How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

No Irish Need Apply are performing at the Irish Center fundraiser on Saturday.

No Irish Need Apply are performing at the Irish Center fundraiser on Saturday.

Sometimes it seems like it’s all fundraisers, all the time, but the Irish are a generous people so it shouldn’t come as a surprise that there are at four of them this weekend, all for good causes.

The one I’m involved in is the Irish Center fundraiser at McGillicuddy’s in Upper Darby on Saturday, June 27. I hope you’ll come out and say hello, listen to the music (including the fabulous No Irish Need Apply who always make me feel safe—several of them are cops!), have something to eat and drink, and buy a raffle ticket. The raffles are amazing: two bikes, including a darling Hello Kitty bike for your favorite little girl; two free passes to see Emmett O’Hanlon of Celtic Thunder when he comes to Philadelphia on August 21; four tickets to the Phillies Vs. the Atlanta Braves (and they’re great seats!); dinner for four at the new McKenna’s Kitchen and Market which opens on July 5; free tuition to Act One, the two-week summer theater camp for kids in Ardmore; a spa basket of goodies for those of us with Irish skin from Celtic Complexion; and much, much more.

There will also be a silent auction for exquisite handmade chiming mantle clocks from local artisan and musician Tom Gilbride (who will also be performing). I hope to see you all there!

On Saturday, The Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund is holding its annual fundraiser, a golf outing and dinner at Five Ponds Golf Club. This organization honors the memory of a man who was always ready to help someone in need—and it continues his work.

On Sunday, there’s a fundraiser at the Plough and the Stars at Second and Chestnut in Philadelphia for some of the young musicians from our area who qualified to go to the All-Irelands music competition in Ireland this summer. We regularly send four or five kids who come back with trophies bigger than they are, and we’re thinking that this year will be no exception.

Also on Sunday, starting at 5:30 PM, there will be a fundraiser at Tir na Nog at 16th and Arch in Philadelphia to raise money for victims of the Berkeley balcony collapse which killed five young Irish people in the US on J1 visas to make money for school. The money will go to help their families and the other victims, several of whom were critically injured and will require lengthy hospital and rehab stays.

Sunday is also Celtic Day—19th version—in Bristol Borough, with the Bogside Rogues, Bristol’s own River Drivers, the Philadelphia Banjo Society and the Fitzpatrick Irish Dancers on the scenic waterfront. Festivities start at 1 PM.

Next Friday, catch the Paul Moore Band in their favorite spot, doing First Friday honors at Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill.

Also next Friday, there’s a beef and beer fundraiser for the Young Irelands Gaelic Football Club at Paddy Rooney’s in Havertown. Even if you don’t care for Gaelic football, go for the food. It’s always terrific. Hats off to you Paddy and Una!

Then on Saturday, while you’re being Irish in Philly, be American in Philly. It’s our national birthday! Happy Birthday to you, home of the free and the brave! Cue the fireworks.

Sports

A Day at the Delco Gaels Blitz

Not a lot of action on this little guy's end of the field.

Not a lot of action on this little guy’s end of the field.

None of the games counted in official standings of any sort.

So what was the point of the Delco Gaels Blitz, a day of Irish football and hurling played under the blazing sun on the athletic fields of Cardinal O’Hara High School last Sunday?

Probably nothing less than grooming the next generation of Philadelphia’s Gaelic athletes. And when it comes to the future of Gaelic games in the United States, there’s probably nothing more important.

Out on the artificial turf of the football field, the little kids held sway. While the big kids played on adjoining fields, some of the small girls and boys donned helmets and swung away with their hurling sticks—the really little ones played with plastic hurleys—at a ball that often seemed to elude a lot of them. Others hurtled up and down the field chasing a football.

On the sidelines, parents an coaches shouted encouragement: “Great kick, Brennan!” “Good goal, Siobhan!” (I’m making up the names, but trust me, the field was filled with Irish-sounding names.)

Some of the kids clearly knew what they were about—especially the footballers—and in some of the games they were evenly matched. There was some terrific action.

You could see that the future was in good hands.

We spent the afternoon slathering on sunscreen and slugging back water like everyone else. Here are some pictures from a really fun day.

[flickr_set id=”72157654724814966″]

 

How to Be Irish in Philly, News

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

The Converse Crew will be playing at Glen Foerd mansion in Philly on Thursday.

The Converse Crew will be playing at Glen Foerd mansion in Philly on Thursday.

