Columns

Yet Another Reason Philly Isn’t Like New York

Our babies may also be cuter. This one's with Second Street Irish Society.

Our babies may also be cuter. This one’s with Second Street Irish Society.

Just recently, irishcentral.com published a slide show of the top 10 controversies surrounding the New York St. Patrick’s Day Parade, including the ban, until 1989, of a woman being grand marshal and the refusal to allow Bernadette Devlin, the Berrigan Brothers, writer Brendan Behan, and gay groups to march in the parade.

I found myself wondering if I could come up with 10 controversies about the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade. I got stumped after, “the city made us put up the money for our own port-a-potties a few years ago.” We are a seriously boring people. And if that’s bad, I don’t want to be good.

There’s never been a ban, to my knowledge, against women as grand marshals. There just haven’t been that many—four, counting this year’s honoree, Kathy McGee Burns, president or former president of [fill in just about any Irish organization in Philly here}.

While we’ve had Sinn Fein members marching in the parade, the truth is, most people wouldn’t know it. Or care. We don’t usually get anyone famous, unless you count the CBS3 crew and WMMR’s Preston and Steve. The modern-day equivalents of Devlin, the Berrigans, and Behan are not clamoring to march up the Parkway for their 10 seconds of fame live on local TV. Even the delegate from the Irish government, which always sends someone to visit this time of year, isn’t marching in the parade. Tanaiste (deputy prime minister) Joan Burton is leaving the city the night before. Was it something we said? We are a humble people; most of our floats were being handmade in someone’s neighborhood last week.

I don’t know that any gay groups have applied to march, but I would like to think they would not be turned down, that it wouldn’t become a controversy. We live in a city where we have an official “gayborhood” marked by rainbow flags and one of our sweetest, loveliest and most famous Irish pageant winners is openly gay. I like to think we’re more than tolerant here. I like to think we’re party people whose attitude is, “Ahh, sure, the more the merrier.” We have been not asking, not telling, and not caring longer than most people. I’m not naïve. I know that there are bigots in our community. I hear things. But I’d like to believe that their small voices would be drowned out by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir of the right-thinking people who live in this city.

We do like to party. Some of us party hard. Some of us throw up in the streets; most of us do not wrestle there. There have never been any serious incidents associated with the parade to my knowledge. I did once see a silly string fight at 17th and Arch, but no one was seriously injured in the mele. I once interviewed two guys having beers and laughing together at Tir na Nog and asked them how long they’d known one another. They turned and looked at each other. “Oh, I don’t know,” said one. “About 20 minutes?” Chill. We are chill.

I was a member of the St. Patrick’s Ring of Honor one year, and marched in the parade with about 10 other women, including two nuns and two judges. We heard a lot of calling and cheering from the crowd as we went by. I wondered whom they’d recognized from the group until it suddenly dawned on me—they were former students yelling to the Sisters of Mercy who were marching behind us. We are a people who cheer their nuns.

In fact, when I started thinking about our noncontroversial St. Patrick’s Day Parade, I was only able to come up with a handful of questions that really didn’t lend themselves much to a click-bait slideshow. Here’s what I’m wondering (see photos below):

Will the lady who wears the cabbage and potato necklace be hanging around 16th and Arch? And will she be wearing the leprechaun shoes?

Now that traffic guy Bob Kelly is at Fox29, who will be bouncing around the streets doing random interviews for CBS3 and CW Philly?

What is with the folks in the full-body suits? A couple of years it was a green man, one year a shamrock person. I use those descriptors deliberately. These are skin-tight suits. I knew one was a guy. The other. . .hmmmm.

Will Murphy the Irish wolfhound be on the Parkway or has he gone to the great dog park in the sky? Wolfhounds, alas, are not long-lived animals and we didn’t see Murphy last year.

What will make Parade Director Michael Bradley smile during the parade? It certainly won’t be seeing a camera.

How many city blocks will the Second Street Irish Society contingent take up when standing still? That has to be the largest group in the parade. No complaints. They have music, adorable kids, and they dress really well. But why aren’t they the Two Street Irish Society? Everyone knows that in Philly, that’s what we call that stretch of road in South Philadelphia. You know, because we’re quirky like that.

