Showing posts with label Peach State Storytelling Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peach State Storytelling Festival. Show all posts

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Gleaning Facebook: Peach State Storytelling Festival

 First of all, we folks in the Southern Order of Storytellers owe a debt of gratitude to Anthony Vinson, director of this year's Peach State Storytelling Festival. I think the overall quality of the stories was top notch. Sheila and I thoroughly enjoyed every session that we attended!

Well done, Anthony!
This festival is one of my favorites because it always includes an outstanding national teller, but also local and regional tellers and kids. It also includes at least a couple of workshops. And there are always shows/activities for all ages. This year Bil Lepp was the big attraction who kept us in stitches. There may be a couple of tellers who can match Bil in drawing power, but not many more than that! But the regional and local folks were also outstanding. Our current Big Fibbers champ is a case in point. This evening she contributed two stories to the Tall Tales session that were gems. Don't miss her story on opening night, March 17, here in Rome. She also plans to defend her title the next night in the 240th Annual Big Fibbers Contest!




Monday, January 11, 2016

Gleaning Facebook: Elizabeth Davis & Peach State Storytelling Festival



I had a great time talking about the Peach State Storytelling Festival with Elizabeth Davis on WLAQ this morning.

Elizabeth, born and raised in the radio business, is a wonder to watch and listen to. She flips those switches meshing interviews with politicians, ads, network updates; throwing in weather and bits of commentary on breaking news events; all the while dashing back and forth to refresh her coffee or grab some piece of info she needs or chatting with me, never missing a beat or allowing any "dead" time.
I hope some Rome folks will make the one-hour dash down I-75 to join us for Peach State. It will be lots of fun! Bil Lepp and lots of local and regional tellers will intrigue you with tales of all varieties. Check out the Facebook link above!

Tuesday, January 05, 2016

Gleaning Facebook: Peach State Storytelling Festival

Just head down i-75, take a left onto i-85. You can see the UUCA building from the interstate. It's right there on the frontage road. Well worth an hour's drive. Come Saturday afternoon and you can hear that Great Prevaricator ...ME!

And some poor guy who can't even spell "Bill" 😉




 

Monday, January 04, 2016

Gleaning Facebook: Peach State Storytelling Festival

Hey, y’all don’t miss the tall tales at Peach State! 4:30 on Saturday afternoon. Four of the rascals are Big Fibbers Festival alumni, and the fifth, Ron Kemp, barely missed telling at last year’s Big Fibbers. He was our standby teller in case someone had to drop out. I'll bet he tells this year.

The amazing Tracy Walker was our 2015 Big Fibbers champion! Frank Causey wowed us with his motorcycle tale and garnered a runner-up award. I am a two-time Big Fibbers Contest winner (2012 & 2014). And, of course, Bil Lepp was our headliner last year and is generally conceded to be the top fibber in America. (Paula and the kids are so proud!)
So come enjoy a program of bald-faced absolutely-real stories. You can take our word for that.




Sunday, January 25, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: Peach State Storytelling Festival

 We had a great time at the Peach State Storytelling Festival. I got to tell my winning fib from last year's Big Fibbers Storytelling Festival again. I was thrilled to see the dean of American Storytelling, Donald Davis, laughing in the audience. Donald's program tonight started at eight. He kept us chuckling for an hour and a half with three tales. Too late to write about it tonight. Maybe tomorrow! After a busy weekend and late nights I sing at all three services at Trinity in the morning. G'nite all.

David Jones
I know you were great


Terrell Shaw
Thanks!


Terrell Shaw
I wish you could have been there tonight. You woulkd have gotten a kick out of Donald.


Terrell Shaw
My fellow Roman, Gary Greene wowed 'em with his great song (and story) Cherokee Names.


Terrell Shaw
Martin Penland Teem
I used your name in vain again!


Martin Penland Teem
I'm flattered, I think.


Terrell Shaw
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Saturday, January 24, 2015

Gleaning Facebook: Peach State Storytelling Festival

We had a great first evening at the Peach State Storytelling Festival. I got there in time to sit in on the Southern Order of Storytellers business meeting and hear from our new president, Mary Williams.

The evening concert had three regional storytelling acts introduced by eloquent emcee, Barry Stewart Mann, who set things up with a very brief tale of the relationship between Shaow and Light.
First came the husband and wife tamdem storytelling team, Jill & Bill. They gave us a feel for their travels as newlyweds and then as new parents and tension between Jill's need for certainty and Bill's spontaneity from Atlanta to Texas to San Francisco and Hong Kong.
Shannon Turner told of her adventures as a 14 year old discovering her aunt's romance novels, and reading them on the floor of the walk-in closet, and then all the wonders of Readers Digest. Her boyfriend from summer camp actually wrote her. And it's still the best love letter of Shannon's life. He traced his hand on the letter and asked her to place hers where his had been and remember when those hands had been clasped. I'd say that boy was dangerous! That aunt and another aunt, her sister, whose childhood fall left her handicapped were important to Shannon's life in different ways. Fishing one day with her family, Shannon managed to lose her grip on a stringer full of fish.
As a grown up the she saw selfishness and duplicity in some family members as well as finer attributes in others. She closed the tale wondering what had happened to those fish, tethered as they were. Did they learn to swim together, or did they die.
Tracy Sue Walker closed us out with her eloquent and melodious voice, beginning and ending her program with song. I think I enjoyed hers most of all, despite the fact that I had heard versions of each of her stories.
The first she personalized by setting it in last winter's "Snowpocalypse" along the Chattahoochee in North Georgia. Three male hunters, lost in the snow came to the wide Chattahoochee. The first prayed for strength and stamina to swim the swift, frigid waters, and after much effort struggled across. The second added a request for equipment to help him across, and was given a canoe. He barely managed to cross, with great effort, the raging stream. The third added intelligence to the prayer. He was made a woman, checked a map, and walked across the bridge just downstream!
Her second story was about Copper Annie who unwittingly married the devil.
Tracy Sue finished up by singing one of my old favorites: The Farmer's Cursed Wife, inviting the audience to join in the chorus after each silly verse.
Hope I can sleep now. I had coffee to keep me awke on the drive home. Now I need sleep.


Saturday, January 25, 2014

Gleaning Facebook: Peach State Storytelling Festival

 A great night of southern storytellers: Jan Cribbs, LaDoris Bias-Davis, and Cynthia Rintye.

Jan, in her measured, calm delivery, is the quintessential introvert-storyteller. Who'd a'thought such a beast extant? And this was the story of her quest for vim and vigor from a ginseng and herb shop and the not yet American-certified Dr. Lee, who prescribed Green Onions.
LaDoris is not an introvert. I thought she was about to tell one of my old standbys (and Danny Kaye's) when she announced a short tale: "The Tailor". But this marvelous tailor, capable of fantastic feats such as the mending of broken hearts, was called on to stitch up a hole in the sky. Her second "tale" was a hodgepodge of entertaining anecdotes about the "Things People Say" in her home state of "Mis'sippi"
The final tale was Cynthia's long, funny, and touching tale of her on-again, off-again courtship and eventual marriage with Perry. They met, and both worked for several years, at a Renaissance Fair. Perry's job was to play the Village Idiot dragging a pet log around the fair. "Other women claim to be married to an idiot," says Cynthia, "I have proof."
There'll be more stories all day tomorrow from 10 a.m. till about 10 p.m. Check the photos of the festival program (below) for more info.
Here is the program from the festival (Click each picture to see the enlarged type):