Irish America – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Wed, 13 Dec 2017 18:36:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Irish America – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Students Spend an Evening Immersed in a Theatrical Production of James Joyce’s “The Dead” https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/81481/ Wed, 13 Dec 2017 18:36:02 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=81481
Last month, three students in my Texts and Contexts: Modern Irish Literature course were among the lucky few invited to participate in a dress rehearsal for The Dead, 1904, an immersive theater adaptation of a literary masterpiece.

“The Dead,” the concluding story in James Joyce’s 1914 collection Dubliners, is one of the most beloved and resonant works in Irish literature. It is set in turn-of-the-20th-century Dublin, on a snowy evening at the end of the Christmas season. A married couple, Gabriel and Gretta Conroy, arrive at the home of Kate and Julia Morkan for the sisters’ annual Feast of the Epiphany celebration.

It’s an evening of merriment and melancholy. They dine, dance, hear music, and give toasts. All of those assembled—with the exception of one intoxicated guest and one full of political passion—try their best to suppress their differences in the name of harmony and “Irish hospitality.”

Dublin by Way of the Upper East Side

The dramatization of Joyce’s story, which opened on November 18, takes place at the American Irish Historical Society on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. The society’s stately stone-and-brick Fifth Avenue town house, across the street from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, beautifully evokes the period in which the story is set.

For the dress rehearsal, I joined three of my students: computer science majors Zainab Shaikh and Chenelle Simpson, and environmental science major Lauren Beglin. Seated at the head table alongside the actors, we were served a holiday feast inspired by the one in the story and drawn into the events detailed by Joyce.

Fordham English professor Keri Walsh (center) with three of her students (from left), Chenelle Simpson, Zainab Shaikh, and Lauren Beglin, and Jean Hanff Korelitz, co-author of "The Dead, 1904," at the American Irish Historical Society.
Fordham English professor Keri Walsh (center) at the American Irish Historical Society with (from left) Chenelle Simpson, Zainab Shaikh, Lauren Beglin, and Jean Hanff Korelitz, co-author of “The Dead, 1904.”

Seeing Joyce’s Protagonist in a New Light

As the evening neared its end, we and several dozen other guests were invited up one flight of stairs to witness the climax of the story: Gabriel and Gretta’s post-party confrontation in a room at the Gresham Hotel. In this scene, staged in a darkened room with only a bed in it, Gretta recalls a lost love of her youth.

Lauren Beglin said the dramatization led her to reconsider the opinion she had formed of the story’s protagonist.

“In my initial reading of ‘The Dead,’ I did not have a very high opinion of Gabriel, especially in his treatment of Gretta in the final scene of the story. Seeing this scene brought to life, however, completely changed my view of him,” she said.

“Instead of a whiny man who could not bear the idea of his wife having a life before him, the actor’s performance recast him as a heartbroken man who loved his wife with all his heart and soul, but would never be able to truly express that to her because of her past, and would never be able to live up to her idea of love. It was a scene that humanized a character I formerly hated and completely changed my experience of ‘The Dead.'”

Chenelle Simpson said the production helped her realize that the characters of Gabriel and Gretta might be based not only on Joyce’s own life but also on the experiences of one of his important literary precursors, William Butler Yeats.

“The story reminded me of [Yeats’ muse] Maude Gonne, who also suffered a loss [that of her child], and how Yeats, like Gabriel, was unable to receive her ideal affection,” Simpson said. “Yeats, being such an inspiration at this time and being only 17 years older than Joyce, could possibly have influenced the characterization of Gabriel.”

An Intimate, Immersive Experience

Zainab Shaikh found herself impressed by the feats of acting required in immersive theater.

“One of the major lessons I learned was about the art of being in character but also connecting with your audience,” she said. “How can they keep us feeling comfortable? Do we communicate on the basis that it’s 1904 or 2017?

“They gracefully responded to all of our interactions and wove them into a great production. Their hospitality truly immersed me into Joyce’s world, their humor allowed me to loosen up, and the intimacy of the vast set, as paradoxical as that sounds, allowed for one-on-one interactions that seem to be missing from many theatrical shows.”

This year marks the second holiday season in which Dot Dot Productions, in collaboration with the Irish Repertory Theatre and the American Irish Historical Society, is staging Joyce’s story. The Dead, 1904 was adapted by Paul Muldoon and Jean Hanff Korelitz, and it is directed by Ciarán O’Reilly. The production is scheduled to run through January 7.