Can I crash the McSweeney-Sears party that’s been in the same spot on the Parkway since 1993? They always have liquid refreshments. In New York, is it possible to know spectators along the parade route because you see the same people year after year? I will be missing some familiar faces, people who are no longer with us, including Mary Walters, who I met 9 years ago during my first parade; the AOH’s Joe Montgomery, always the best-dressed man on the Parkway; the guy with the beard who was the best St. Patrick ever; and always, Knute Bonner and Paul Phillips, two parade veterans.

And finally, what shall I wear? Some years, the weather for St. Patrick’s Day Parade is as warm and balmy as a Caribbean night. Other years, this rain-or-shine parade lives up to its name. One year, my hands were so cold that the photo IDs I took down looked like they were written by someone with tremors. Like everyone else in the city, I blame the weather on the local meteorologists because, of course, they control it. We once drove a guy out of town for overhyping a snowstorm. That’s the kind of people we are here.

[flickr_set id=”72157650849140920″]

Music

FullSet Warms a Cold Winter’s Night

Piper Martino Vacca

Piper Martino Vacca

Michael Harrison, fiddler and leader of the stunningly talented Irish traditional band FullSet, admitted their tour might have been better planned.

It began in New England, about at the same time the region was blanketed with 120 feet of snow, accompanied by plagues of lice, frogs, locusts and rivers of bloods.

OK, maybe not that much snow, and maybe we’re making it up about the lice, frogs, locusts and rivers of blood, but the timing couldn’t have been worse, and the travel was harrowing at times.

Last Friday night, the band rolled into Philly for a concert at the Philadelphia Irish Center, where the weather outside was frigid, but subtropical in comparison to New England.

In no time at all, the joint was jumping, bringing the ballroom crowd to its feet at the end.

We have the pictures.

[flickr_set id=”72157648875516234″]

News

Raising Funds for Duffy’s Cut

16709175976_35f671ab0b_kMaggie O’Neill’s in Drexel Hill played host to a well-attended fund-raiser for the Duffy’s Cut project last Saturday.

The upstairs bar was full of folks who want to help the brothers Bill and Frank Watson continue excavations at the site where 57 Irish immigrant railroad workers died in 1832, less than two months after their arrival in the country. Research suggests they were afflicted by cholera, and that at least some of them were murdered by local residents, possibly fearful of the spread of the disease.

The site is in a patch of woods in Malvern, along an Amtrak line about 30 miles west of Philadelphia.

Members of the Watson Highlanders greeted guests with the skirl of bagpipes, later replaced by the tunes of Karen Boyce McCollum and friends.

The money will go toward continuing the excavation of the site and to repatriate two small bones of the only woman victim, Catherine Burns, to her native Tyrone.

Last week’s fund-raiser pulled in $2,150.

Here are some pictures from the event.

[flickr_set id=”72157651210238695″]

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

It's that time again.

It’s that time again.

Hope you’ve dug out your car. There’s plenty to do this week, so let’s get craic-ing.

Maria Walsh will be the International Rose of Tralee for another several months, but on Saturday night she gives up her local crown as Philadelphia Rose of Tralee at the gala selection event at the Radnor Hotel.

The Burlington County, NJ St. Patrick’s Day Parade, always the first in our area, won’t be first again this year. They’ve had to postpone it until March 29 because of this week’s snowstorm.

This and next are the weekends for the pub crawls that are part of the fabric of the St. Patrick’s holiday observance in the region. We posted several on our calendar, include the Shamrock and Roll in Delaware County. Marty Magee’s is part of the event and will have live music, including the Malarkey Brothers, Joe Magee and friends, and the John Byrne Band. Don’t drink too much and enjoy the music.

The McHugh Irish Dancers have also posted their schedule for the next couple of weeks on the calendar so if you have a hankering for seeing some step dancing—high recommended just for the adorableness overload—check it out.

Also on Saturday:

Lafferty’s Wake, an interactive play, continues at Society Hill Playhouse.

The Bogside Rogues will be providing the Irish music at Paddy Whack’s in Northeast Philly.

The AOH Division 6 Montgomery County is holding its St. Patrick’ Day party at St. Mary Parish in Schwenksville.

The Bucks County St. Patrick’s Day Parade Ball is Saturday night at Falls Manor Caterers (former Kings Caterers) in Bristol.