Three fundraisers and a festival deserve your attention this week.

First, the annual Penn-Mar Irish Festival takes place on Saturday and features a fabulous group of entertainers, including singer and storyteller Mairtin de Cogain, the Kilmaine Saints, Magill, Screaming Orphans (fingers crossed their visas come through), Tommy’s Fault, and John Whelan, as well as Burning Bridget Cleary. The event is in York County.

The three fundraisers are actually next Saturday and Sunday, June 27 and 28, and benefit great causes. On Saturday, June 27, local Celtic folk group No Irish Need Apply will headline an evening of music, dancing, food, drink and raffles at McGillicuddy’s in Upper Darby, all to benefit the Irish Center of Philadelphia, which has had some financial difficulties following a tax reassessment. Fundraisers last year raised some $82,000-plus, which went to cover taxes, insurance, and pay for some much-needed repairs and improvements. (Check out the Barry Room—it’s no longer painted Pepto Bismol pink!) The Irish Center expects to be a 501 (c)(3) nonprofit by the Fall, which will help its financial picture.

Also on Saturday, the players tee off at 1 PM at the Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund Golf Outing, followed by dinner, at the Five Ponds Golf Club in Warminster. The proceeds will go to the fund which, like the late Charlie Dunlop of Tyrone and Delco, goes to help anyone in need.

On June 28, head to Tir na nOg in Center City for a fundraiser, organized by local Irish immigrants, to help the families of the Irish students who were killed in the balcony collapse in Berkeley, CA, this week. You can visit the gofundme.com site to donate. For tickets, type TICKETS in the comment section on the Plans were still in the works as of this posting, but we’ll keep you up to date on our Facebook page as they’re firmed up, or check the event’s Facebook page.

Also this week:

On Sunday, June 21, the Celtic group Friends of Eric will be playing at Bainbridge Green in Philadelphia as part of the Make Music Philadelphia event—free music all over the city. It’s Father’s Day. Take your Da.

A real treat on Thursday: The Converse Crew—young Irish musicians Keegan Loesel, Alex Weir, Haley and Dylan Richardson—will be performing a concert on the river, at Glen Foerd on the Delaware, 5001 Grant Avenue in Philadelphia. It’s a beautiful venue and they play brilliantly together.

On Friday, scoot yourself over to the Knights of Columbus in Newtown Square for another of the Roy Lynch dance evenings, particularly for you lovers of Irish country dancing.

News, People

RIP: Rosabelle Gifford, 100, A Woman of Spirit

Rosabelle Gifford

Rosabelle Gifford

Rosabelle Gifford, a Donegal native and single parent who emigrated to the US with her five children in the 1950s, died this week at the home of her daughter, Rosemary McCullough, in Havertown. She celebrated her 100th birthday last August.

Mrs. Gifford was the first recipient of the Mary O’Connor Spirit Award, presented by the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee Centre, in 2009 and was honored by Philadelphia’s Irish Center as an “Inspirational Irish Woman’ in 2010. Always impeccably dressed and accessorized, Mrs. Gifford will always be memorialized in the “Rosabelle Gifford Best Dressed Lady Award” given at the annual Rose of Tralee Selection Gala in Philadelphia.

She is survived by her 3 children, Rosemary McCullough of Radnor, Kathleen Harshberger of Radford VA, and James Harvey of Seattle WA; and by 13 grandchildren and 22 great-grandchildren.

Contributions in her memory may be made to the Donegal Association of Philadelphia, The Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia, PA 19119, Attn: Financial Secretary.

Below is an article we wrote about Rosabelle Gifford when she was selected for the Mary O’Connor Spirit Award:

When she was looking for the right candidate for the first annual Mary O’Connor Spirit Award to honor a woman from the local Irish-American community, Karen Conaghan says Rosabelle Gifford came to mind immediately.

“She’s very brassy, but not abrasive. Opinionated, spirited, courageous,” says Conaghan, who, with her sister, Sarah, coordinates the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee pageant, of which the award is now a part. “She’s better dressed than anyone we know. She enjoys life. She’s a total inspiration.”

I met Rosabelle Gifford this week. It’s all true.

Named for the original “Rose of Tralee,” who refused to marry her true love because she knew it would tear him from his disapproving family, the first Mary O’Connor Spirit Award is going to a woman who knows intimately how love can go wrong—and the meaning of courage and self-sacrifice.

