The
Wild Geese, Inc., the Irish cultural organization, is pleased to
announce the selection of Pulitzer Prize winning author Frank McCourt as
their Twentieth Anniversary Celtic New Year Ball Honoree for Outstanding
Contribution to Irish Culture. McCourt is known the world over for
Angela's Ashes, his sensitive and truthful portrayal of his
"miserable Irish childhood" that became a publishing
phenomenon.
The Ball is to be held on Saturday,
October 26, 2002, 8 PM to 12 midnight, at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Old
Greenwich, Connecticut. The evening will start with a cocktail
hour at 6:30 PM, which ends when the guests are led in to the grand
ballroom by the Emerald Society Pipe Band of Greenwich. Following
the invocation, the black-tie event begins with dinner, then dancing,
and traditional Irish entertainment, as well as the presentation of the
award to Mr. McCourt.
The Wild Geese Celtic New Year Ball is
a celebration of an ancient Irish tradition. The Celtic New Year
was coincidental to the contemporary holiday of Halloween, the modern
practices which have been attributed to Irish immigrants. In old
Irish calendars, the end of the old year, signifying the end of the
growing season and harvest time, was October 31, and the new year began
on November 1. It was also a time of the year when the ancients
remembered the dead of the past, an annual memorial of ancestors as well
as a night of spirit and mischief.
Mr. McCourt's life is modern
legend. His childhood, form its beginning in New York City
tenements, to the slums of Limerick, is the basis of the prize-winning
1996 biography, Angela's Ashes. It is a story that, if not for the
fact that it was real, could have been written by Charles Dickens.
It has all the elements of a Dickens tale - death and dying, disease,
illness and disability, family tragedy, poverty, survival, lost youth,
alcoholism, romantic politics and bitter hatreds. It includes the
influence of religion, secrets, and above all, humor, love, and a look
at life through the eyes of a child.
McCourt eventually made it out of the
Irish ghetto he lived in, and came to America when he was nineteen, the
subject of his second book, Tis. This work recounts his struggles
as an immigrant working in New York City, while he earned his teaching
degree, married, and eventually taught at the prestigious Stuyvesant
High School in New York City. Currently, Mr. McCourt lives in both
New York City and Connecticut with his wife, Ellen.
The award for Outstanding Contribution
to Irish Culture is given to those individuals who have had a singular
impact in advancing a more universal awareness of Ireland's unique
culture and traditions. Among past honorees are Irish playwright
Brian Friel; Paddy Maloney, founder of the traditional music group The
Chieftains; film and stage actor Milo O'Shea; Claire Grimes, former
owner and publisher of the Irish Echo newspaper; and most recently
international film star Gabriel Byrne.
The Celtic New Year Ball is the
organization's major fund-raising event of the year. Proceeds from
the Celtic New Year Ball have enabled The Wild Geese to award grants to
groups whose projects foster and reflect positive and productive
attitudes of Irish culture. Some of the past recipients have been:
Armagh Together (Ireland), Book of Kells Reproductions, Crawford
Municipal Museum (Ireland), Fairfield University Irish Cultural Series
(Connecticut), Famine Symphony (New York), Glucksman Ireland House (New
York), Irish Repertory Theatre, Irish Way Program, Northern Irish
Children's Enterprise, Project Children, The Shamrock Traditional Irish
Music Society (Connecticut), Stokestowne Famine Museum (Ireland), The
Tara Circle (New York), and Teach Synge (Ireland).
For a formal invitation to this event,
when they are available, click
here.