The AOH Notre Dame Div. One parade folks are having their grand marshal ball at the Elmwood Park Zoo Banquet Hall in Norristown. Congrats again to GM Mickey McBride.

Belfast Connection is playing at Darlington Arts Center in Garnet Valley.

Blackthorn is the headliner at the Beer Festival at Harrah’s Chester Casino.

You can spend an evening with Celtic Spirit at the Nazareth Center for the Arts in Nazareth or with Donegal’s own Altan at Annenberg Center on Walnut Street in Philadelphia. (Side note: Altan was the first Irish group I ever saw live, and they hooked me.)

Jamison is taking the stage at Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill.

On to Sunday:

There’s an all-day fundraiser for the Springfield St. Patrick’s Day Parade at Maggie O’Neill’s in Drexel Hill. Doors open at 11 AM for Irish breakfast and if you tell your server you’re there to support the parade, a portion of your bill will be donated to the parade. At 4:30 PM, catch the local Celtic rock group Round Tower and meet the 2015 Grand Marshal Dr. William McCusker, who is the recently retired president of Cardinal O’Hara High School.

At 10 AM, there will be an Irish Mass at St. Malachy’s Church in Philadelphia, a recent tradition that looks like it might have staying power. Read our story from 2013.

The group Celtic Spirit will be entertaining at brunch on Sunday at Kildare’s Irish Pub in West Chester.

This Sunday will also mark the third anniversary of the burial of some of the victims of the Duffy’s Cut tragedy at West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd. There will be a memorial event at graveside starting at 2 PM.

At 3 PM, Blackthorn takes the stage at The Deck at Harbor Pointe in Essington for a fundraiser for the 162nd District. It’s a GOP benefit.

Catch local young phenoms Haley and Dylan Richardson and Keegan Loesel, along with the Cumberland Highlanders Pipe and Drum Band and the group, Sligo Road, at the Down Jersey Celtic Celebration in Vineland stating at 3 PM.

The Paul Moore Band will be playing at the Jokers New Year’s Association—think Mummers’ Parade—St. Patrick’s Day party at the group clubhouse in Philadelphia.

Women of Ireland bring their full stage production to the Keswick Theatre on Sunday at 3 PM.

Then on Wednesday

Villanova’s Irish Dance group will be showcasing their prodigious talent on at the Connelly Center Cinema at the University starting at 7 PM.

At 9 PM, the Druids, a rebel ballad band from Kildare, will be performing at Mary Magee’s Pub in Prospect Park.

Thursday dawns. . . .

And so begins the 12 days of Irish music at the Green Parrot in Newtown. Slainte, Seamus McGroary, Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfetones, Clancy’s Pistol, McGraw and McLaughlin, Seamus Kelleher, Tom McHugh, the Hooligans, Secret Service and Challenge Accepted are all booked there through the holiday season. Check our calendar for links to the Green Parrot where you can see who is playing when. Some of the gigs are on our calendar. (Bands can post their gigs to our calendar, but there are so many of them that we can’t usually do those.) For instance, we know that Slainte is performing on Thursday night because they always put their gigs on our calendar. Well done, men!

The annual Philadelphia Parade Grand Marshal dinner will be held on Thursday night at the Doubletree Hotel in Philadelphia. Kathy McGee Burns, who has been the head of just about every Irish organization in the city from the Donegal Association to the Irish Memorial, is this year’s GM.

Also on Thursday night, the AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 Irish coffee contest is happening at the club house in Swedesburg. It’s a well-attended event that’s loads of fun—and, there are samples.

The Irish conversation group continues talking in Irish on Thursday at Villanova.

The Wolfetones will be performing at the FOP Lodge #5 in Northeast Philadelphia this evening.

On thank-God-it’s-Friday:

Hoo boy, this is quite a day and night.

Check out the Paul Moore Band on “Good Day Philadelphia” in the morning. That’s on Fox29.

Then, listen to the Bleeker Street Café Celtic Mandolin Concert on WDVR (89.7 FM) starting at 1 pm. That should be amazing.

The Hooligans will be playing for the early dinner crowd at Fluke’s on State Road in Philly.

The John Byrne Band with No Irish Need Apply are scheduled for World Café Live that evening. The show is almost sold out.