She was Rosabelle Blaney of Gortward, Mountcharles, County Donegal, when she married Edward Harvey of Castleogary. The couple moved to post-war London where they went on to have five children, including a set of twins. But the marriage was not to last.

“It was a very bad marriage,” says Gifford. “He was drinking, running around with other women, and a wife-beater. I had to go.”

At a time when there was little help for abused women and families—and there was almost no housing in bombed-out London—Gifford had to plan her own escape. She sent two of her five children back to Ireland to live with her parents and one to Scotland to stay with her sister. “I knew they would be well cared for and I had to do it—I had no place to live,” she recalls.

In the early 1950s, when her oldest son, Ted Harvey, was considering enlisting in the British military, Gifford suggested that he go to America instead. “My two older sisters were living here and I told him that if he went, we would follow.” He did, and in 1958, his mother and his siblings moved into the apartment in Bryn Mawr he had rented and furnished for them.

“I got a job taking care of children. I was good at it,” chuckles Gifford. In fact, some of the children she cared for will be attending the award ceremony on Saturday night, June 27, during the 2009 Philadelphia Rose of Tralee Selection Gala.

While at a New Year’s Eve party at a friend’s house, Rosabelle met Charles Gifford, who worked in the accounting department of a steel company. They fell in love and married. She has been widowed for more than 20 years. “He was a good man. I needed that,” she says wistfully. “He was so good to my children too—so good to them.”

Her son, Ted, died many years ago of brain cancer. Three of her four remaining children, Rosemary McCullough, Kathleen Harshberger, Frank Harvey [who passed away since this story was written] , and assorted grandchildren and great grandchildren will be attending the event. The fourth, son James Harvey, an educator, will be in China at the invitation of the Chinese government.
You’ve probably noticed that I haven’t mentioned Rosabelle Gifford’s age. That’s because she doesn’t. “I don’t think it’s anyone’s business,” she says. “I think you’re just as old as you feel.”

[flickr_set id=”72157652412254544″]

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Learn about the Irish in Philadelphia on a walking tour this Saturday.

Learn about the Irish in Philadelphia on a walking tour this Saturday.

Find the real Irish Philadelphia this Saturday with Philadelphia Hospitality’s “Irish Heritage and Walking Tour” of sites involving Irish heritage and influence in Philadelphia. The tour includes a visit to the Irish Memorial at Penn’s Landing where Irish Memorial President Kathy McGee Burns will give a talk. It ends with brunch at the Plough and the Stars on Second Street.

The Rosenbach Museum’s Bloomsday celebration—which marks the stroll by character Leopold Bloom around Dublin in James Joyce’s Ulysses—revs into high gear, with a special exhibit about the novel that continues for several months and a concert of songs from Joyce’s books by classical guitarist John Feeley and singer Fran O’Rourke on Saturday at the museum on Delancey Street. Feeley will be giving a concert at 2 PM on Sunday at the Settlement Music School, sponsored by the Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society.

Catch guitarist/singer-songwriter Seamus Kelleher at Puck in Doylestown on Saturday, starting at 9 PM. He’s also a great storyteller. You’ll be laughing.

This Saturday, you can watch the big football game – that’s Republic of Ireland Vs. Scotland-at The Plough and the Stars on Second Street in Philly starting at noon.

On Sunday, watch Ulster GAA’s football championship (Armagh Vs. Donegal) at 9 AM and Connacht GAA Football Senior Championship semi-final (Galway Vs. Mayo) at 11 AM at The Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia. Breakfast is available for $5; cost of watching the games is $20, which is the charge agreed upon between GAA and Premium Sports—none of that money goes to the Irish Center.

As it is all around the world, Tuesday is Bloomsday in Philadelphia, with readings all around the city, from the Free Library to Rittenhouse Square to the Rosebach.

Celtic group The Real McKenzies will be at the Sellersville Theatre with their kilts, bagpipes and Celtic punk gestalt.

Next Saturday, the annual Penn-Mar Irish Festival takes place at The Markets at Shrewsbury in Glen Rock, PA, and features top-notch Irish acts such as Mairtin de Cogain, the Kilmaine States, the Screaming Orphans and John Whelan, as well as local talents Haley and Dylan Richardson.

News, People

Local Irish-American Actor Injured in Hit and Run

Michael Toner with Marybeth Phillips.

Michael Toner with Marybeth Phillips.

Philadelphia actor Michael Toner, known for his one-man shows and his critically acclaimed work in Irish plays, was seriously injured in a hit-run accident this week in Philadelphia.

