Raisin’ a Ruckus
How It All Really Started - A 24 Year Tradition
At 24 years of age, the North Texas
Irish Festival has grown into a veritable institution, a
national event, and a source of bragging rights for Texan
aficionados of Irish music and the City of Dallas alike. A
tourist reports that, while in a pub on the west coast of
Ireland, she heard this from a friendly local: “You’re from
Dallas, then? Have you ever been to the North Texas Irish
Festival?”
As with all great events, the origins
of NTIF have been lost in the myths of time and, well,
almost legend. With enough time and Guinness, it might soon
be rumored that Oisin himself wandered into Fair Park and
spontaneously began the first festival, assisted by the
Little People. The real beginnings are much more mundane,
but, in their own way, more wonderful.
It all started in a car, late at
night, in the winter of 1983. Peggy Turner and her husband,
Jim Brunke (member of the band Sungarden) had just met Ken
Fleming and Peggy Davis (of Tinker’s Dam) the previous fall.
Each band had been performing in the area for a year without
knowing of each other’s existence, and it gradually came to
light that there were several Celtic traditional bands in
Texas, mostly performing in isolated gigs.
Clearly, just a few years after the
Bothy Band and Planxty had begun popularizing Irish
traditional music in the Northeast and on the West Coast,
something was afoot right here in Texas. Ken Fleming mused
aloud: “How can we get all these bands together, share our
music, and create more public appreciation for Irish music?”
Such an effort, he proposed, would benefit all the bands.
Peggy Turner, a native of Wisconsin
and its renowned Milwaukee Irish Fest, immediately had an
idea. “Let’s have a ceili,” she said, meaning a gathering of
musicians and dancers that is open to the public. And faster
than you can say, “My uncle’s got a barn!”, Nick Farrelly’s
Lounge was proposed as the place, with Nick’s gracious
permission, and the first Saturday in March the time, just
to get everyone in the mood for St. Patrick’s Day. What
would grow the very next year into the NTIF was initially
dubbed “The First Texas Ceili,” and, with no budget at all,
volunteer efforts were established from the beginning as the
core of the festival’s success.
Ken Fleming and Peggy Turner
contacted bands, Ken and Jim printed and distributed
posters, and Peggy Davis spearheaded publicity. Ken was
point man on the planning, Jim was named treasurer, and the
two Peggys spent an afternoon in the kitchen cooking enough
Irish stew and baked potatoes to feed a hundred, the very
first NTIF food concession. Jim had five tee-shirts (one for
each organizer and a baby-size for son Zeke) emblazoned with
“First Texas Ceili”. It was believed by one organizer at
that time that producing souvenir tee-shirts to sell would
be too much of a financial risk.
Others added contributions that have
had a lasting effect on NTIF. Russ Alvey, a member of
Tinker’s Dam, created the “star and harp” logo that has
since been associated with the festival; Vickie Alvey baked
soda bread and desserts to sell. Marcie Milligan, Cheryl
McClure and Peggy Turner volunteered to teach Scottish and
Irish ceili dancing in the early hours of the ceili, which
lasted from 3:30 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.
The bands at the First Texas Ceili
were a demonstration of the extent to which Celtic music had
taken a hold in Texas: from Dallas, Tinker’s Dam, Sungarden,
and the late, great tenor Pat McCarthy; from Fort Worth,
Connemara; from Austin, Grimalkin; from Houston, Four Bricks
out of Hadrian’s Wall; from Denton, Westron Wynde; and from
Arlington, harpist Judith Romero. A “hooley,” the first of
what would become many sessions, would round out the
evening.
The ceili was successful beyond
anyone’s imagining. Two hundred people were expected; 600
lined up at the door on a cold, damp night. The two Peggys,
when they weren’t performing, huddled in the defunct,
freezing kitchen of the NFL, heating up stew and potatoes on
Coleman stoves and praying that the Health Department and
the Fire Marshall wouldn’t show up. The limited amount of
food quickly sold out.
Something was afoot. As the
result of the success of this little party at the NFL, seed
money was raised for the Southwest Celtic Music Association,
whose Ceili newsletter, concert series, workshops,
and ultimately NTIF would have an impact far beyond the City
of Dallas or even the State of Texas.
In the meantime, who would have
thought that on that rainy night in a leaky pub in Dallas,
Texas, a city with no indigenous Irish neighborhoods and no
tradition of Irish culture, a group of traditional musicians
and dancers -- meeting for the very first time --
would raise a ruckus that could be heard 24 years
later as one of the largest Irish festivals in the country?
Now there’s a legend for you. Article by Peggy Fleming,
originally printed in the SCMA Ceili |