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How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

If you missed him the first time he was here, your second chance to hear Gabriel Donohue at the Irish Center happens Friday night, February 19. Donohue, who has played at Carnegie Hall, at the Clinton White House, and on CNN, and the network morning shows, is a singer and multi-instrumentalist. He’ll be performing with Marian Makins and Pairac Keane.

If your bent is comedy, there’s an evening of it to benefit Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia at Maggie O’Neill’s in Drexel Hill on Friday night.

And it’s a jam-packed Saturday night:

The Rose of Tralee Winter BBQ which was postponed because of the snow is going on at The Willows Mansion in Villanova on Saturday night. Meet the reigning Rose of Tralee Jocelyn McGillian and many other lovely ladies while you pretend you’re out in the backyard eating grilled stuff. Well, you won’t have to pretend you’re eating grilled stuff—that will be there—but it might be a good idea to stay out of the back yard. It’s $20, all you can eat, with DJ Bucky Scott, Quizzo with prizes, kids’ activities and proceeds go to the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure (the Roses participate).

Singer Danny Quinn is making a special appearance at The Irish Times, one of our favorite pubs in Philly, down in Queen Village. We’ve seen Quinn perform at the Shanachie in Ambler and he’s also one of our favorites.

John Byrne is trotting out his newest CD, After the Wake, at World Café Live on Saturday night. Byrne, Enda Keegan, and Damien Byrne will be performing, but the event is sold out. You gotta move on these things people. We told you about John Byrne a week ago.

AOH Division 1 in Bristol Borough is hosting a benefit for Project Children, a program that brings kids from Northern Ireland to the US during the summer. There will be music by the Birmingham Six, members of the band Jameson, The Shanty’s, and Susie and the Sizzlers.

Wish we could be everywhere.

On Sunday, don’t forget that the WTMR 800AM Irish radio shows are holding their on-air fundraiser. Lots of great gifts and prizes. Tune in at 11 AM.

The second of four St. Patrick’s Day Parade fundraisers is scheduled for Sunday at 3 PM at the Mayfair Community Center. This one honors Grand Marshal Seamus Boyle, national president of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, and the Ring of Honor recipients. It features music by The Shanty’s (they’re having a busy weekend), Ballina, The Gallagher Brothers, and the Irish Dance Group Celtic Flame. Plus food and drink and prizes and all the usual frivolity, all for a good cause.

The Jameson Sisters—that’s singer Teresa Kane and harper Ellen Tepper—will be performing at the Molly Maguire Pub and Restaurant in Phoenixville. We could go on and on about the Jamesons, the Molly Maguire Pub, and Phoenixville, but suffice it to say (as Sister Silvanus used to put it) that it’s a fabulous combination.

On Monday night, the Inis Nua Theatre Company, which produces plays from the UK and Ireland, is starting its reading series with “O Go My Man,” a play by Sheila Feehily at The Playground at the Adrienne Theatre on Sansom Street in Philadelphia.

Then on Tuesday—Parade Fundraiser #3, this one at Con Murphy’s Pub on the Parkway at 17th with the group, Slainte. Gourmet hors d’oeuvres are promised and it’s an open bar, all for $50 which goes to help the Philly St. Patrick’s Day Parade make up a $100,000 shortfall.

And it’s not over yet. On Wednesday, join Sarah Conaghan of the Rose of Tralee Center and Alan Farrelly, vice consul of Ireland, at Tir na nOg, for a discussion of what it means to be Irish these days. All with Irish food and drink, sponsored by International House’s Culture and Cuisine program.

Or, join RUNA, a multinational Irish group HQed in Philly at the World Café Live, also on Wednesday night.

And the week’s entertainment is not over. On Friday night, Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfetones will be performing at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Glenside at a benefit for the charities supported by the Sean McBride Div. 2 of the Ancient Order of Hibernians.

Also on Friday, Irish artist Sarah Iremonger’s mixed media exhibit opens at the University of the Arts in Broad Street in Philadelphia. It includes a mural, a video continuing original and found footage and digital photography and runs through March 17.

And it’s not even March.

