The Clancys and Tommy Makem popularized Irish roots tunes, but in recent years, many have come to recognize that their rise and that of the Chieftains–during the nascent folk era in the US–helped create a resurgence in popular interest in Ireland’s own musical history which, at the time, seemed to be heading the way of the thatched roof.

As one trad musician wrote on a message board after Makem’s death, “I listened to Tommy, and the Clancy Brothers — kinda hard to separate them, even though he hasn’t played with the band for years — for a lot of my childhood, dismissed them in my late teens as hokey and cliche, then ultimately realized how much they’ve all meant to the music.”

Makem meant everything to Timlin’s music–and his life. ” I was proud to say he was my friend and I will miss him sadly every day,” he says. ” ‘Onward and upward’ he would say and so ‘Onward and Upward Tommy.'”

Here’s what others have to say about Makem. First, Liam Clancy, who first made note of Tommy’s passing on his message board:

He was a friend and partner-in-song for over fifty years. We shared a great hunk of our lives together. We were a hell of a team. Tommy was a man of high integrity, honesty, and, at the end, courage. Our paths diverged at times but our friendship never waned. He was my brother every bit as much as my blood brothers.”

Irish President Mary McAleese:

‘In life, Tommy brought happiness and joy to hundreds of thousands of fans the world over. Always the consummate musician, he was also a superb ambassador for the country, and one of whom we will always be proud.”

Singer-songwriter Eugene Byrne, quoted in the Dover newspaper Foster’s Daily Democrat:

“Not one of us who play a note of Irish music on a guitar today would be playing if it wasn’t for Tommy Makem, along with the Clancys. He gave us pride in our country and our culture. Bono (U2’s lead singer) was influenced by him. Michael Flatley’s new show, Celtic Tiger, has Four Green Fields in it.”

From Marianne MacDonald, host of the local radio show, “Come West Along the Road” (Sundays from noon to 1 p.m. on WTMR-800 AM):

“One of the bright twinkling stars from the constellation of Irish music faded today.  We’ve lost the great Tommy Makem.  I was fortunate to have seen him at Appel Farms, the Guinness Fleadh and, years ago, at the Holmdel Arts Center when my mother dragged me to my first Irish Festival.”

From Ed Ward of the Milwaukee Irish Fest:

“I spoke to him about two weeks ago, the day after he returned from Ireland. We talked for about a half an hour about his trip, how wonderful it was to see the parade of people who came to visit him in the hotel, relatives, old friends, the archbishop. He said he was very sad when he boarded a plane to leave Ireland, clearly knowing he would not see it again.”

He desperately wanted to make it to Milwaukee this year so we discussed plans on what we would do as it was evident he would not be able to perform. But he planned to be there anyway. We are going ahead with these plans and Tommy’s slots will be billed as “Remembering Tommy Makem” and will be led by his nephews Tom and Jimmy Sweeney, Brian Doherty, Kevin Evans and Eugene Byrne and other close friends. The Makem and Spain Brothers will also be in Milwaukee so it should be a special celebration of Tommy’s life and love for the music of Ireland.”

From Ira Goldman, editor and publisher of the Trad Music News:

“Just about anything and everything that can, and should, be said about Tommy Makem’s music has been said since his death last Wednesday evening. The great and the not so great have been crowding the Tasker Funeral Home in Dover NH for his wake since yesterday and Thursday morning we will fill to overflowing St, Mary’s Church in that lovely New England village Tommy called home for decades.

Most people know Tommy as a balladeer and partner of the Clancy Brothers and especially of Liam Clancy. Many know him as the composer of fine songs, some of which have become standards of Irish music. Some of us have had the joy of knowing him as a fine ‘sean nos” singer and traditional musician on the banjo and whistle. His musicology as well as his music made him a true treasure of Irish Traditional Music.

Some of us have been blessed to have the invaluable, immeasurable, and lasting delight of knowing Tommy Makem as a person and as a friend. In the some 25 years I knew Tommy I never heard an unkind or angry word pass his lips. His countless acts of warmth and kindness will never be forgotten. For example, Tommy recorded a wonderful song, as delightful for “grownups” as for children, called “Waltzing with Bears.” When he was told two wee boys in Co. Carlow (aged 5 and 6) were learning the song from his cassette tape so they could entertain their Yank friend at Christmas, Tommy wrote each of them a note congratulating them for learning the song and thanking them for learning it from him.

And there was once a quiet, sunny afternoon in the empty bar of the hotel by the Sligo railroad station when Tommy played piano and let a Yank friend sing with him (much to the dismay of Liam Clancy who had to listen).