—Keri Walsh, Ph.D., is an associate professor of English at Fordham and the director of the University’s Institute of Irish Studies. She’s also the editor of Broadview Press’ 2016 edition of Dubliners. In a brief essay posted on the Broadview website, she describes the experience of editing and annotating “Joyce’s first masterpiece,” referring to “The Dead” as her “favorite story to edit, just as it is my favorite to read.” 

This story was first published in English Connect, the Fordham English department’s blog.

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Seven Questions with Terence Winch: Musician, Songwriter, Poet, Author https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/seven-questions-with-terence-winch-musician-songwriter-poet-author/ Wed, 22 Mar 2017 16:28:49 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=65691 Above (from left): Musicians Michael Winch, Terence Winch, and Jesse Winch at the Irish ambassador’s residence in Washington, D.C. (Photo courtesy of the Winch family)Terence Winch, GSAS ’69, has produced his first album in 10 years, This Day Too: Music from Irish America. He and his brother, Jesse—Bronx-born sons of Irish immigrants—were founding members of the original Celtic Thunder (not to be confused with the commercial group and stage show that later took the name). They were the first to record Terence’s best-known song, “When New York Was Irish,” which has been covered by many artists.

Since the 1970s, Winch has made his home in the Washington, D.C., area, though much of his work remains rooted in Irish-American New York. “Childhood Ground,” a track on the new album, recalls his boyhood neighborhood, which was razed to make way for the Cross Bronx Expressway during the late 1950s.

Winch’s poetry has appeared in more than 40 anthologies, including five Best American Poetry collections. He earned a master’s degree in English at Fordham in 1969 and, as a doctoral fellow, was a chapter away from completing his dissertation when he moved to D.C. In 2014, his undergraduate alma mater, Iona College, awarded him an honorary degree. “I finally got my doctorate,” he said.

How did “When New York Was Irish” come about?
In the late 1980s I really pushed Celtic Thunder to get a new album’s worth of material together. I had the chorus in my head for years and had never shared it with anyone, and before rehearsal I sat down and quickly wrote another few verses. Everyone was totally knocked out and that was the first sign to me that the song would resonate with people. I have at least 25 different recorded versions of it.

What brought you back to the studio for This Day Too?
I really wanted to do a recording project with my son. Michael is a terrific fiddle player. Given this point in my own life—I’m 71 now, he’s 27—I thought we should do a record together. My brother Jesse volunteered to be co-producer, and that kind of made the three of us the nucleus of the project, but since we are so involved in the Irish-American community in this area we knew we would be calling on lots of other friends to play on it.

From left: Paddy Winch (Terence’s father), Jesse Winch, and P.J. Conway during a June 1957 jam session in Queens, New York. A sample from some of Paddy Winch and P.J. Conway’s home recordings bookends the final track on “This Day Too,” a rendition of the song “The Homes of Donegal” on which Michael Winch plays his grandfather’s banjo and Terence plays P.J. Conway’s accordion (right).

How did Celtic Thunder get started?
When I moved to Washington, D.C., in 1972, Jesse was already here, and right away I found myself playing in a ceili band with him. Then we started an old-time music string band that, because of me and Jesse, played a lot of Irish music as well. Occasionally we would get an Irish gig and for those gigs we called ourselves Celtic Thunder. Jesse and I met a fiddle player named Steve Hickman and his wife, Linda Hickman, a flute player, around 1976. We also connected with singer Nita Conley, and the five of us started getting together and playing traditional Irish music. We really clicked. We took the spare name from the string band, and Celtic Thunder became popular pretty quickly.

You’ve published seven books of poetry and two short story collections, one fiction and one nonfiction. How would you characterize your writing?
Some of my poetry is narrative. But a lot of what I do is influenced more by avant-garde impulses and surrealism. Writing, for me, on some level is play. It has to have that element to it. It has to be something that is pleasurable, that exercises your creativity in a way that provides you with a certain level of satisfaction, and for me that involves doing more than just one kind of writing.