TIVO ALERT: Just set it up for the next month, starting next week. Next Friday, the Irish Tenors are coming to the Liacouras Center, and Irish singing sensation Annemarie O’Riordan is kicking off her first American tour at the Irish Center on Friday, March 5. Wait, that’s not all. The Mount Holly St. Paddy’s Day parade is on Saturday and BUA, the super Irish trad group, will be on stage at the Irish Center that night, Ronan Tynan will be at the Keswick in Glenside, and that’s the weekend of Gael Scoil in Lawrenceville, NJ, where kids 7-17 can learn Irish history, language, music, sports and all things Celtic.

And wait, it’s still not over. On Sunday, the fourth Parade fundraiser with Blackthorn is at the Springfield Country Club, fiddlers Alasdair Frasier and Natalie Haas will be doing workshops and performing at Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill, and Kevin Crawford and Cillian Vallely from Lunasa will be in Coatesville.

An embarrasment of riches, or bad planning? You decide.

Columns

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Are you ready for some fun? Good, because we have it aplenty this week.

A concert with Albannach, Seven Nations, Jamison and other high-octane bands kicks off the 18th Annual Greater Philadelphia Mid-Winter Scottish-Irish Festival and Fair, an event whose name gets longer every year, held at the Valley Forge Convention Center. It’s two and a half days of total Celtic immersion—music, dancing, whiskey, beer, food, even medieval sword play. There are dozens of vendors who are hawking everything from bejeweled Claddaghs to goth kilts. See our story on the St. Paddy’s Day parade fundraisers to find out what we’ll be doing there. (And stop by, say hello, and enter our promotional contest for a chance to win tickets to see Scythian at the TLA or Ronan Tynan at the Keswick Theatre next month!)

If Irish tenors are more to your taste, St. Colman’s Parish in Ardmore is hosting renowned singer Mark Forrest in concert on Friday night, February 12. The same night, the Gloucester City AOH is offering a free Irish music night with Jerry and Shaun of the Broken Shillelaghs. We would say, “so much to do, so little time” but we’re saving that phrase for March when the events are stacked up like Legos.

A reminder for this weekend: The WTMR 800AM radio shows are holding their on-air fund drive. Last week, with the help of the Irish Club of Delaware County, they raised almost $1,000. Let’s see if we can double that this week. Hosts Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald will be at the Mid-Winter Festival in Valley Forge this weekend, so you can stop by and slip them some cash and music requests.

Speaking of the Irish Club of Delco, they’re holding their monthly meeting on Sunday at the Irish Immigration Center in Upper Darby. In Whitemarsh, St. Thomas Episcopal Church is holding its monthly Celtic worship service.

A reminder on a couple or three new regular events on our calendar—a ballad session at Slainte with John Byrne, whom we just profiled, Irish music at St. James Pub in Bethlehem, and Irish Night at the Washington Crossing Inn with some of your and our favorites, including the Theresa Flanagan Band, Paddy’s Well,?the Boys of County Bucks,?Connemara Codfish Company, and?Tullamore Trio.

McGillin’s Old Ale House in Center City has posted a “Mardi Gras” event with loads of drink and New Orleans’ cuisine specials (Po’ boys, yum!).

Mardi Gras can only mean one thing—no, not show me yours and I’ll throw you these beads—and that’s that Lent is coming up. What are you giving up? Hope it’s not Irish music because Gabriel Donohue is making a return appearance at The Irish Center on Friday, February 19, with singer Marian Makins and Alaskan fiddler Caitlin Warbelow. The Irish-born Donohue is not only a well known singer and guitarist, he’s produced award-winning CDs for many of your favorite performers such as Joanie Madden (of Cherish the Ladies), Jimmy Crowley, Girsa, Dan Milner, and top fiddler Seamus Connolly.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish In Philly This Week

From last August's WTMR radio on-air fundraiser, St. Patrick's Day Parade Director Michael Bradley joins host Marianne MacDonald at the microphone. Volunteer Olivia Hilpl is at left.

From last August's WTMR radio on-air fundraiser, St. Patrick's Day Parade Director Michael Bradley joins host Marianne MacDonald at the microphone. Volunteer Olivia Hilpl is at left.

Snow may scotch your plans to be Irish at least part of this weekend. For example, the Rose of Tralee Winter BBQ, scheduled for Friday night in Villanova, has been postponed until Saturday, February 20. Make sure you call ahead before bundling yourself up and heading out.