There are not enough tears to truly mark your passing, Tommy. There will always be the memories and the music and the love.

Slan, old friend.

Ar dheis De go raibh a anam uasal.”

People

R.I.P., Kathleen Gambon Erdei

Just posted on the Philadelphia Ceili Group Membership list:

Kathleen Gambon Erdei passed away Tuesday evening, July 31, after a two-week battle with what was diagnosed “raging cancer” at the Central Montgomery Medical Center in Lansdale, one month shy of her 72nd birthday. She had come down with Lyme disease two years earlier, and her system suffered greatly as a result.

Beloved in Philadelphia’s Irish-American community for her work toward peace in Northern Ireland since the 1970s, Kathleen turned on two generations of young folks to the music of Ireland, and often partied with people a third her age in places like Fergie’s or The Plough and the Stars. Her friend and Oak Lane neighbor Maryanne Devine said, “With the British troops beginning to leave Northern Ireland right now, Kathleen’s work here is done.”

Before his own death, Philadelphia Daily News columnist Jack McKinney once said of Kathleen, “Spending an afternoon with her is like stepping into a James Joyce novel – fascinating, deep, and layered with complicated characters”.

Raised on farmland in Camden County, NJ, Kathleen attended Camden Catholic High School, then explored California and the West Coast as a young woman, before settling down to raise a family in the 1960s.

A former parishioner of St. Genevieve’s Parish in Flourtown, PA, Kathleen’s home there overlooked the sheep farm of Fitz Eugene Dixon. She was a devout Catholic who never toed the party line, which was manifested in her many demonstrations against the Vietnam War, protests for clean air, water and lower utility fees for poor and working people, for peace in Northern Ireland, and against the closing of poor parishes in Philadelphia. She once participated in a public rite of exorcism in front of the Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul to root out, she said, “the corrupt practices of the Archdiocese’s policy regarding those parish closings.”

But her public persona belied her gentle touch with everyone she met. In her neighborhood of Philly’s Oak Lane, to which she moved in the 1980s, she helped organize neighbors in their Arbor Day celebrations and tree-plantings. She gathered local children to treat them to outings they might not otherwise afford, she volunteered at radio station WXPN, and was an exceptional afficionado of culture and literature.

“Kathleen knew the lyrics to 100-year old operettas, to songs of the Great Depression, folk tunes from here to Europe and South Africa. Her mind was all-encompassing, and she never stopped learning. And as big as her brain was, her heart was even bigger. She read several newspapers daily, and listened to people with their problems the whole world over, whether face-to-face, on the BBC or NPR”, said close friend Marybeth Phillips.

For the past dozen years, Kathleen lived in Center City Philadelphia (Wash-West), and rode a bike all over town while working for PennPIRG, the Pennsylvania Public Interest Research Group. With them, she found a career already in line with her causes, and fought hard from Philly’s City Council to Harrisburg to D.C.

She often had her bicycle stolen when she parked it at a train station, but taking a Zen approach to everything, refused to worry.
She would find it on another occasion and steal it back. She was an avid urban gardener, planting in every inch of soil she could find on Lombard or South Streets, and once turned down a week’s vacation in Florida so as “not to miss anything that begins to bud in Philly”.

In addition to PennPIRG, Kathleen also worked for the Dominican Sisters in Elkins Park, helping sick nuns recover or pass through to the next life, at St. Katherine’s Hall.

Ms. Erdei is survived by her former husband Abdon Erdei, daughter Stephanie Scintilla, and sons A. Andrew, Daniel, and James, and her first grandchild, Daphne Erdei.

In her always-altruistic fashion, Kathleen donated her body to Jefferson Medical College. A memorial service is scheduled for her at The Irish Center/Commodore Barry Club, Carpenter Lane and Emlen Streets, Philadelphia, on Saturday, September 15, at 5 p.m. Donations in her memory may be sent to the non-profit Heart of Camden Housing Corporation, Broadway and Ferry, Camden, NJ 08104.

For more information, please call daughter Stephanie Erdei Scintilla at 215-350-5412, or Marybeth Phillips at 610-436-4134.

News, People

Support Team “Ratty Shoes”

About six years ago, Patty Byrd worked with a young woman with multiple sclerosis. “She had such a great attitude–she was so funny about everything, even though she had to take a cocktail of medications just to function,” says Byrd, a banking officer for BSC Services in Philadelphia. “Her disease was so unpredictable. She was planning her niece’s First Holy Communion party—she was devoted to her—and the day of the event her bowels and bladder stopped working. But she never lost her great attitude.”

