Get to Know Don White

Get to Know Don White

Don White is a storyteller-comedian-author-troubadour-folk singer-songwriter, and since it’s his first time performing at the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival we thought it would be nice if he could introduce himself to our Festival attendees so we asked him three questions.

1. This is our 30th anniversary and we’re so happy you will be celebrating this milestone with us. As a first-time teller at the festival, what would you like our audience to know about you?

“My performances used to be songs with little stories in between them. Over the past twenty years they became stories with little songs in between them. I like to go back and forth between being funny and being serious. I think humor that is friendly and not mean spirited is a very powerful tool for connecting with an audience. I’m interested in putting stories into the world through as many genres as possible. Whether I am singing or telling, being funny or serious, speaking plainly or poetically, I am always trying to serve the story so that it will find as many ears and hearts as possible.

Old people are hunched over by the weight of their untold stories.
If you encourage an old man to tell you his stories you will see his back straighten and his skin tighten quite discernibly with the telling of each one.
If an old woman could find an attentive ear for the dispensing of only one story each day she would be young again in the span of one year.

An odd world, don’t you think, where billions of stories live for year upon year in search of a place to be told?

Of what earthly good is a story without an ear to receive it, without a mind to be challenged by it, without a sense of wonder to marvel at it and, most importantly, without an open heart to possibly see the world differently after being moved by it?

It is something of a miracle to me that a body of ninety years can summon the strength to move one inch under the weight of ten thousand untold stories.”

2. Our theme this year is Timeless Tales. Would you consider your stories to be more timeless (traditional stories) or timely (personal narrative)?

“My stories and songs are drawn from my life. I’d like to think that the stories I tell from my life focus on universal themes.”

3. How can a new fan hear more from you after the festival? Do you have any published work, a website or other social media sites?

“I have a website: www.donwhite.net – and a facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Don-White-62176263069/ – My ten CDS, my two DVDs and my book are available on the website as well as lots of concert video for viewing.

You can see Don and all of the other tellers at the 30th Anniversary of the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival September 5-7, 2019 at the Ashton Gardens at Thanksgiving Point by purchasing tickets online or at the gate.

Andy Hedges, Cowboy Poet and Songster

Andy Hedges, Cowboy Poet and Songster

Andy Hedges is new to the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival this year, but his brand of storytelling is not. He joins a select group of cowboy poets and storytellers that have graced the stage at the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival, so we asked him to introduce himself and his Texas brand of storytelling.

“I come from Lubbock, Texas and I recite cowboy poetry and I sing old-time cowboy songs. Cowboy poetry is an oral storytelling tradition and I think it will be a great fit at the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival.

Would you consider your stories to be more timeless (traditional stories) or timely (personal narrative)?

“I would say more timeless traditional stories. My performances are centered around traditional cowboy poetry recitations and the folk songs of the working cowboy. Many of these poems have been passed down for generations and the roots of cowboy music go all the way back to the British Isles.”

Where can we go to hear more from you?

“I’m on all of the social media sites but a great way to hear more from me is to listen to my podcast Cowboy Crossroads. I do in-depth interviews with poets, musicians, and working cowboys. My guests have included Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Waddie Mitchell, and Colter Wall. It’s available on my website (www.andyhedges.com) and on podcast providers like iTunes and Spotify.”

Thanks Andy. We’re looking forward to having you join us at our 30th annual festival. To see Andy, get your tickets to the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival September 5-7 at the Gardens at Thanksgiving Point.

Introducing Simon Brooks

Introducing Simon Brooks

One of the new featured tellers at the festival is Simon Brooks. He is here to help us celebrate our 30th anniversary and we’ve asked him to tell us a little about himself.

“I was born in Tuffley, Gloucestershire, England, but spent most of my growing up in Worcester, near the Malvern Hills and the Welsh border. From Worcester we would make forays into Wales to see the castles, and travel visiting standing stones burial grounds, battle sights and other story places. I moved to the United States in 1994 to marry an American girl I had met in Eastbourne, England where I had been working and telling tales! Fast forward 25 years. We now live in New London, New Hampshire, New England, New World, and have a son and daughter, and cat and dog. If you follow me on Instagram (SimonMBrooks), you will see the hashtag – #inthewoodswithmoe which shows the hikes I take with my dog. You will also see where I have been telling my tales when you use #ontheroadstorytelling.

The tales I tell are the Ancient Tales – myths, legends, folk and fairy tales. I rarely tell personal stories, although sometimes use personal narrative as a segue in or out of a tale. I feel the old stories are powerful, and filled with wisdom and wonder, whereas my life is well, my life and therefore lacking mermaids, giants, and the wee folk I love so much! I tell these tales to adults as well as children, and absolutely love my job.