The show will go on at the Irish Center on Sunday as WTMR radio hosts Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald throw a Super Bowl party to help raise money for the St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Watch the game on one of the center’s three flat screen TVs, have a $4 pint of Guinness (or two), and choose from a buffet loaded with stromboli, wings, meatballs, hoagies, cheese and pepperoni, and chocolate cake. There will be door prizes and a raffle. All for $20. And forget the half-time festivities. You can dance to live music provided by Gallagher.

Don’t forget to tune in to the WTMR 800AM radio shows Sunday morning. They’re kicking off their on-air fund drive and offering some great prizes (we know, because we’re donating some).

In Phoenixville on Sunday, Theresa Kane and John Beatty will anchor a session at the great pub, Molly Maguire’s. If you haven’t been to Phoenixville for a while, you’re in for a surprise. There are several terrific Irish pubs and an Irish breakfast place as well as some interesting little stores.

On Tuesday, when the snow has likely melted, head down to the World Café Live in Philadelphia to hear two of the finest musicians working today. Karan Casey, former singer with the group, Solas, and sterling guitarist John Doyle have teamed up for an evening of Irish traditional and folk music.

Don’t forget the new addition to the Irish treats now on offer: Irish night at the Washington Crossing Inn in Washington Crossing (you Jerseyites can come right over the bridge) and live Irish music at Bethlehem’s St. James Pub on Thursdays at the Sands Casino.

Also on Thursday, Bob Hurst and Tim Murphy of the popular Bogside Rogues are taking a turn at Con Murphy’s Irish Pub on the Parkway in Philadelphia. We haven’t gotten there yet, but we eye it every time we’re in town. It’s perfectly located so you can watch the parade from there!

On Friday, the biggest weekend of winter kicks off with a night time concert at the Valley Forge Convention Center featuring Jamison, Rathkeltair, Seven Nations, and Albannach. These are popular groups and this will be a high octane night, so get there early for tickets. There’s music, food, drink, vendors, beauty queens, dancers, and lots of fun. We’ll be there all weekend. Stop by our table and sign up for our weekly e-newsletter, Mick Mail, and a chance to win tickets to hear those wild and crazy lads from DC, Scythian, at the TLA in March 11 or Ronan Tynan at the Keswick on March 6. We may even be able to score you some Altan tickets for Sellersville for March 13. All you have to do is allow us to come to your emailbox once a week. We don’t share our mailing list with anyone and we’ll even clean up a little while we’re there.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish In Philly This Week

Fun stuff this weekend to bring a chilly end to January and launch us into February, which is shaping up to be the month of fundraisers and benefits, many for the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

Blackthorn is rocking Archbishop Ryan on Saturday night—a fundraiser for the Ryan Tuition Assistance Program. Although it’s a high school, high schoolers aren’t allowed. This is a strictly over-21 crowd.

AOH Notre Dame Division 1 is throwing a ceili dance on Saturday night at their hall in Swedesburg. Tom McHugh & Company will be providing the music.

On Sunday, AOH/LAOH 87 will be holding a benefit for member Donna Cannon whose daughter and her family lost everything in a house fire on New Year’s eve. The event, which will feature music and a Chinese auction, will be at the division’s Kevin Donnelly Hall on Wakeling Street in Philadelphia.

Also on Sunday, join the Sons and Daughters of Derry at the Irish Center for a Bloody Sunday Memorial Mass in memory of those who lost their lives during a clash between protesters and British soldiers in Derry’s Bogside neighborhood in 1972.

February starts with a bang on Monday as Maura O’Connell, lead vocalist of DeDanaan, appears at Sellerville with Shannon Lambert-Ryan and Runa, a Philadelphia-based Celtic group.

New to our calendar: John Byrne of the John Bryne Group is regularly anchoring a ballad and Irish trad session at Slainte at 30th and Market Street, across from 30th Street Station. Check him out this Tuesday.

Also new: It’s Irish Night at the Washington Crossing Inn on Wednesdays, featuring live music from Paddy’s Well, Boys of County Bucks, Connemara Codfish Company, Tullamore Trio and the Theresa Flanagan Band, with dinner and drink specials.