Then, it seemed, everywhere Byrd went, she saw posters and pamphlets for the MS Society’s Challenge Walk. “It was 50 miles in three days and I thought to myself, ‘Oh, I don’t know about that. Oh, no!’ I was still smoking and about 60 lbs heavier than I am now. But I decided to tell people I was going to do it so I would be obligated. But they all said, ‘Are you nuts?’ Maybe, I said, but I’m going to do it.”

And she did it. It took a lot of training (and some weight loss), but Byrd not only walked the 50 miles that year, she’s walked it every year since, picking up other brave strollers on the way. “My second year I had a hodgepodge team with no name. Then the third year, something happened. It was a chilly day in spring. I was about to go out walking and I put on my shoes and realized they had no insoles. I thought to myself, ‘These are ratty shoes.’”

If you’re a fan of the popular local Irish group, Blackthorn, (Byrd calls herself “an addict) you can probably guess what happened next. “Ratty Shoes” is the name of the group’s 2001 CD and a catchy paean to the magical powers of comfortable old “ratty shoes” that can take you anywhere you want to go. And what CD was Byrd listening to when she made the observation about her own sneakers?

Of course, it was fate. And it prompted Byrd to shoot off an email to the group, asking if she could use the name for her walking team. “They said sure, and they even donated merchandise for raffles,” says Bryd. “Then, last year, (lead singer) Mike Boyce kind of realized, ‘Hey, they’re not going away,’ so the group has really gotten behind us in a big way.”

On Wednesday, July 11, when the band performs at the Pennypack Park Bandshell, Welsh Road and Rowland Avenue in Philadelphia, they’ll be selling raffle tickets to help raise money for the team (each person needs to come up with $1,500 in pledges to participate in the walking event). They’ll be selling them at every performance till August 11, when a drawing will be held at The Bolero Resort in Wildwood, where the band is performing. The prize: A complete package (accomodations, food, and tickets) for four to attend Blackthorn’s (huge) part of Wildwood’s Irish Weekend, September 21-23, at The Bolero. They’re also donating $2 from every sale of Blackthorn merchandise from July 11 to August 11 (buying a CD or a t-shirt will automatically get you a raffle ticket, which is also available without a merch purchase for $2 each). For more information and a schedule of band appearances, go to www.irishthing.com.

You may also run into band members on Sunday, July 15, when Team Ratty Shoes holds an MS Benefit at Brittingham’s, 640 E. Germantown Avenue, Lafayette Hill, featuring a host of performers including Random Blonde, Raymond McGroary, Allison Barber, and, possibly, Paul Moore, the co-author (with Blackthorn’s John and Mike Boyce) of “Ratty Shoes,” co-founder of the group, and currently with the band, Paddy’s Well.

Doors open at noon and the Irish frivolity goes on till 4 (Oliver McElhone appears on stage at 5, so you might want to stay). And it’s all in a good cause.

“We have a great team,” says Byrd. They are Tom Wyatt of Duncannon, PA; Christopher Burden of Warminster, whose wife, Michele, has MS; Leslie Bell Moll of Pottstown and Lorraine Porcellini of Philadelphia, who both work for WXPN Radio. “But it’s more than the walkers, our team includes and army of other people who support us, like Blackthorn,” says Byrd.

They’re living proof that there is some magic in those old “ratty shoes.”

People

For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow

The birthday boy.

The birthday boy.

With a gentle shove from his son Jimmy, Kevin McGillian passed through the doorway curtains and into the Commodore Barry Club’s Fireside Room.

The few hundred friends and family members waiting inside burst into warm and enthusiastic applause. Kevin’s face lit up with a bright, broad grin. It was the kind of smile that looks like you have been saving up smiles from all of the happy things that have ever happened to you, and you unleash them all at once in one enormous outpouring of joy.

As Kevin began at last to wade into the throng of well-wishers, contemporaries and fresh-faced kids alike, the surprise 80th birthday celebration for this gentle, self-effacing accordion player from Legfordrum, County Tyrone began in earnest.

It was a party that seamlessly transitioned to a rollicking session, with many of Kevin’s friends—including his mononymous long-time ceili partner Pancho on piano accordion, Kathy DeAngelo and Dennis Gormley, Hollis Payer, Chris Brennan Hagy, Caitlin Finley, and so many others I can’t remember them all.

And after the session, the fiddlers and pipers and banjo pickers hurriedly collected their chairs and their beers, and the dancers took over. Soon the Fireside Room rocked to the sound of slamming heels, and a thumping great ceili broke out.

Soon Kevin McGillian himself joined the ceili band, picking up the two-row button accordion and getting down to business.