Tell me about your years at the Smithsonian Institution.
When I first moved to D.C., I made my living for years as a musician and freelance writer. After I got married, I started thinking I needed something more predictable. That’s when I sought work at the Smithsonian. I spent six years at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American Art—I was senior editor and acting head of publications there. In 1992 I moved to the National Museum of the American Indian and helped start a new publications department there. I was able to invent the whole operation and build it into what I think was a very successful enterprise. I produced somewhere in the neighborhood of 60 to 65 books as editor or project director. I had a great staff, and it was hard to leave, but I retired early. I recognized we don’t live forever and I wanted to spend as much time as I could with my own work.

I understand Boston College has acquired your literary and music archive.
I knew it would be a unique archive because it was split between music and writing. And I knew for anyone interested in Irish-American culture, it would be a good resource because I have been at the front lines of the Irish-American issue for 40 years or more. Fortunately, BC shared this view. One of my missions in life has been the promotion of Irish-American identity and the validity of Irish-American history and culture. Those ideas are more widely recognized and accepted today.

What’s next?
I have a book coming out in the fall from Hanging Loose Press—The Known Universe, a collection of poems written over the last few years. And I have a Young Adult novel, Seeing-Eye Boy, about a kid growing up in the Bronx in the 1950s, kind of modeled on me and a little bit on my son and father. It’s finished, but I don’t yet have a publisher for it. I’m still playing and still writing a lot. And I’m taking a course in the Irish language for the first time in my life, which I’ve always wanted to do.

Interview conducted, edited, and condensed by Carolyn Farrar, FCRH ’82.

Watch the video for “Childhood Ground”

 

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The Immigrant Experience and the Power of Stories: A Talk with Novelist Peter Quinn, GSAS ’75 https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/the-immigrant-experience-and-the-power-of-stories-a-talk-with-novelist-peter-quinn-gsas-75/ Wed, 01 Mar 2017 19:22:16 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=65147 Above: Bronx-born writer Peter Quinn, shown here on the steps of the New York Public Library, will be the featured speaker on March 17 at Fordham’s St. Patrick’s Day Brunch in Manhattan. (Photo by Michael Falco)Peter Quinn’s New York roots are nearly as old as Fordham’s. His great-grandparents Michael and Margaret Manning emigrated from Ireland sometime around 1847 (six years after the University was founded) and settled on a farm not far from the Rose Hill campus.

“I was told that my great-grandfather cobbled the shoes of the Jesuits there,” says Quinn, who earned a master’s degree in Irish history at Fordham in 1975.

Four years later, he left academia to become a speechwriter for New York governors—first for Hugh Carey until 1982, and then for Mario Cuomo. Quinn was a key contributor to several of Cuomo’s most memorable speeches, including his July 1984 keynote address at the Democratic National Convention—widely regarded as one of the most powerful of the past four decades.

Quinn left the governor’s office in 1985 to become the chief speechwriter for Time Warner—a transition he made while working on Banished Children of Eve: A Novel of Civil War New York, which won a 1995 American Book Award.

He followed that with a collection of essays, Looking for Jimmy: A Search for Irish America (2007), and a series of historical novels—Hour of the Cat (2005), The Man Who Never Returned (2010), and Dry Bones (2013)—all featuring private detective Fintan Dunne.

Quinn and his wife, Kathleen, have two adult children, both of whom are Fordham graduates. He recently met with FORDHAM magazine to discuss his family history, his writing, and more.

In this 2007 collection of essays, Quinn combined personal anecdote and historical fact to relate the epic struggle of the Irish in America.

How much did you know about your ancestors when you were growing up? Did your parents talk much about them?
No. I mean, I heard anecdotes and I always knew I was Irish—our Catholicism was our Irishness. But I think my parents’ generation felt, “We’re moving into America. That is the past. There’s no need to have it beyond St. Patrick’s Day.” You’re very proud of being Irish, but the particulars of it were not of interest. I think in my parents’ case, and their parents’, they pushed their children ahead, you know, and made sure that they went to college. I only knew one grandparent, and they never talked about Ireland. Never. And I think they loved cities—you know, the whole Irish farming experience hadn’t been too great.

Your great-grandfather Michael Manning, how much do you know about what brought him to America?
It was the famine that would have brought him. He would have been one of the 2 million Irish who left in 10 years.

