Ann McNulty
The Melodeon (accordion) playing vaudevillian Ann “Ma” McNulty (1887–1970), widowed in 1928 in the wake of the Great Depression and determined to support and keep together the small remaining family of herself and her 2 minor children, went to stage with these children, who were Eileen McNulty (1915–1989), a songstress and dancer, and Peter McNulty (1917–1960), a singer, dancer, violinist, pianist and, eventually, a composer of music and lyrics. The trio, who were known as the “The McNulty Family’s Irish Showboat Revue”, first appeared on stage as such in 1932-1933 and through Ma’s astute show business acumen became almost immediately and remained for decades an astounding success on the U.S. East Coast entertainment circuit. The trio eventually appeared regularly on radio and at such venues as the Rockefeller Center's Radio City Music Hall, the Yorkville Casino, New York City’s Leitrim House and at Rockaway Beach, Queens. For 16 consecutive years the trio of "Ma" McNulty, Eileen McNulty and Peter McNulty sold out the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s 2,109 seat Howard Gillman Opera House. In their near 2 decades of music recording for labels like Decca Records, Standard and Copley from 1938-1956, the McNulty family’s “Showboat Revue” released 155 sides on 78-rpm shellac & vinyl. In 1953, they appeared through the then new entertainment venue of television on Milton Berle’s wildly popular Texaco Star Theater.[1]
“Ma” McNulty did not appear on stage during her children's earlier duo performances. In 1926, after one theater’s “professor” was unable to keep proper time for her children, “Ma” began, herself, keeping time for them from backstage on an old melodeon accordion. By 1928, she had been encouraged to perform on stage with her children. Though by the late 1930s, radio and motion pictures had already there and throughout the nation eclipsed as popular entertainment vaudeville, which had begun in the 1880s, the McNulty family managed to keep the art of Irish “vaudevillian” or variety theater alive on the U.S. East Coast well into the 1950s.[2] The McNulty family had a powerful influence on the development of the Music of Newfoundland and Labrador in its modern era.[3] Another testament to the popularity of the McNulty Family was the impressive number of recordings they made for Decca, Standard, and Copley: 155 sides on 78-rpm releases.[4]
Partial Discography
- Likeable Loveable Leitrim Lad, composed entirely and performed in part by Peter McNulty
- When I Mowed Pat Murphy’s Meadow[5]
- A Mother’s Love is a Blessing
- Boys from the County Cork
- Mother Malone
- Along the Rocky Road to Dublin
- When Rafferty Brought the Rumba to the Town of Aughnacloy
See also
Music of Newfoundland and Labrador
References
- ↑ Earle Hitchner “All Aboard The McNulty Family’s Irish Showboat” Irish Echo March 2, 2011 Arts & Leisure
- ↑ J.J. Lee and M.R. Casey Making the Irish American New York: New York University Press 2006, p 399 ISBN 978-0-8147-5208-1
- ↑ Osborne, Eveylyn (2013) The most (imagined) Irish place in the world?: the interaction between Irish and Newfoundland musicians, electronic mass media, and the construction of musical senses of place (doctoral dissertation) Memorial University of Newfoundland, Abstract retrieved from http://research.library.mun.ca/6216/
- ↑ The Irish Echo, All aboard the McNulty Family’s Irish Showboat, accessed 19 August 2015.
- ↑ Recorded by Peter McNulty in the 1950s, lyrics by J.M. Devine in the 1930s, about a field in King's Cove, Bonavista Bay, Newfoundland, where the lyricist spent his childhood; arranged by his granddaughter, Anne Devine Pitcher. It was then set to a tune composed in the '50s.