It was on the pretense of playing for a ceili that Kevin was lured to the Barry Club in the first place. (Teacher John Shields did his best to reel him in, leading a handful of dancers and calling out steps until just before Kevin entered the room.)

Several of Kevin’s longtime friends had hatched the scheme many weeks before.

“A few months back at the Shanachie (Pub) session, Judy Brennan asked me if I thought we should do something for Kevin’s 80th birthday,” says Marianne MacDonald, host of the local radio show “Come West along the Road” and set dancer. “After a lot of back and forth with the Irish Center being booked for the dates around his birthday (which was June 7th), we were able to settle on the last Friday of June. Lots of people had a hand in organizing it and getting the word out and trying to make sure Kevin wouldn’t hear about it. But I guess Jimmy (McGillian) and I were the main organizers. Kevin’s family made the arrangements for the food.”

When they first started to organize the party, Marianne says, she and her co-conspirators expected perhaps a hundred guests. Those expectations changed fast.

“Once the RSVP’s started coming in,” Marianne says, “we knew it would be at least 200. I don’t know what the actual count was, but judging by the number of seats that I know we put out and the people sitting and standing I would say it was about 250. I think it was a fine tribute that all of those people came out to wish Kevin a happy birthday.”

But perhaps it shouldn’t have been so surprising that so many people chose to honor Kevin McGillian. Marianne calls Kevin her “absolute favorite musician.” Anyone who watches him play would have to agree. He seems to have forgotten more tunes than most session musicians know. (And I wouldn’t really bet on him forgetting many, though I’ve seen him draw a blank on a few.)

But what most people remember about Kevin, other than being wowed by his talent, is how conspicuously unassuming he is about it all. He is a truly gentle and generous man. Marianne sums it up: “He is amazingly humble, modest and down-to-earth, and I think that’s why everyone loves him so much.”

News, People

Philadelphia Says Goodbye to the Irish Ambassador

Chamber president Bill McLaughlin, left, Irish Ambassador Noel Fahy, and Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali at the farewell luncheon for the ambassador at the Union League.

Chamber president Bill McLaughlin, left, Irish Ambassador Noel Fahy, and Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali at the farewell luncheon for the ambassador at the Union League.

One thing he discovered about Americans in his five years as Irish ambassador to the United States, Noel Fahy told a group of Philadelphia business leaders last week, is that they’re doers, not whiners.

“In Europe, we see a problem and say, oh my, that’s a very big problem,” he told the delighted crowd at the Union League in Philadelphia. “Americans see a problem and they genuinely try to solve it.

“I know that America has been criticized about Iraq, but beyond that criticism, we still look at all the contributions the United States has made to the world, to Ireland.”

Technically, the luncheon given in his honor was a farewell party from the Irish-American Chamber and Business Network, a non-profit membership organization in Philadelphia that promotes the development of economic, commercial, financial and educational relationships between the United States and Ireland. Fahy was recently named Ireland’s ambassador to the Vatican. But in his goodbye speech, Fahy waxed more patriotic than many Americans about the place that was his home for half a decade.

“The US role in the new shared government in Northern Ireland was crucial,” he said. In fact, former US Senator George Mitchell received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1999 for the pivotal role he played in convincing Protestant and Catholic leaders to sign what is known as The Good Friday Accord, which paved the way for peace in the war-ravaged North.

“The US government and private American groups have contributed nearly $1 billion for reconciliation projects in Northern Ireland. President Clinton was there when we needed him, and in the run up to the final stages in March, President Bush did make some phone calls,” said Fahy.

As a parting gift, Chamber President Bill McLaughlin gave Fahy a bound copy of the manuscript of James Joyce’s “Ulysses” from the Rosenbach Museum in Philadelphia, which houses an original. Accepting the two-book set, Fahy joked, “I don’t know if I’ll have time in the Vatican to enjoy ‘Ulysses’ for the second time.”

People

Meet the New Mary from Dungloe

Meagan McGough

The new Mary of Dungloe, Meagan McGough, takes some time with her family: grandfather Ed Brennan, grandmother Dolores Brennan, and her mother, Barbara McGough.

The latest Philadelphia Mary from Dungloe knows how to get to Carnegie Hall. Meagan McGough performed there for five years and discovered, as the old joke goes, the secret is to “practice, practice, practice.”

From the time she was 10 till she was 15, this award-winning Irish step dancer and her parents, John and Barbara, traveled to the Bronx every Sunday after church–four hours up, four hours back from their home in Downingtown– where she would rehearse the routine she performed in an annual show with the late Irish tenor Frank Patterson.