The 68-year-old native of Northeast Philadelphia, who is a frequent Ulysses reader during the Rosenbach Museum’s Bloomsday celebration in Philadelphia, had his right leg amputated at Jefferson Hospital after he was found unconscious on the street at 1 AM by a passerby. He may have lain on the street for two hours. Police are still investigating.

He was supposed to perform David Simpson’s Crossing the Threshold Into the House of Bach with the Amaryllis Theater Company this week.

Toner has performed both in Philadelphia and New York over his 40-plus-year career, as well as at the International James Joyce Symposium, the American Shaw Festival, the Edinburgh, Scotland Fringe Festival, and has written a number of one-man shows in which he starred.

“He’s made a successful career out of one-man shows that no one wanted to produce,” says friend and colleague Marybeth Phillips who first encountered Toner when he was performing with the short-lived Irish Players, an offshoot of the Philadelphia Ceili Group to which Phillips belongs.

“I can’t remember what the play was, but it was back in the early ‘80s and when I came out of the theater, I thought, who the hell was that little guy? He stole the show. That was Michael Toner. He was electric. With every move he made and word he said, he stole the show.”

She said she expects that Toner, a Vietnam veteran who once offered to be her son’s “pagan godfather,” will respond to this setback the way he always does—with typical Irish humor.

“I’ve saved every bit of literature from his accident for him to read. I’m sure Mike will say, ‘Jesus Christ, now you give me publicity. Where were you when I needed it for my plays?’” says Phillips.

Arts, Music, News, People

James Joyce, Set to Music

John Feeley, left, with Joyce's guitar, and Fran O'Rourke.

John Feeley, left, with Joyce’s guitar, and Fran O’Rourke.

Had they consulted a marketing wizard before naming their CD, “JoyceSong: The Irish Songs of James Joyce,” singer Fran O’Rourke and classical guitarist John Feeley might called it “James Joyce’s Greatest Hits: A Soundtrack from the Collected Works of Ireland’s Foremost Writer.”

If you’ve casually read  The Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Finnigan’s Wake, or Ulysses, you may have missed Joyce’s musical references, though they’re prominent symbols throughout his body of work.

But Dublin’s favorite son was a singer and guitarist, the son of a singer and guitarist, who was leaning toward a musical career before he was captured by the lyricism and harmonies of language. In fact, he once shared a stage with renowned Irish tenor John McCormack. And his wife Nora, the inspiration for many of his female characters, once bitingly remarked, “Jim should have stuck to singing.”

Though writing took primacy over a career on the stage, Joyce remained captive to song—from Wagnerian opera to the Irish traditional music he learned as a boy, what O’Rourke, professor of philosophy at University College, Dublin, calls “the music of the people.”

O’Rourke and Feeley, who is considered Ireland’s leading classical guitarist, will be performing Joyce’s greatest hits on Saturday at 4 PM at the Rosenbach Museum and Library at 2008-2010 Delancey Place in Philadelphia, as part of the Rosebach’s annual “Bloomsday” festivities, marking the fine June day (June 16) Leopold Bloom wandered the streets of Dublin in the 900 pages of Ulysses. The Rosenbach houses one of Joyce’s handwritten copies of the book.

O’Rourke, whose first “artistic connection” with Joyce came when he was 14 and sang a traditional song on Irish television, “a line of which occurs in Finnegan’s Wake,” revisited Joyce as a scholar because of their mutual interest in philosophy. He was delighted—and remains delighted—to also find the music there.

“The story, ‘The Dead,’ from The Dubliners, almost the entire tenor of that story, the ‘mood music’ of that story, comes from the Irish traditional song, ‘The Lass of Aughrim,’” said O’Rourke, whom I met, with Feeley, this week in the lobby of their hotel in Center City. “The story is so sparse, so beautiful, not a word out of place. The atmosphere of the story was inspired by that song.”

It is the recreation of an Irish family party attended by one of the main characters, Gabriel, and his wife who, listening to someone singing the lachrymose song about a lover’s death at the party, finds her mind wandering back to her teenaged sweetheart, Michael Furey, who died of a cold after coming to visit her. When the two return to their hotel after the party, Gabriel faces the truth that he is not his wife’s first—nor greatest—love. You can see and hear Feeley and O’Rourke performing “The Lass of Aughrim,” with Feeley playing Joyce’s own guitar, here. 