On Thursday, tune in early to WHYY-91 FM (between 6-10 AM) when reps from all over the Irish community will be taking pledges during College Challenge Week. Talk to your favorite Irish beauty queens (Rose of Tralee, Mary from Dungloe), journalists, Gaelic Athletic Association coaches, and immigration experts as you make your pledge. We expect to beat every other group they’ve scheduled this week—but, as they say during the fund drive, we can only do it with your help.

Speaking of beauty queens, on Friday, the lovely Rose of Tralee, Jocelyn McGillian, will be hosting a winter barbecue (yum) with music, food, drink, Quizzo, prizes, all to benefit the Susan G. Komen Foundation. It’s all happening at the Willows in Villanova. We’re hoping she’ll sing.

If you’re in Jersey, you can catch Sharon Lambert-Ryan and Runa at the Appel Farm in Elmer on Friday night.

This month, the Sunday WTMR-800AM radio shows will launch another on-air fund drive to get them through the beginning of the year. Listen in between 11 AM and 1PM and make a generous donation.

And don’t bother whipping up the chili for the Superbowl Party. Bring the family and friends to the Irish Center instead where you can watch the game on three big flat-screen TVs, enjoy a draft beer, and eat a sumptuous buffet that someone else is making—all for $20. Proceeds from the event will benefit the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade which has been socked with some extra fees from the city.

Ahead—some terrific traditional music concerts planned for the Irish Center in the next two months leading up to St. Patrick’s Day. The Midwinter Scottish-Irish Festival in Valley Forge is on Valentine’s Day weekend (we’ll be there–stop by and say hi). And “The Irish and How They got That Way,” a musical by the late Frank McCourt (“Angela’s Ashes”), is at the Kimmel through the Irish holiday season. (We saw it last night and loved it.)

So, get your practice in for the big day. There’s nothing worse than being a St. Paddy’s Day Irishman. Or, as the rest of us refer to you, an amateur.

Check our calendar for all the details.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Remember last week when I told you to book early for the Blackthorn fundraiser for the Black Jack Kehoe AOH Division 4 in Springfield on Saturday? Remember how I said “sold out” was their middle name? Well, the event is sold out. No tickets will be available at the door because they can’t shoehorn in even one more person. Next time, listen to me.

There may still be time to book for Enter the Haggis at World Café Live on Saturday night. This Toronto-based band delights fans with its novel take on Celtic rhythms, matching it with rock, pop, and even funk.

On Wednesday, Kilkenny-born contemporary folksinger and songwriter Enda Keegan is on stage at Slainte at 30th and Market streets. Keegan is a recent Philly transplant who still performs mainly in New York City but is spreading his wings here. Next month he’ll be opening for John Byrne (late of Patrick’s Head) at Byrne’s CD release party at World Café Live.

Like a little Irish music with your gambling? Then head up to the Sands Casino in Bethlehem. Amadaun, a group that blends rock, bluegrass, and folk-rock with traditional Celtic sounds, is playing this week at the St. James Pub.

On Friday, January 29, at 7 PM, there will be an information session on the disaster in Haiti featuring filmmaker Dede Maitre (granddaughter of Irish immigrants) who will screen clips from the documentary work she has done over the years with various charities in Haiti. Representatives from Haitian aid organizations and members of the local Haitian community will be there.

Following the meeting, stay for the January Rambling House entertainment evening, featuring music by The Malones and whoever else wants to get up and do their party piece. There’s a bar there for the shy, free refreshments, prizes, and it all costs only $5. You can’t even see a movie for that little.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Some fine Celtic doings this weekend. First off, Paddy’s Well headlines AOH Div. 87’s annual Beef and Beer Night at that Irish playground, Finnigan’s Wake, at Third and Spring Garden Streets on Saturday afternoon. You get to kill many birds with one stone here: Have a good time, listen to a great band, support AOH charities as well as Mike Driscoll, owner of Finnigan’s and a generous supporter of all things Philly and Irish.

Also on Saturday, three remarkable musicians will converge on Coatesville from Baltimore to present an evening of virtuoso traditional music: singer-guitarist Pat Egan, his wife, flutist Laura Byrne, and accordian player Bill McComiskey. You get to do a good deed here too—support the Coatesville Traditional Irish Music Series, whose founder, Frank Dalton, has been bringing the best in traditional music to a beautiful venue (the Coatesville Cultural Society) for many years. It only costs $15, there are no bad seats, the acoustics are great, and you can even have a light supper or dessert at the snack bar.

