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Emmett’s Place

People

Happy Birthday to (Shhhhhhhh!)

The birthday boy

The birthday boy

If you’ve seen “White Christmas,” you know the fluffy plot: Two song-and-dance men, Wallace and Davis, want to put together a show for kindly old general Waverly who led them in battle during World War II. And to really make it a swell party, one of the hoofers goes on nationwide TV to invite everyone who served with them in the 151st division. The other hoofer distracts the old guy so he misses the show.

(Stick with me. This really is going somewhere.)

There’s a really big party this Sunday at the Philadelphia Irish Festival down on Penn’s Landing, and it’s for one of our favorite guys: Emmett Ruane, who for 37 years ran Emmett’s Place, a well-known and loved Irish haunt in the Northeast. It’s his 75th birthday, and this party is a surprise. And all of those hundreds of you who attend the festival? You’re invited.

(Now, everyone join me in singing, “We’ll Follow the Old man Wherever He Wants to Go.”)

No worries that Emmett will catch on, just because the big do is now officially online and about as not secret as you can get. Emmett’s son Michael says he doesn’t go online. And even though he has a Facebook page, it’s Michael who manages it on his dad’s behalf. Michael assures us that this is one surprise that will stay a surprise.

If you’re going to the festival—and if you aren’t, you should be, just on general principles—here’s your reason to head for the Delaware.

Zero hour is 2 p.m., give or take a few minutes. The Hooligans will be onstage, and singer Luke Jardel will announce the birthday and lead the crowd in singing “Happy Birthday to You.” Radio host Marianne MacDonald will will wrap things up with a birthday cake for Emmett and his nearest and dearest, at the “Come West Along the Road” tent.

Michael also passed along a couple of fabulous old photos of the man of the hour, and we tossed in one particular favorite of our own.

See you Sunday!

Click to see our three pics.

 

People

Got Time for a Pint? Donate Blood on Sunday!

The man himself, Emmett Ruane.

The man himself, Emmett Ruane.

Remember Emmett’s Place fondly? For that matter, dontcha miss Emmett?

Well, you can get together with one of our best-loved (retired) publicans and his family, and help a good cause at the same time.

Emmett’s son Michael and favorite nephew Sean King are bringing the old gang together (and maybe drafting some new gang members) for a very ambitious American Red Cross blood drive on Sunday from 9 in the morning to 2:30 in the afternoon at the Perzel Center, 2990 St. Vincent St., in Mayfair. It’s the second annual drive, organized in honor of Raj S. Shah, the late husband of one of Michael’s first cousins, Joanne. Shah died of leukemia in 2007.

Last year, the Emmett’s crowd collected 36 pints. It was part of a nationwide effort, including a drive organized by Shah’s wife in Satellite, Florida, and another put together by friends in Austin, Texas, that collected 76 units in total.

Joanne Shah is also running her second annual drive on Sunday.

Michael recalls how much Raj Shah came to depend on the generosity of blood donors. “He was just a great guy,” Michael says. “It was as if he was one of our own family. He had actually been diagnosed with leukemia 17 years before he passed away. He was treated, and his leukemia went into remission for quite a long time. The last year, it came back, and they just couldn’t get it under control again. He received transfusions almost on a daily basis for most of that year.”

In all, 45 people donated at the Philly event last year. Based on early interest, Michael expects to top that this year.

“Facebook has really helped this year,” he said. “We think we’re gonna have more than last year. I have a feeling it’s gonna be a much bigger response.”

Of course, it’s a gathering of friends as well. There’ll be Irish music, and lots of treats, including homemade scones. (Much more than your basic Red Cross doughnuts, for sure.)

So if you have time for a pint, Michael asks, why not drop on by?

Scheduling a time slot is strongly encouraged so the Red Cross can have plenty of staff available to collect donations from everyone who wants to donate. Pick your time slot at the American Red Cross Web site using Sponsor Code 14357. Here’s the Web address:

Food & Drink

Last Call

So who wasn’t there?