When did you really delve into that history and learn more about what the immigrant experience must’ve been like for him?
Well, that’s how I wound up writing a novel. I was studying for a Ph.D. in Irish history with Maurice O’Connell at Fordham. Then I left the academic world to go into politics, and I used to go to the state library to research speeches. I found this housing report for 1855 that was like a description of Dickensian London. I recognized that this is where my great-grandparents lived, and I had never heard anything about it. So then I began to look into that, the conditions in New York in the 1840s and ’50s. It had an infant mortality rate like the third world. It didn’t have a sewer system. So I realized, in a sense, why they didn’t tell us all this growing up. What was the use in knowing that?

Do you think there is a tendency to romanticize the immigrant experience generations later, and do you see a danger in that?
Oh, yeah, it’s a human tendency. It becomes part of a sentimental path rather than a reliving of the brutal reality that so many people go through.

And I think the danger is that you can lose sympathy with people in poverty and difficult circumstances now, thinking, “We were more noble the way we did it.” You forget the people who didn’t survive, who were victims of a lack of opportunity, poverty. We tidy it up. I always say America loves immigrants, but they have to be here two or three generations before anybody loves them.

People lose sight of the kind of labels and stereotypes that have been attached to new immigrant groups. The Irish, their disease was cholera. People thought they carried it with them. It came from tainted water, but people didn’t want to live around the Irish because they thought it was their disease, and they were judged to be mentally inferior to Anglo-Saxons. It’s like IQ tests, when they were first used at Ellis Island: They felt that Italians and Jews would bring down the national IQ. So you just see these things, and I don’t know how you cure it.

I think if you’re Irish and if you understand your history, if it doesn’t leave you with sympathy for the underdog, I don’t know what would.

Archbishop John Hughes (Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)

You’ve written—both in Banished Children of Eve and in Looking for Jimmy—about the pivotal role Archbishop John Hughes, Fordham’s founder, played in galvanizing “the Irish-American process of reorganization” in the mid-19th century. How would you sum up his contributions?
I always say he was as much an Irish chieftain as a Catholic churchman. He’s the stem of the whole flower, the central figure, or however you want to describe it. He was here when a million Irish came out of Ireland from the famine, essentially skill-less, impoverished, and he was the mainspring of their reorganization. I always say that the Irish experience in America was about reorganizing. They were a mob when they came here. They had no financial resources. They had no education. They had no skills.

The engines of reorganization were the Catholic Church, the Democratic Party (which called itself the “Organization”), and the labor movement. The thing was to know the community was there, and it held together. Things cohered.

How did you go from grad school at Fordham to political speechwriting?
I wrote an article for America magazine in 1979 called “An American Irish St. Patrick’s Day.” I submitted it because, I didn’t know it at the time, but I was fascinated by this Irish-American experience that seemed to me to be going away without having been examined. We never looked at ourselves. Now we were moving to the suburbs. We were losing that thing I was talking about; the coherent thing was falling apart. But where was the record of it? Supposedly the Irish are great writers, but I couldn’t find any novels about the Irish-American experience. One, Elizabeth Cullinan, she wrote a beautiful novel, House of Gold, about the Bronx parish that I grew up in. But I remember everybody was horrified that she wrote it. She was putting out the family laundry. My mother was like, “How could she do that?”

So I wrote the article about this, and a Fordham alumnus read it and gave it to [New York Governor] Hugh Carey, who knew my father and was looking for a speechwriter. Out of the blue, they asked me to write the Fordham Law School commencement speech for him. I’d never written a speech. But I was looking for a job, and I didn’t want to be underemployed, so I wrote the speech. They really liked it and eventually offered me a job. I said I’ll do it for a year and then go back to academics. That was almost 40 years ago.

What did you learn from your experience in Albany?
To work in politics behind the scenes, you learn so much about the dynamics of human interrelationships, how much is based on personal relationships. Merit and hard work are no match for it. You know what was the great motto of the Albany machine? Honesty is no substitute for experience.

At what point did an academic career recede in your rearview mirror?
It receded when I got my second raise. I was making about twice what I’d been making. And then I got married. My wife is from the Bronx. We knew each other 14 years before we got married. That’s what’s known in the west of Ireland as a “whirlwind courtship.” She had moved to Albany for graduate school. She was a rehabilitation counselor. We reunited and got married. Finishing the doctorate would have been taking a big step backward. And some part of me always wanted to be a writer. It was an ambition.

