heritageatplay

Posts Tagged ‘USA’

“Playing Irish” Premiering This Weekend

In News, Playing Irish, Updates on September 13, 2010 at 7:58 pm

Playing Irish a 2010 documentary by Colleen Brogan & Zachary McCune will premiere in Newport

NEWPORT, R.I. – This Saturday (September 18th), Colleen Brogan & Zachary McCune will premiere their “Playing Irish” documentary at the Newport Public Library. The event will be free and open to the public. Nearly two months since the pair left Ireland, and three weeks since the team completed the film, the event will mark a celebratory conclusion to the Heritage at Play project. The Newport Public Library is located at 300 Spring Street Newport, Rhode Island and the screening will begin at 4:30 pm. A question and answer session with the filmmakers will follow, and items collected during the filming of “Playing Irish” will also be shared.

‘Playing Irish’ Completed!

In Broadcasts, Playing Irish, Updates on September 1, 2010 at 2:55 am

Playing Irish a film about gaelic games by Zachary McCune and Colleen Brogan

After dark, wet week in Cambridge, Mass. Colleen and I were able to complete our feature documentary. The result, a 32-minute exploration of what gaelic games are and what they mean to the Irish who play them, is cheerfully titled “Playing Irish.” The title is inspired as much by our experiences as filmmakers in Ireland, playing along within a world of Irish sports and culture, as it is by the fact that for many of the Irish people we met, gaelic games represent an Ireland at Play.

Much of the final film cut has been drawn from the best of our broadcasts so readers and viewers familiar with our material here on heritageatplay.org will recognize a number of the characters, places, and adventures shown in the final documentary. But fear not, the documentary also features a host of new material and more importantly, the entire approach to editing this final film was very unlike the broadcasts. Instead of focusing on our travels and experiences, “Playing Irish” approaches gaelic games as a single theme, working through its meaning to communities, players, coaches, and spectators around Ireland. The result, we think, is a tight and informative exploration of hurling and football, offering an introduction for the uninitiated and a succinct celebration of the GAA for the long-time fan. Or as we describe it on the DVD box (which are prototyping this week)

Gaelic Games are among Ireland’s most popular and celebrated pastimes, with massive stadiums, national television coverage, and a network of clubs criss-crossing the Emerald Isle.

But few outside of Ireland have ever heard of Gaelic Games, and fewer still know how they are played.

Just after graduating college, two Irish-American filmmakers (Colleen Brogan & Zachary McCune) set out for Ireland to learn about these ancient games and their importance to the Irish people.

And that’s the story we’re telling!

Flying out

In Uncategorized on June 23, 2010 at 9:57 pm

We are just taking our seats on Aer Lingus flight ei136 bound for Dublin. On the way on board we noticed that plane was named St. Aoife, a pleasant name for a plane. We will be arriving in Dublin at 5:30 in the morning Irish time. Our first piece of business will be meeting our landlord at 9:30 on the steps of Trinity College. We will see you all thereafter.

Playing In

In Competitions on June 7, 2010 at 6:40 pm

With the Statue of Liberty on its jersey, the New York GAA acknowledges its council as a result of the immigration that Lady Liberty often represents.

The GAA, as an organization that preceded the Republic of Ireland, has always emphasized the playing of gaelic games over political boundaries. As such, the GAA continues to organize the playing of gaelic games in Northern Ireland, and perhaps more interestingly, in London, New York, Chicago, Boston, and Philadelphia as well. These diaspora teams, frequently nicknamed “the exiles,” are not merely token GAA outfits abroad. To the contrary, London and New York (at least) have the ability to play in to the All-Ireland senior competitions in Hurling and Gaelic Football, presenting the somewhat odd possibility of a London and/or New York squad of athletes someday holding the title All-Ireland Champion at Croke Park in Dublin.

The manner in which New York and London compete for the All-Ireland crown is rather interesting. In hurling competitions, London and New York play into the Ulster bracket, placing them suggestively within the Irish-who-are-not-in-the-Republic-of-Ireland framework. Perhaps in an effort to avoid this type of conclusion, New York and London play into the Gaelic Football Competition through Connacht, where they are firmly within a Republic context.

Nevertheless, the fact of London and New York’s opportunity to compete as equals alongside the counties of Ireland in the prestigious All-Ireland Championships does nod at the fact that for the GAA and the players of Gaelic Games, these locations are of special distinction for concepts of Irishness outside of Ireland, a matter of pride evident in the websites and documents associated with these (and other) foreign GAA councils.

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