It seemed like everyone who had ever played music or danced to it in Emmett’s Place, the Northeast’s venerable Irish pub, was on hand for the big farewell bash. The joint was so crowded, people had to enter in shifts. At one point, an entire drum set needed to be assembled out on the sidewalk.

We could tell you more, but far better to show.

Food & Drink

Say Goodbye to Emmett’s Place

Since 1971, Emmett’s Place in Oxford Circle has been the place to go for great Irish music and dancing every weekend. But now, after 37 years, owner Emmett Ruane is retiring. And in true Irish fashion, his friends are holding a “wake” for the place where they drank beer and danced sets even as the neighborhood became less and less Irish.

On Saturday, October 25, some of the musicians who played at Emmett’s—for some of them, one of their first gigs after arriving in the city from Ireland—will be providing the music one last time. (Update, October 27, 2008: Here’s a video sampler of the farewell party.)

Starting at 7 PM, you might catch Tommy Moffitt, the Vince Gallagher Band, the Malones and Their Cousin, Gerry TImlin, the King Brothers, Erins’ Heirs, Mike Brill, Paul Moore, Tom McHugh, Pat Campbell, Oliver McElhone, The Birmingham Six, The Brigade, Cletus McBride, The Celtic Connection, Tom Kelly, the Tara Gael Dancers, and more. (If you’re interested in being a part of the musical troupe, contact Fintan Malone at (215) 379-0424.)

Moore, lead singer of Paddy’s Well, previously of Blackthorn, says he knows the place and its owner “all too well.”

“He’s one of the finest people I know.” says Moore. “I am thrilled he can retire happily after all those years and that we can give him a nice farewell this weekend. All of the bands that I have ever played with got our first chance to play publicly there—Blarney Stones a/k/a Blarney, Blackthorn and Paddy’s Well. He was always true to keeping Irish music in the pub all through the years—’til the very end—through good years and bad.

“I love and respect the fact that he gave so many musicians a chance to succeed in the past 40 years so I am really looking forward to giving him a big farewell this weekend and saying thanks for everything.

“I have so many funny stories and happy memories from emmett’s place that it is hard to pick one. But I would say that my dad (Paul) and my grandfather (Will O’Donnell) only ever heard me perform in public in one place before they both passed away in 1990. It was Emmett’s Place and that’s something i’ll always remember.”

Dancers, too have their memories.

Marianne MacDonald, host of the radio show “Come West Along the Road,” has been going to Emmett’s since the early ’90s. She recalls her first visit. “I went to see Blarney (Fintan and Tom Brett). There was a full crowd, with several folks from New Jersey. On the way home, we realized that Levick Street was one way in the wrong direction and, not being sure what to do, we made a right and ended up doing a scenic tour of North Philly on the way home. The next time we made sure we followed someone who knew the way.

“There were many memorable times but probably one of my favorites was the night before Thanksgiving when Tommy Moffit would play and all of the folks would come in and catch up with each other. The place would be packed to the gills, you could hardly move, you were lucky if you got a seat and there would be three or four sets dancing on the tiny dance floor. It was always a great night, lots of fun and you’d see people you hadn’t seen in months.

“I think it’s sort of like the Northeast’s answer to Cheers, where everyone knows your name. You always felt very comfortable coming through that front door and you’d hear folks calling hello, waving to you and there would be Emmett at the back of the bar by the kitchen or at his table with the lamp.

“I know I will miss the place an awful lot. I hadn’t been getting there as much as I used to but I always tried to get there at least once a month. Emmett deserves a lot of credit for starting the Irish music and keeping it running all these years, through thick and thin. I feel like it’s the end of an era but Emmett certainly deserves a well-earned retirement! I hope everyone comes out next Saturday night for the send-off party.”

Hey, we’re going to be there! Hope to see you too! Emmett’s Place is at 925 Levick Street.