With COVID-19 fading, St. Patrick’s Day celebrations swing into high gear
The St. Patrick鈥檚 Day parade that will be winding through the streets of downtown Pittsburgh on Saturday will contain all the elements that revelers have come to know and love 鈥 step dancers, baton-twirlers, pipe bands, people dressed like leprechauns and green as far as the eye can see.
This year, however, the St. Patrick鈥檚 Day parade will likely have merriment of an additional magnitude because it鈥檚 the first one in three years that is actually happening within the vicinity of St. Patrick鈥檚 Day.
The parade in 2020 was called off as COVID-19 was initially spreading around the world and the first lockdowns were put in place. Vaccines were starting to go into arms around St. Patrick鈥檚 Day last year, but organizers pushed the parade to September, making it a 鈥渉alfway to St. Patrick鈥檚 Day鈥 parade. With coronavirus numbers waning and normalcy seemingly within reach, the St. Patrick鈥檚 Day parade this year will take place on its traditional date, which has been the Saturday before the holiday.
And it will happen regardless of the weather 鈥 the marching bands braved the streets even when a fearsome blizzard descended on the region in 1993 鈥 and is set to start at 10 a.m. Parade-goers might want to pull their green galoshes and winter jackets out of the closet, since snow showers are forecast, with high temperatures not expected to get out of the 30s on Saturday. The parade will start at the Greyhound bus station at the intersection of Liberty Avenue and 11th Street, and proceed to Grant Street and then the Boulevard of the Allies. A receiving stand at Stanwix Street will mark the parade鈥檚 end.
Peter Shovlin, a 90-year-old Pittsburgh resident born in Liskerraghan, Ireland, is the grand marshal of this year鈥檚 parade. Shovlin is a charter member of the Irish Centre of Pittsburgh, and has long been dedicated to preserving Irish music and culture. He explained, 鈥淲hen you support the Pittsburgh St. Patrick鈥檚 Day parade, you鈥檙e really supporting St. Patrick. If he were alive today, and was given a cellphone and a computer, can you imagine what he would do when you see all that he accomplished with just a little shamrock?鈥
The parade is the highlight of the celebrations of the patron saint of Ireland in this region. There will, though, be plenty of other events happening. Of course, watering holes in the region will be pouring out green beer to patrons bedecked in shamrock bead necklaces, but other festivities are planned that don鈥檛 necessarily involve raising a glass or two or three.
The Carnegie Science Center will be celebrating Irish history, tradition and language on Saturday. Irish writer and actor Manchan Magan will be starring in the 70-minute production 鈥淎ran & Im鈥 at noon and 3 p.m. It celebrates Ireland, including its food, with freshly baked sourdough bread that visitors can spread with butter they churn themselves from Irish cream. Registration is not required to attend 鈥淎ran & Im,鈥 but seats and bread are available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Magan also appears in the documentary 鈥淚reland,鈥 which is showing in the Carnegie Science Center鈥檚 Rangos Giant Cinema until the end of July. Narrated by Liam Neeson, it looks at the natural wonders and cultural heritage of the Emerald Isle and is in 3D.
For those who like their St. Patrick鈥檚 Day revelry to have a somewhat darker cast, the Haunted Hills Estate Scream Park in Uniontown is offering two holiday-themed attractions tonight and Saturday. The first is the interactive murder mystery 鈥淕oldfellas,鈥 where visitors will help the O鈥橶eary Gang uncover a murderer, and the other, 鈥淣athair: The Summoning,鈥 promises 鈥渁 horrifying ritual.鈥 For additional information, go online to www.hauntedhillsestate.com.
Next Thursday, on St. Patrick鈥檚 Day itself, 鈥淭he Rhythm of the Dance鈥 will be at the Palace Theatre in Greensburg. It celebrates the dance, music, songs and culture of Ireland from pre-Celtic times to the present. 鈥淭he Rhythm of the Dance鈥 has been ranked one of the three top Irish step dance shows in the world.
Showtime is 7 p.m. and information is available at thepalacetheatre.org.