Songwriter Stephen Foster is one of the real-life figures featured in Peter Quinn’s award-winning debut novel. (Library of Congress)

Tell me about the genesis of Banished Children of Eve. I understand you initially thought you were going to write a history of the Irish in New York. Is that right?
I was an ex-academic. I still have a big interest in history. I used to send away for remaindered books. As I began to think about the experience of the famine Irish coming into New York, I realized there was really no central history written of it, this big event. I got one book on the Draft Riots, The Armies of the Streets [by Adrian Cook]. This historian did what no historian had done before. He went down and got the records from the morgue. They used to say a thousand people died in the riots. He could identify a hundred and something people. One of the names was Peter Quinn. My Quinn ancestors weren’t here yet. They didn’t come until 1870, but I was like, “Whoa, who is he?”

The personalization of history struck me. There were no diaries, no records. Nobody wrote. There’s not a scrap of paper in my family of anybody’s experience. So I wanted to write a history, but I began to realize the voices I wanted were not recorded. Then I found out that this songwriter, Stephen Foster, was in New York at the time of the Draft Riots. I went down—I think he committed suicide in the New England Hotel on the Bowery, and I stood in front of it. Every novelist is part psychotic; we hear voices. And standing there, I kind of felt I knew who he was. I had never written fiction, not a lick of it. But I said the only way I reach those voices is in novels.

How conscious were you of the fact that as a novelist you were drawing from your work experiences—for example, from the time you worked as a court officer in the Bronx?
At some points I was, absolutely. Dealing with a city, I felt like it was in extremis [as it was during the Civil War]. Being in the South Bronx in the ’70s in a uniform and sitting in a courtroom with 150 people and saying, “Well, you know, these people look poor and strange to me. And this is what my ancestors looked like to the people who were wearing the uniforms at that time.”

I figured it wasn’t just an Irish story I was telling at that point because once you stepped off those boats, you’re no longer Irish. You’re still Irish, but you’re becoming something else. And part of that experience is you have to interact with people you never had to interact with before. You might hate them. But you have to live with them, and some part of you is going to rub off on each other. That dynamic hasn’t changed.

Since 2005, you’ve published a trilogy of historical-mystery novels featuring the Irish-American detective Fintan Dunne. Do you see those books as part of a continuum that began with Banished Children of Eve?
Yes, Fintan Dunne is a descendant of Jimmy Dunne [in Banished Children of Eve], but I don’t know how. He’s a cousin somehow. The idea was that they would be three books that would stand alone, but in a way tell the history of New York from the First World War to the Cold War. And the thread would be this Irish-Catholic guy, Fintan Dunne.

I love Raymond Chandler. I always felt his character Philip Marlowe, he’s really Irish American with his hard-edged blend of cynicism and idealism, and he belongs in New York. So that was the inspiration for Fintan Dunne. I knew people that lived in that New York, and the thing about New York is, you never have to look for a story to tell. It’s right there in front of you.

Peter Quinn’s trilogy of novels featuring New York detective Fintan Dunne

How do you go about conducting research for your novels? When do you know enough’s enough?
I love doing research. Every writer wants excuses not to write, and research is the best excuse to have because you’re still working on the book. What I would try to do is immerse myself to the point where I would feel that I have some sense of that world. Then I would start to write, and if I had to look for other pieces, I would.

When I was researching Banished Children, my wife and daughter were away for the summer at Shelter Island. I would go out on weekends, but every night after work, I’d go to the newspaper division of the New York Public Library. I read all of the newspapers from the Civil War. I remember sitting there, and the air conditioner wasn’t working. It was August. I said, well, now I’ll read all of Harper’s Weekly. Then I realized I can either write this or research it for the rest of my life because the research is quicksand; it’s so interesting.

Did it get harder to stop researching for the Fintan Dunne books because it’s just so much easier to find things these days?
Oh, yeah, it’s unbelievable. I used to keep a list at my desk. I’d write down things to look up. Then at lunch hour—I was working at the Time-Life building—I’d run to the library. Now you just go online. It’s so much easier but not as much fun. It was so much more like detective work before. You were like Fintan Dunne. You were a gumshoe tracking stuff down.

What does it mean to you to be an American of Irish ancestry born in New York? What kind of cultural inheritance do those three things imply?
My father once said to me that the legacy of being Irish is having a sense of humor and rooting for the underdog. And if you’re going to live in New York City, those are two necessary things!

