
EAST DURHAM―On Friday, July 24 at 8 p.m., McGrath's Edgewood Falls will tilt decisively toward the disco era, hosting an outdoor ABBA-themed night anchored by the touring tribute act Dancing Dream. The two-hour performance, set on an outdoor stage behind the pub and inn, invites attendees into a fully participatory experience—wigs, costumes, and all.
If it sounds familiar, that’s because it is. Two summers ago, the venue staged a similar night that drew a crowd large enough to spill onto the wraparound deck and press up against the dance floor.
For proprietor Colleen McGrath, who runs the pub and adjoining inn alongside her daughter (also named Colleen), the event is less a novelty than a continuation of something personal. She first saw Dancing Dream perform several years ago and loved them immediately. Booking them, she said, was an easy decision.
“They have their singing and movements down to a science,” she noted, encouraging anyone with even a passing affection for the 1970s to make an appearance.
The band itself trades in precision nostalgia. Dancing Dream has built a following across the Northeast by recreating not just the sound of ABBA, but the look and choreography, right down to the mirrored gestures and bright, theatrical costuming that defined the original group’s stage presence. Their set typically runs through the expected catalog of “Dancing Queen,” “Mamma Mia,” and “Take a Chance on Me,” but what keeps audiences engaged is the illusion of immediacy, the sense that this music, so tied to another decade, is happening again in real time.
At McGrath’s, that vision lands in a setting that already leans toward communal storytelling. The pub, long a fixture in East Durham’s Irish American corridor, has built its reputation on live music, themed events, and a kind of intergenerational hospitality that blurs the line between business and family gathering. Summer weekends often stretch late into the night, with bands rotating through and guests drifting between the bar, dining area, and outdoor spaces.
That overlap of music and memory isn’t accidental. McGrath points to her own family’s embrace of ABBA as part of the reason the event resonates. When her daughter married, the bridal shower leaned fully into the theme with wigs, costumes, and a soundtrack pulled straight from the Swedish quartet’s catalog. The comparison to Mamma Mia! isn’t lost on her―running an inn and pub together, she said, has occasionally felt like living inside a version of that story.
The event is designed to extend beyond the headliner. After Dancing Dream’s set concludes, a live band will take over to “keep the crowd going,” as McGrath put it, shifting the evening from tribute performance into a more open-ended dance night.
Tickets are $25 and available at the door or through Eventbrite.
