Ranked third nationally among US step dancers, Meagan, who performs with the DeNogla School in Verona, NJ, came in third place at the All-Ireland Championships two years ago–on her 18th birthday. “It’s always the beginning of July so I’m always dancing on my birthday, which is July 6” she laughs. “I guess it’s good luck.”

But her luck hasn’t always been “of the Irish.” She excels in an art form where you break bones almost as often as a linebacker. Meagan has fractured her foot three times since she started dancing at the age of 5. “It’s always been my left foot too,” she says with a wince. “I even danced at the world championships with a broken foot. I just kept wrapping it and taking Vioxx. I broke it the week before the competition and I figured the ticket was booked, the hotel was paid for, and I was going to go. I made it to the last eight bars of the song and didn’t stop but I definitely made a mistake. At World you have to be flawless, the best of the best. Afterwards, I put a cast on my foot.”

Which tells you a lot about Meagan McGough. Challenge? Bring it on! A marketing major at Fordham University, Meagan took a summer job last year that’s sent her in another career direction, one not for the faint of heart. “I got a call over Easter break from an oral surgeon at last year from The Main Line Oral and Facial Surgery Center in Exton,” she explains. “I thought I was going in to interview for a receptionists’ job. I always had interest in the sciences and those gory things, and thought this is so cool. “

It got cooler. They didn’t want her to be their receptionist. They wanted to offer her a surgical assistant internship. She wouldn’t be answering the phones. She’d be assisting in oral surgery–doing suction, helping with IVs, suturing, administering medication. “I thought I’d be wearing suits every day,” she laughs. “Instead, I was wearing scrubs and masks. I loved it. In fact the experience inspired me to go on the medical track at Fordham and go to medical school one day.”

But she didn’t want to give up her marketing major. So she went to the dean of the business school and worked out a plan that allows her to pursue her business degree with a minor in science. “Instead of taking the liberal arts or fun courses in addition to the business classes, I’m on the premedical track which is more challenging than the core courses. When I’m a senior I’ll have most of the prerequisites I need for medical school, though I may have to take summer classes.”

There’s a method to this madness. She thinks her marketing skills will marry well with her medical skills if she’s able to work with Operation Smile, a nonprofit, volunteer organization that provides medical treatment to children in Third World countries born with facial deformities, like cleft lips, that often leave them ostracized in their communities. Its secondary mission: to raise awareness–and money. Irish actress Roma Downey is the international spokesperson for the organization. “I’m going to be interning again this summer and with that extra experience I can apply to work with them next year,” says Meagan.

And in the middle of all this, she’ll be competing in Ireland at the end of July into early August in the International Mary from Dungloe pageant in Donegal. She hadn’t even considered entering the local competition, which is sponsored by the Donegal Association of Philadelphia. The free trip to Ireland? She’s been traveling to Ireland since she was very young, mainly with her maternal grandparents, Ed and Dolores Brennan of New Jersey, who paid for her step dancing lessons and chaperoned her to international competitions. In fact, it wouldn’t have occurred to her to enter if a Donegal Association member hadn’t approached her on St. Patrick’s Day, after she’d done an impromptu “Irish dance battle” with a six-year-old boy during her family celebration at The Plough and the Stars in Philadelphia. (No doubt dazzled by this redhead with flawless skin and sparkling dark eyes who can dance the heck out of a jig.)

“Grace Flanagan, the sister of Theresa Flanagan Murtagh who is the president of the Donegal Association, came up to me and asked me if I’d be interested in entering,” says Meagan. “So my Dad and I went down to the Irish Center and I applied. I really didn’t expect to win. They were all incredible girls. But I’m really excited. I’ve never done a pageant before and even though I’ve been to Ireland so many times, I’m excited about experiencing a whole different aspect of the culture. When you’re dancing in competition, any spare time you have you’re practicing. ”

It won’t be her only trip either. She’ll be competing at the 38th World Irish Championship in Belfast over Easter break in 2008, but for the last time. (The World Championships come to Philadelphia the following year.) “After this World, I’m hanging up my shoes,” she says. “I’m getting certified as a teacher, and as successful as I’ve been as a dancer, I think I’ll be an excellent coach. In fact, I might even be a better coach.”

She’s already the mentor of a younger dancer whose dream was to place in the Irish nationals. “I worked hard with her and she placed 35th, which is a huge deal for her,” says Meagan. “I’m finding it more rewarding to work with kids and see them grow as individuals and see them win. I’ve learned to love the spotlight. Now I’m learning to love the behind the scenes stuff. But this is my last year in the spotlight.” She grins. “I guess I’m going out with a bang.”

Check out Meagan’s competition at the recent Mary from Dungloe Pageant held at the Irish Center.