And I think the great thing about being Irish and Catholic in New York is you don’t have to be. Everybody can choose what they want to be. It’s not an identity imposed on you. Tomorrow, I could be an American Buddhist. To me, that makes it so much more valuable, you know, that freedom to be what you want to be that New York confers, I think, as much or more than any place in the world. I can be this. Then I can admit other people’s rights to their choices.

You’ve talked about storytelling as a noble occupation, something that unites us all. Would you elaborate on that?
You grow up, and you think there are serious jobs—accountant, lawyer, business CEO—and then you realize, the most important thing human beings have, the thing that makes us human, are stories. The first thing we did after we sat around campfires was to tell each other stories. It is essentially what it is to be human.

In every human society, one of the most important persons has been the storyteller, the seanachie in Irish. Before the Bible was written, it was spoken. Every religion is organized around a story. Every nation is organized around a story. Every family has its own myth.

Now I think there are bad stories. There are stories that are written or told badly, and then there are stories that are bad, like eugenics. That was a bad story. It was essentially a story that was used against other people to commit mass murder. Stories are very powerful.

One of the things I learned in writing speeches was that a good speech is a good story. And [Ronald] Reagan, one of his powers as president was, he had a story. He had the story of the frontiersman and the lone pioneer. One of the reasons why Cuomo is remembered is he had a story too—family, mom and pop. That’s what people listen to.

Do you ever itch to be back where you were—
To be young with hair? Sure, everybody does.

I mean, as a political speechwriter, having the opportunity to help tell a story in that way?
No. I’m really glad I did it. It was a defining experience. It helped me be a writer in ways I can’t describe. But I would never, ever want to do it again. For five minutes, I wouldn’t want to do it again. And I do think you have to be young to do it. It’s physically taxing. And it’s an exercise in anonymity.

Next month, you’ll be participating in a Fordham conference on “The Future of the Catholic Literary Imagination.” How would you define that term, and do you think of yourself as a Catholic writer?
When I’m writing, I never think about being Catholic. It’s just who I am. I’m not advancing any dogmas.

I have an essay in Looking for Jimmy where I said there are three elements to the Catholic imagination: sin, grace, and mercy. I wrote that years ago, and Pope Francis, the word he uses all the time now is mercy. We don’t want justice. We want justice for other people. We want mercy for ourselves. In politics, there’s not much mercy. It’s always been an in-demand commodity in the world, and it always will be, because it’s such a leap. Mercy is not deserved. It’s freely given, and there’s no rationale for it.

Interview conducted, edited, and condensed by Ryan Stellabotte.

Watch Peter Quinn’s New York, a five-minute video in which Quinn talks about his noir-tinged Fintan Dunne series and the city as muse. “For me,” he begins, “New York City isn’t so much a setting as it is a character. It destroys some people, elevates others. But one thing New York won’t do is leave you alone. It’s always changing.”

 

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Alumni and Friends of Fordham Dominate at 2011 Irish America Hall of Fame https://now.fordham.edu/arts-and-culture/alumni-and-friends-of-fordham-dominate-at-2011-irish-america-hall-of-fame/ Wed, 02 Feb 2011 20:50:27 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=42187 When Irish America magazine celebrates the inductees at the 2011 Irish America Hall of Fame awards luncheon on March 15, Fordham alumni and friends will be a big part of the proceedings.

The ceremony at the New York Yacht Club will honor bestselling author Mary Higgins Clark, FCLC ’79, grand marshal of this year’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Manhattan; William J. Flynn, GSAS ’51, chairman emeritus of Mutual of America, and champion of the Irish peace process in his role as chairman of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy; and diplomat Jean Kennedy Smith, who received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Fordham in 1995 (the same year Mary Robinson, then president of Ireland, delivered the commencement address).

Honorees Denis Kelleher, founder and CEO of Wall Street Access, and Chuck Feeney, Irish American billionaire philanthropist, also have close ties to the University. They are being honored along with James Watson, Ph.D., co-discoverer of the double helical structure of DNA (for which he received a Nobel Prize in 1962), and Michael Flatley, choreographer and dancer, and the creator of The Lord of the Dance.

The Irish America Hall of Fame honors “the extraordinary achievements of Irish-American leaders — from their significant accomplishments and contributions to American society, to their personal commitment to safeguarding their Irish heritage and the betterment of Ireland.” Irish America magazine has been in print for more than a quarter century, and is a leading publication of Irish interest in North America.

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