McDermott’s Handy—two fine musicians, Dennis Gormley and Kathy DeAngelo—will be in concert at the Bridgeton Public Library in Bridgeton, NJ. BTW, I know for a fact that these two will play anywhere. I once ran into them playing in the deli at a New Jersey supermarket.

The Celtic group, Carbon Leaf, will be at the World Café Live at the Queen.

The Glengarry Bhoys are scheduled to be on stage at the Sellersville Theater.

Blackthorn is back playing at Ambler’s The Lucky Well BBQ place. Love the band, love the BBQ. A win-win.

The Bogside Rogues are at Reedy’s Irish Pub in Philly.

The Hooligan’s are at the newly re-opened Dubh Linn Square in Bordentown (after their early bird special at Fluke’s in Philly).

The Broken Shillelaghs will be at Tavern on the Edge in Gloucester City, NJ.

2U, a U2 tribute band, is booked at Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill.

Isla Verde, a Philly bar, is having its first St. Patrick’s Day Party, though we’re not quite sure how Irish it’s going to be.

And a word about next weekend:

The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day parade is on Sunday. It’s broadcast by CBS3 and CWPhilly but it’s really fun to see live. Really. I wouldn’t lie. The crowds alone are worth the drive or train fare. There are two Irish pubs along the parade route that are crowded and convivial (Tir na Nog and Con Murphy’s). Me, I usually eat a pretzel from a vendor because, hey, I’m working here. Last year, I bought gloves from a vendor. Best purchase ever. $5. For both gloves. But the weather’s gong to be nice, so fear not the evil Arctic blast or polar vortex. Or polar bears. There won’t be any of those either.

There are lots of parties after, but may we suggest Sober St. Patrick’s Day at WHYY. It’s one of a group of St. Patrick’s Day events across the country that cater to families and to those in recovery. Maria Walsh, the International Rose of Tralee (and an affirmed teetotaler) will be there, as will a remarkable array of Irish traditional musicians from all over.

On Saturday, there are beaucoup parades: Bucks County, Springfield, Hamiton, NJ, North Wildwood, Trenton, Conshy. I’ll be going to all of them. Yeah, right. Look for me in Springfield, if all goes well. Look for Gwyneth MacArthur, our parade photographer, in Conshy and in Philly on Sunday. You’ll see Lori Lander Murphy in Philly on Sunday and you’ll also see Jeff Meade there, totally wrapped in camera straps like something from 50 Shades of Grey. No one knows where he’s going to be on Saturday. He is the man of mystery.

Take a peek at the calendar for next week. It’s already large and will grow to Godzilla size (Aieee! Aieee!) by next Friday, when we write the last big How to Be Irish in Philly for the season.

Also, consider joining our Irish Philadelphia Facebook page. There are some lively discussions going on there (I especially like the “who/what is more Irish” debates) but there’s also a great exchange of information and ideas. I now have lists of great Irish books, movies, and songs, thanks to this enthusiastic group of people who share a love for all things Irish (and Philly). It occasionally gets a little salty there, but if you can overlook that, I think you’ll learn a lot. And be entertained.

Check our calendar frequently this week. It’s changing almost every minute.

Arts

Your St. Patrick’s Month Reading List, Part 1

KJfZw8djFIoC

There’s nothing like immersing yourself in a good Irish book to get into the spirit of the month. While it’s all music, dancing, parades, and Irish potatoes everywhere you look, storytelling is quintessentially Irish, arguably the oldest form of entertainment in any culture. If you count history in there, it’s how the Irish saved civilization, according to the book of the same name by Thomas Cahill.

There’ll be no touting of “the 10 best Irish books ever” here. There are hundreds of books that are near and dear to people who love Irish literature and culture. We know. We asked the members of our Irish Philadelphia Facebook group to recommend their favorites, and we added our own, plus some on our “to read” list, to a master list we’re keeping.

Starting this week, we’ll be sharing some with you every Friday. If you click on the book title, it will take you to Good Reads, a book website, where you can see how others rated the book and find links to take you to websites where you can buy it.

Feel free to include your favorite book or books in the comments section at the end of the story and come back every week for more reading material.

Let us know if you might be interested in forming an Irish reading group. It’s something we’re considering since we not only love to read, we’re writers and one of us is a librarian. Books rule!