On Thurday, Con Murphy’s Pub on the Parkway in Center City is featuring County Tyrone’s Raymond Coleman, and acoustic performer with an eclectic play list (Shane McGowan to David Gray). You can use the opportunity to scout out Con Murphy’s Pub for your post-St. Paddy’s Day tall one. Or check out how much the parade you can see from your barstool. Whatever.

Next weekend looks like a big one too: Enter the Haggis, the sensational Toronto-based band, will be at World Café Live on Saturday. Their concerts are always sold out at Sellersville, so call now for tickets.

And Blackthorn will be playing a benefit next Saturday for the AOH Black Jack Kehoe Division at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Springfield. If Blackthorn had a middle name it would be “sold out,” so get there early while there’s still dancing room.

Just a couple of reminders: The Sunday WTMR radio shows are running out of dough, so if you can send a donation their way, it would be a good thing. And if you haven’t already done so, fill out the Irish Immigration Center’s Irish Community Survey. We thank you.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

An eclectic—one might even day “odd”–mix of events this week, from a Celtic worship service to an immigration reform “happy hour” to a performance by The Band of the Irish Guards. We’re going to peek into next week a little because there’s a fabulous music event coming up that you trad fans won’t want to miss.

First up: Tune in to 800AM between 11 AM and 1 PM on Sunday to learn how you can support the WTMR Irish radio shows. Fundraisers last year kept the shows going for seven months, but that money has run out. You can make a donation to the shows by sending a check made out to WTMR Radio (that’s important–it has to be made out to the station) to WTMR Radio-Sunday Irish Radio Shows, 2775 Mount Ephraim Ave, Camden, NJ 08104. Mark the envelope “ATTN: Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald.”

St. Thomas Church in Whitemarsh is holding its monthly Celtic worship service on Sunday at 5:30 PM. Read our story explaining what it’s all about.

On Tuesday, join representatives from the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center at Tir na nOg pub and restaurant in Center City to learn about how the new immigration reform bill could affect Irish immigrants. There will be “happy hour” specials for those who attend. There are other immigration meetings going on throughout the city next week, but I believe this one will be the most fun along with being informative. Way to go, Irish!

Pipe and drum aficionados, listen up: The Band of the Irish Guards will be performing at the Stabler Arena in Bethlehem on Thursday night. Also featured: the Pipes, Drums and Highland dancers of the Royal Regiment of Scotland and the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. What a sound!

If you’re marching in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade this year, you have a meeting on Thursday night at the Doubletree in Philadelphia at 8 PM to pay up and pick up your badges. That apparently means that there will be a parade this year. Yay!

Frank McCourt’s “The Irish and How They Got That Way” is playing through April at the Kimmel Center. If you mention the word “special” you get 20 percent off your ticket price. It’s the Irish discount.

Peeking into the following week: AOH Div. 87 is holding its annual beef and beer fundraiser at Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia on Sunday, January 17. Paddy’s Well is playing. As always, money raised at AOH events goes to charities large and small.

Later on Sunday night, three incredible trad musicians will be playing at the Coatesville Cultural Society. Singer-guitarist Pat Egan, his wife, flutist Laura Byrne Egan, and Brooklyn-born accordian player Bill McComiskey not only play together regularly, but teach others to play at the Baltimore Irish Arts Center. The Egans were recently in Philadelphia with Jim Eagan for an Ed Reavy tribute at the Irish Center.

As always, there’s a session just about every night of the week in the Philly area. One of our new year’s resolutions is to get to every one of them. Maybe you should add that to your list too!
Check the calendar for details.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

You can ring in the New Year with music and dancing at the Irish Center on Thursday night, then start the new year off right on January 2 with Barleyjuice at the Sellersville Theatre. And there are plenty of sessions all week to keep your Irish up.

But the real treat starts on Thursday with the return of “The Irish and How They Got That Way,” a play by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Frank McCourt, who also gave us “Angela’s Ashes.” “Tis,” and “Teacher Man,” before he died in 2009 from melanoma.

The play, at the Kimmel Center, mixes songs and stories, sentiment and humor, irony and sweetness, as only McCourt could do it.

Check our calendar for details.