Ulysses is composed of 18 episodes and in each episode a different art dominates,” says O’Rourke. “The episode called ‘Sirens’ is the counterpart of the sirens who bewitched Homer’s sailors in ‘The Odyssey,’ [the Greek story of Ulysses’s travels]. The episode takes place in a hotel where people are singing two songs. One is “The Croppy Boy” and the other is “The Last Rose of Summer,” by Thomas Moore. Practically every word is quoted or parodied in that episode.’

Those songs are part of the program the two musicians are bringing to the Rosenbach on Saturday, then to the Irish Embassy in Washington and Solas Nua, a DC nonprofit dedicated to the promotion of Irish arts, next week to honor both Joyce and Irish poet William Butler Yeats, whose 150th birthday is Saturday, June 13. Their tour is sponsored by Culture Ireland (Cultur Eireann), which provides funding for the presentation of Irish arts internationally, and, in Philadelphia, by the Irish Immigration Center.

One treat you can hear on their CD but not in concert is Feeley’s rendition of “Carolan’s Farewell” on Joyce’s guitar, which is now owned by the Irish Tourist Board and housed in the Joyce Tower Museum since 1966. In 2012, O’Rourke helped fund the guitar’s restoration (along, he says, with a “generous donation” from New Yorker poetry editor Paul Muldoon) by UK luthier Gary Southwell.

It went from playable to barely playable, but Feeley was able to coax out the tune. “It was in very bad shape to begin with,” says Feeley. “Gary Southwell dated it to 1830, which means it was an old guitar when Joyce got it. It’s not a top guitar which you can see the way the finger board is worn down. As a guitar, it’s not particularly great, and that’s being generous, but it’s actually a sweet instrument, with a small sound. It also has a small problem. The turning pegs are irregular. They’ve worn down quite a bit so it tunes in installments.”

But, he says, that didn’t diminish the thrill of playing it. “It’s amazing,” says Feeley. “You feel you’re playing a piece of history.”

Because they’re only scheduled to play for an hour on Saturday, you also may miss the highly entertaining banter between the two men. How did they meet, I asked them.

“I had John’s first album,” said O’Rourke.

“At least he had some taste,” Feeley remarked with a glint in his eye.

“That first album was fabulous. Happily one day we met on the street  and said hello,” O’Rourke continued. “What was your first album anyway?” he asked, turning to Feeley.

“It was just called ‘John Feeley,’ actually,” said Feeley, returning the gaze. “It came out in 1985. I was two years of age.”

And so, I asked, are you two friends?

“Oh no. No, no,” said Feeley, barely surpressing a laugh.

“Intermittently,” deadpanned O’Rourke. “We have a lot in common.”

“Yes,” said Feeley. “We live in the same country.”

You don’t need to be a Joyce scholar—or even a fan—to enjoy the JoyceSong concert, but a love of Irish traditional music helps. Purists may be thrilled to hear O’Rourke’s and Feeley’s rendition of “Down by the Salley Gardens”—one of Yeats’ compositions– which is historically accurate. That is, it may not be the tune you’ve heard or played—it’s been done by everyone from John McCormack to the Everly Brothers, the Clancys and Black 47. But it’s probably the one Joyce sang in his sweet though thin tenor voice.

You have a second chance to hear John Feeley this weekend. He’ll be playing classical guitar the the Settlement Music School, 416 Queen Street in Philadelphia, at 3 PM Sunday, a concert sponsored by the Philadelphia Classical Guitar Society. 

History

Local Irish Honored for their Support of Barry Memorial

The Irish Center's Frank Hollingsworth and Sean McMenamin accept the Barry portrait.

The Irish Center’s Frank Hollingsworth and Sean McMenamin accept the Barry portrait.

Persuading the U.S. Naval Academy that Commodore John Barry, a gallant son of Ireland and the “Father of the American Navy,” deserved a visible presence worthy of his stature should have been a no-brainer.

It wasn’t. In fact, for proponents of the it turned into a bit of a slog, with one rejection after another. John McInerney and Jack O’Brien, members of the Washington, D.C. Ancient Order of Hibernians, led the charge. With help from many supporters, including the Philadelphia Irish Center/Commodore Barry Club, the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, the Philadelphia AOH, and the Commodore Barry Club of Brooklyn, the memorial eventually became a reality.

To thank Philly-area project supporters, Jack O’Brien presented a copy of the official U.S. Navy portrait of Commodore Barry to the Irish Center in a ceremony Wednesday.

Here’s our video from the ceremony.