Fiction

The Agnes Brown Trilogy (The Mammy, The Chislellers, The Granny) by Brendan O’Carroll

Comedian Brendan Carroll not only played the foul-mouthed Agnes Brown, matriarch of a fatherless brood, on television (Mrs. Brown’s Boys), he wrote a series of semi-autobiographical novels about the very funny, charming, and irascible Brown family. Angelica Huston starred as Agnes in the movie. We still prefer Brendan. (This link takes you to a clip of an episode–strong language/sexual situations alert.)

Circle of Friends by Maeve Binchy

Set in Ireland in 1950, the story follows the unlikely friendship between 10-year-old overweight only child Benny (Bernadette) and skinny orphan Eve who is being raised by nun in a convent where she was placed by her mother’s wealthy family. The narrative takes them to university, through various romances and betrayals. Binchy was a prolific writer whose novels are wildly popular; some, like this one, have been made into films.

Dubliners by James Joyce

A collection of fifteen short stories by James Joyce depicts life among middle-class Irish living in and around Dublin in the early years of the 20th century, when Irish nationalism peaked. Some of the characters in these stories later appear in Joyce’s most famous novel, Ulysses. Use this book as your entree into that one, which may be a more difficult read.

Ireland by Frank Delaney

The last of the great Irish storytellers, or seanachies, arrives at the home of 9-year-old Ronan O’Mara in 1951 but is run out by Ronan’s mother, who thinks the stories he tells, handed down in Ireland’s great oral storytelling tradition, are blasphemous. Ronan is smitten and tracks down the storyteller who presents him with what one reviewer called “a kind of Irish book of Genesis,” starting with the construction of Newgrange in 5000 BC.

Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann

This novel set in New York merges the lives of a seemingly disparate group of people, including two men from Ireland—Corrigan, a monk working in the slums, a his brother Ciaran , newly arrived. The plot revolves around the real tightrope walk of Phillipe Petit between the Twin Towers in 1974 and the fictional trial of a prostitute. The Twin Towers serve as a metaphor for man’s uncanny ability to find meaning in life.

The Barrytown Trilogy by Roddy Doyle

You saw the movies—The Commitments, The Snapper, and the Van—now read the books that chronicle the lives of the Rabbitte family of Dublin.

Nonfiction

Angela’s Ashes by Frank McCourt

This Pulitzer Prize-winning 1996 memoir by the Frank McCourt covers his gritty, impoverished childhood and early adulthood in both Limerick, Ireland and New York. The son of an alcoholic father and resourceful, loving mother (Angela), McCourt tells his story of tragedy and, eventual, redemption with skill and humor.

McCarthy’s Bar by Pete McCarthy

Pete McCarthy grew up in England, but spent time with his mother’s family in Ireland. His book began with a single premise, “Never pass a bar with your name on it,” and he doesn’t.

Paddy’s Lament by Thomas Gallagher

Written in 1962 by a second generation American of Irish descent, Paddy’s Lament is an eye opening history of what’s erroneously called “The Potato Famine”—the failure of one crop doesn’t constitute a famine—and the difficulties faced by the Irish both in Ireland and in emigrating.

How The Irish Saved Civilization by Thomas Cahill

How did they do it? According to this entertaining book, by preserving the great thoughts of other cultures in excruciating detail, Book of Kells style.

1916: The Easter Rising by Tim Pat Coogan

The 100th anniversary of this landmark of Irish freedom is next year. Bone up now with this book by this controversial journalist and historical writer, who is former editor of the Irish Press newspaper.

Mystery
In the Woods by Tana French

This is the first in a series of mystery novels by French, who is American, that uses the Dublin Murder Squad as its backdrop. This plot of this Edgar Award winner for best first novel focuses on the murder of a 12-year-old girl and the two detectives assigned to the case.

Haunted Ground by Erin Hart

Hart specializes in bog bodies—the dead whose remains are preserved in Ireland’s turf lands. Her protagonists in this first of three novels are Irish archaeologist Cormac Maguire and American pathologist Nora Gavin who work together to solve the mystery of a woman with red hair whose body is found by farmers cutting turf. Read our interview with author Erin Hart.

