Hell's Kitchen

Hell's Kitchen is the blog of TheWildGeese.com (WGT), a leading online destination chronicling "The Epic History and Heritage of the Irish." Hell's Kitchen is written by Patricia Jameson-Sammartano, Gerry Regan and Joe Gannon. TheWildGeese.com, which draws nearly 200,000 visits per year, is the flagship project of GAR Media, "forging new frontiers for the past."

Friday, June 29, 2007

A United Northern Ireland

Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland Martin McGuinness addressed an enthusiastic crowd of well-wishers Thursday at the offices of Thomas Moran of Mutual of Omaha. McGuinness appeared with Peter Robinson, Minister for Finance and Personnel, at a reception co-hosted by Moran and Bill Flynn.

Photo credit: Patricia Jameson-Sammartano

Both ministers acknowledged the assistance of the United States in the Northern Ireland Peace Process, and both also warned of danger to the process if the rest of the world forgets them. Mc Guinness stated that the evolution of the NI Executive is being studied as a model for conflict resolution throughout the world. Robinson especially stressed that Northern Ireland is a marketable commodity, and that went over well with the audience, most of whom were from the business community.


McGuinness is a former Irish Republican Army Chief of Staff and Robinson is deputy leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, headed by Dr. Ian Paisley. It was moving to see the former
adversaries unite in collaboration for the Northern Ireland Executive, although the missing man in the room was Paisley, who at 81 and in fragile health could not make the trip.

The quote for the evening belonged to McGuinness: "I like Ian Paisley; I like working with him, and at one time I didn't like him at all."

Patricia Jameson-Sammartano
Culture Editor, WGT



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Sunday, June 17, 2007

Bloomsday on Staten Island 2007


Gary and Joanie Moore as Buck Mulligan and Molly Bloom, in downtown Staten Island. This was only one of the many Bloomsday celebrations taking place around the city and around the world this year
Patricia Jameson-Sammartano
Culture Editor, WGT
Photo credit: Patricia Jameson-Sammartano

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Saturday, June 16, 2007

"yes I said yes I will Yes"



Photo credit: Berenice Abbott, 1929


It's Bloomsday! The title quotes Molly Bloom, the female protagonist of James Joyce's Ulysses, which is being celebrated today. The action of the novel, considered by many to be the most influential of them all, and certainly the most influential of the twentieth century, took place in Dublin on June 16,1904, the date on which Joyce, left, first dated his wife Nora Barnacle.
Some of the Bloomsday celebrations have already taken place. For example, the American Friends of James Joyce earlier this month honored Milo O'Shea as one of Ireland's Best; the Irish Repertory Theatre's Ciarán O’Reilly and Charlotte Moore received the Veronica Lally Kehoe Award for Cultural Achievement. We congratulate them - the awards are well-deserved.
In Dublin, Bloomsday lasts an entire week, commemorated with readings and plenty of pub crawls. For the centenary, in 2004, celebrations lasted five months.
Here is a sampler of some of the more local events:
The big one is Bloomsday on Broadway XXVI, at Symphony Space, Broadway at 95th St. Approximately 100 performers, including Frank and Malachy McCourt, and the incomparable Fionnula Flanagan as Molly Bloom, will read from the book in shows at 12, 3, 6, and 9 p.m. Between 7-8 pm, Bloomsday features The Antient Concert:The American premiere of a new opera, with libretto by Paul Muldoon and music by Daron Hagen. Tickets can be purchased for: Full day: $25, Members $20; Per 3-hour segment $20, Members $14. This will be simulcast over the web.
Also in New York -- Bloomsday OutLOUD, Saturday, on Staten Island at at 10am, 11am, 1pm and 7:30pm. This is a more mobile version, as Staten Island becomes Dublin, and the action takes place downtown. OutLOUD’s Bloomsday celebration begins at foot of the Armajani Bridge, overlooking the harbor (Bay Street and Borough Place, next to the Ferry).
Philadelphia has its own special Bloomsday traditions, with walks, readings, a childrens' performance sponsored by the Rosenbach Museum and Library, which is the repository for Joyce's handwritten manuscript.
Chicago's Irish American Heritage Center presents readings, music and song from notables in the Chicago theater community; it's called Rattlin' of the Joists at Centerstage, 8 p.m., $10.
Buffalo, NY has been celebrating for a week, but will conclude with a 5-hour reading on the 16th at the Andrews Theatre home of the Irish Classical Theatre Company, 625 Main Street in Downtown Buffalo (5:00 pm - 10:00 pm) . In the morning, the action commnces at Bidwell Parkway at 11 a.m.
At Boston College, events will commence at 11:30 and run through the day to 6 p.m. Readers will include David Barry, the Consul General of Boston, and author Elizabeth Shannon.
Elsewhere in Massachusetts, the Arts and Society group will present its 29th annual Bloomsday celebration at 8 p.m. at the Katherine Cornell Theater,Vineyard Haven, Martha's Vineyard
Tickets: $15 general, $12 senior & studentSold at the door.
Natuonal Public Radio has an extensive website devoted to Bloomsday and Joyce.
The city of Melbourne, Australia also has a celebration.
Santa Maria, Brazil, kicks off at 9 a.m.
So don't tell me there's nothing to do this Saturday!
Patricia Jameson-Sammartano
Culture Editor, WGT