Inishowen by Joseph O’Connor

Police Inspector Martin Aitken thinks his life is a mess—he’s divorced, his career’s on the skids—until he meets an American woman who has collapsed on a Dublin street. Ellen is an Irish adoptee, taken out of Ireland as a baby and adopted by an American couple. She’s dying, and looking for her natural mother. Their roads and that of a successful New York plastic surgeon meet and take the three to Inishowen,  County Donegal, Ireland’s most northerly point.

The Sister Fidelma Mysteries by Peter Tremayne

Writing under one of many pseudonyms, Peter Berresford Ellis has spun more than a dozen tales of the fifth century noblewoman turned lawyer turned nun and her companion (later husband) Eadulf who solve mysteries while revealing the history of Ireland and Europe of the time and, in particular, the unique Irish or Brehon system of law, which was fairly modern in its outlook. The books are so popular they’ve spawned the Sister Fidelma Society where you can learn more about them.

News

Top 10 New Alternatives to “Danny Boy”

dannyhomeWe’re nearing St. Patrick’s Day, a time for parades, corned beef and cabbage, the wearin o’ the green, the wearin’ o’ the shamrock deely-bobbers, and the ritual singing of “Danny Boy.”

It is this last custom that gives me pause, dear reader. It would be one thing if the versions we heard were performed by the likes of Celtic Woman, the Irish Tenors, Daniel O’Donnell, or even Elvis Presley. And yet I say no. Nay, even.

Typically, “Danny Boy” is painfully performed by someone who has no business singing anything at all, much less a song with a high note that most of them are capable of reaching only if kicked, at precisely the right moment, in the private parts.

Amateur singers of “Danny Boy,” an otherwise nice little ditty, are likewise driven to new and terrifying heights of emotion. The shedding of tears is not unusual—for the singer, certainly, but perhaps especially for the listener.

Living in dread of this excruciating annual custom made me think about potential alternatives to “Danny Boy” that at the very least would be less of a bummer. I have also provided the beginnings of what the storyline might be behind each one. You can make up your lyrics.

Please don’t sing them anywhere near me.

Here from the home office in Horseleap, County Offaly, the official irishphiladelphia.com Top 10 New Alternatives to “Danny Boy”:

  1. Uncanny Boy. Watson’s little-known pet name for Holmes.
  2. Boy Danny. A pop artist of the late ’80s New Romantic period, best known for his hit, “Kilkenny Chameleon.”
  3. Danny Toy. Demi Moore’s latest husband.
  4. Branny Boy. He’s just a regular guy.
  5. Manny Boy. Who, with his brothers Moe Boy and Jack Boy, runs a chain of auto parts stores.
  6. Danny Boy Schmanny Boy. Someone who obviously doesn’t take our boy Danny very seriously.
  7. Tanny Boy. George Hamilton. Or John Boehner.
  8. Sappy Boy. Michael Boulton.
  9. Teriyaki Boy. Where we’re going to eat after we’re done with this insanity.
  10. Def Sugar D Danny Wack. Otherwise known as Rapmaster Skibbereen. (See below.)

 

Dance, News, People

They Danced Till They Dropped

Louie Bradley feels the love after he and partner Michele Quinn win the contest.

Louie Bradley feels the love after he and partner Michele Quinn win the contest.

It was the fourth year for the Delaware County Gaels terpsichorean fundraiser, Dancing Like a Star, and it just keeps getting better and better.

Eight couples competed in foxtrot, swing, and dances of various eras at the event, which drew 700 people to the Springfield Country Club on February 20. Jennaphr Frederick of Fox 29 put in her third year as event emcee, though Bob Kelly, who recently joined the Fox affiliate after years with CBS3, blew in for a brief appearance. Judges included dancers and dance instructors Carole Orlandi Barr, Wayne St. David, and Jenna Rose Pepe, with guest judge Peter Papas, of the Philadelphia Union broadcast team and veteran goalie with the Philadelphia Kixx.

The winners, who were selected not only on their abilities to dance but to also raise money, were Louie Bradley, chairman of the youth Gaelic sports league, and Michele Quinn owner of Blush Salon who has been part of the styling team getting the couples ready for their stage debuts.

We were there from start to finish and got before, after, and a few in-between candids of the couples who were:

Irish-born Paul Hurley, who played Gaelic football himself, and Siobhan McGrory, originally from Tyrone, who has been involved in Irish dancing.

Donegal’s own Dermot “Gogie” O’Donnell, who played football and danced, and is now coach of the Gael’s U14s, and Colette Morgan, a nurse whose two sons play for the Gaels.

Jason Fialkovich, known as Mr. Jason, the children’s librarian at the Middletown Free Library, and Beth Hamilton, a mother of two who works in marketing for a pharmaceutical company and is an accomplished dancer.

Mark Procknow, a Kensington native and student athlete, who now lives in Havertown, and Eileen Corr, the daughter of Irish immigrants who is married to a man from Tyrone.

Tom Kane, who is the owner of the Brick and Brew in Havertown, and Chrissy Penezic, a South Philly native now living in Havertown, who is a media strategy director (and won a “Hustle” contest as a teenager).

[flickr_set id=”72157650563134330″]

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Karen Boyce McCollum, here with John Lefty Kelly, will be singing at the Duffy's Cut Fundraiser.

Karen Boyce McCollum, here with John Lefty Kelly, will be singing at the Duffy’s Cut Fundraiser.

Well, it’s that time again. And if you have to ask what time, you must have stumbled onto the wrong web page.

March madness starts this week and there’s a lot to cover. Here we go:

On Saturday, Karen Boyce McCollum and the Lads will be performing at Maggie O’Neill’s in Drexel Hill at a benefit for the Duffy’s Cut project, an archeological dig in Malvern that has turned up the bodies of Irish immigrants who died or were killed in 1834 while working on the railroad. Seven of the bodies have been recovered and buried with ceremony at West Laurel Hill Cemetery and in Donegal. Part of the money raised will go toward recovering the other 50 victims and returning the remains of the one woman known to be among the dead, Catherine Burns, to her home county of Tyrone.

The eighth annual Gael Scoil, a total immersion weekend for youth in the Irish language and culture, will be held at Notre Dame High School in Lawrenceville, NJ.

Also on Saturday, the 8th annual James Gillespie Sr. benefit will be held at PJ Whelihans in Cherry Hill to benefit the children of Camden’s Catholic Partnership schools.

The Shantys will be at Tir na Nog in Trenton on Saturday night, while Janisom will b at Casey’s on Third in Wildwood on Saturday night.

On Sunday, there’s a big fundraiser for the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade at the new FOP Lodge #5 in Northeast Philly. Jamison, the Bogside Rogues, Celtic Connection, Raymond Coleman and the Celtic Flame dancers will all be there. It was a blast last year. There will also be food, drink, and raffle baskets.

Sligo Pub in Media and Glen Mills have added their weekly sessions to our calendar. We heard that Matt Molloy of The Chieftains showed up at the Media session this week. You never know who you’re going to run into at an Irish session.

On Thursday, the Irish American Business Chamber and Network will hold its annual Ambassador Awards luncheon, honoring QVC, local CEO Frank Reynolds of PixarBio, and CBS3 and CWPhilly, the local networks that air the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day parade. Irish Ambassador Anne Anderson will be on hand to give the awards. Read more about the chamber and the awards in our story.

The Irish conversation group reconvenes on Thursday night at Villanova, and the group, Danu, is appearing on stage the same evening at Longwood Gardens. You can catch Slainte (Frank Daly and CJ Mills of Jamison) at Con Murphy’s in Philadelphia.

On Friday, Blackthorn is playing at Concord Township’s annual dance party; Gaelic Storm is on stage at the Wilmington Grand Opera House; Slainte is at Reedy’s Tavern; Galway Guild is at the Green Parrot in Newtown; and the Cummins School of Irish Dance is holding a trivia night at the North Penn VFW in Glenside.

Also on Friday, the interactive play, Lafferty’s Wake, goes on stage at the Society Hill Playhouse for a March-April run on the weekends. Gargle with lemon and honey—there’s a sing-a-long. The theater cabaret has been turned into Rory’s Pub, where as his final request, Charlie Lafferty is being waked, with his wife Kathleen, daughter Maggie; son-in-law Patrick, the village priest Father Pettigrew, his special friend, Molly; and his best friend Rory in attendance. Sing-alongs with the audience include: Whiskey in the Jar, Sweet Molly Malone, The Orange and the Green, and When Irish Eyes are Smiling.

Information on all these events is on our calendar. Check back frequently this month since things change hourly.