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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Literary Celebrations


Photo courtesy of the Celtic Twilight by Yeats, 1902. Public domain.

Lost in the Bloomsday celebrations is the fact that there is another literary birthday taking place today, June 13 - as the 142nd birthday of William Butler Yeats is being observed by the W.B. Yeats Society of New York at the National Arts Club, 20 Gramercy Park South:


June 13th, 6 PMWhat Does a Collected Edition Collect?: The New Edtion of Yeats' Essays The Sculpture Court on the lower floor of the National Arts Club. George Bornstein launches the Early Essays volume of the Scriberr Collected Edition, which he co-edits with the late Richard Finneran, also a recipient of our M.L. Rosenthal Golden Apple Award. There will be a brief tribute to Professor Finneran, who died in December 2005, and commemoration of Yeats' 142nd birthday. The Yeatsians, while often overshadowed by the Joyceans, nonetheless put on a good show, and this is their closing one for the 2006-2007 year(disclaimer: the editor holds a membership in the Society).

Patricia Jameson-Sammartano,
Culture Editor, WGT

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Thursday, June 07, 2007

Pirate Queen to Close; Touring Production Will Sail On


The announcement came via Castcom, "The Pirate Queen's" video log. Producer John McColgan announced earlier on Wednesday that the show will close on Broadway Sunday, June 17, 2007. Despite having won several awards, the show was snubbed by the Tony awards and grosses were down(last week the show ran at 54 per cent capacity)and this can only be laid at the feet of the mainstream media critics, who were almost universally cruel in their reviews, with the exception of the Irish Voice's Niall O'Dowd, who asked that the audience decide for themselves, a sentiment we echoed here at WGT.
The good news is that, to quote McColgan, "This show has a life and this show will go on." This will be through the Broadway cast album, which is to be released on July 3, and through both North American and European tours, which are currently being negotiated. Perhaps the out-of-town critics won't be expecting another "Les Miserables" and will therefore be able to assess "The Pirate Queen" on her own merits.
Photo credit: Joan Marcus
Patricia Jameson-Sammartano
WGT Culture Editor

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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

We Mourn

We pause to mourn the death of Gerald Regan, the father of WGT co-founder and producer Gerry Regan. Mr. Regan died on Friday, June 4, 2007, after a short illness.

Gerald Regan, May 24, 1921-June 4, 2007

May God hold him in the palm of his hand, and may he rest in peace. We celebrate his life.


Photo of Gerry(with binoculars)and his father in 2004, courtesy of Gerry Regan.
Funeral arrangements are as follows:


Wake at Fairchild Sons Funeral Chapel on Thursday, 7-9pm; and Friday, 2-4p and 7-9p. Funeral Mass on Saturday at 10a at St. Anne's Roman Catholic Church, 35 Dartmouth St., Garden City NY. Burial to follow at Holy Rood Cemetery, Westbury NY.

Fairchild Sons Funeral Chapel is at 1201 Franklin Avenue (@12th Street), Garden City NY 11530, 516-746-0585, opposite Lord & Taylor's and adjacent to Sears.

Directions to Fairchild: http://www.fairchildfuneral.com/mapdirections/

Mapquest to St. Anne's http://tinyurl.com/2lmdxo
We take this opportunity to send our deepest condolences to Gerry Regan.


Patricia Jameson-Sammartano
WGT Culture Editor

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