I have five CDs out, Second-hand Tales (2006); More Second-hand Tales (2008), which won a Silver Honors from Parent’s Choice; and A Tangle of Tales (2011), which won a Gold Award from people’s Choice. In 2015 I hurriedly released Moonlit Stories for a theatre show – Revels North which features Tam Lim. This went from inception to release in under two months! Never again. I released The Epic of Gilgamesh, a retelling in 2017, and in 2018 it won a Gold Award from Parent’s Choice. This is an authentic retelling of the epic, and accessible to anyone, with the goal of being appropriate for middle school children. I felt the versions I saw used in schools I visited were not authentic, or were boring. I have a lot of very happy Gilgamesh fans out there of all ages!

My first book, Under the Oaken Bough, a collection of 17 folk and fairy tales, was released in 2018 to great reception. It is a handy little book with a section on tips for telling, an author’s Q & A (did you know that most authors write their own Qs to A?), a resource list/bibliography, and a lexicon, or vocab list with all the “big words” so I wouldn’t have to take them out of the book! It is published by Parkhurst Brothers and is available most places – order it from your local brick and mortar book shop or snag your copy at Timpanogos! Although you can order it on-line!

If you have never heard my work before, or want to hear even more of my work, my CDs can be found for sale at my distributor, CDBaby: https://store.cdbaby.com/artist/simonbrooksstoryteller
and here: https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/simonbrooks5

I also have a number of other places you can find my work. On SoundCloud (https://soundcloud.com/smbrooks) I rotate work in and out, put new work up, some of which might make future albums. My YouTube Channel (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQmugRW-V4nqesolERq-0QA) features a number of videos of me performing, and some other storytellers who were filmed by me. You can find my work for free on my website SimonBrooksStoryteller.com (which points to https://www.diamondscree.com/ ) > Videos, Audio and Free Stuff page (https://www.diamondscree.com/freestuff). If you are interested in listening to interviews of the elders in my community who tell, or told folk and fairy tales, myths and legends – such as Elizabeth Ellis, Laura Simms, Michael Parent, Jay O’Callahan and others – please visit my podcast: https://smbrooks.podbean.com/ which comes out once a month. You can get early access and other goodies if you sign up on my Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/simonbrooks which helps keep the podcast running! You can also hear me on Rachel Ann Harding’s podcast, StoryStoryPodcast where I occasionally host and also tell stories! http://storystorypodcast.com/

If you have any questions please feel to reach out to me and I will do my best to answer them. You can use the from on my website or shoot me an email: simon at diamondscree dot com. The form sends me an email, so it’s kind of the same thing! I will do my best to get back to you as soon as I can. Sometimes I am on the road travelling and telling stories!

We’re so glad to have you join us this year, Simon. To hear his stories as well as others, please join us at the 30th anniversary of the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival, September 5-7 at Thanksgiving Point in Lehi, Utah. Tickets can be purchased online.

Bil Lepp – Telling It Like It Is

Bil Lepp – Telling It Like It Is

We asked Bil Lepp to share some of his memories of the festival as well his thoughts on storytelling in general. As usual, he tells it like it is.

Q- As you know, this is our 30th anniversary and we’re so happy you will be celebrating this milestone with us. As a veteran of the festival would you please share some of your memories of the festival?

A- Timp is one of my favorite festivals! I don’t always answer my phone if I don’t recognize the number, but if the area code is 801, I pick up on the first ring.

I did the Exchange Place at the National Festival in 2000. That was really my first introduction into full fledged storytelling. Shortly after that I got a phone call from Janet Low. She asked if I would be a New Voice and said something like, “We can offer you (…) hundred.” Up to that point I had never made more than $100 for telling stories. And I said, “(…) hundred what?” She laughed and said, “Dollars.” I was blown away.

Timpanogos was the first festival I was invited to as a full fledged teller, even if I was just a New Voice. I was going to be on stage with the big names! The festival was then still at The Homestead and I performed with, I think, Syd Lieberman, Carmen Deedy, Bill Harley, David Holt, Waddie Mitchell, and others. To be honest, I was so new I didn’t even know who most of those people were. I did know Harley was a big shot and a great teller. On Friday night at the SCERA Shell I was telling the Buckdog story and Bill & Syd were in the front row. They were laughing very hard and nudging each other. I’m sure now that they were laughing at how awful I was, and nudging each other as if to say, “Who is this yokel?” But I like to think they were impressed with my telling, and that has always been a very proud moment for me.

I miss the SCERA Shell. That was a great venue. I think it is still the largest single audience I have ever performed for, and the roar of that crowd on a breezy summer night was confirmation that my hours spent telling in sweaty school gyms and church basements to 300 kindergartners or 8 retired ladies were worth the while.

Of course the new venue at Thanksgiving Point is wonderful as well. I’ve only been there once, but I am certainly looking forward to being back this year. I’m sure I’ll come to love it as much as the Homestead, and Timpanogos park.

And the people that run the festival, from the staff to the lowliest volunteer, are some of the best folks in the storytelling community. I don’t want to name names because I don’t want to leave anybody out, but I have to mention that Stephanie A. was my first van driver at Timp, and it has been fun to grow as a teller at Timp while the festival has grown and people like Stephanie have grown in responsibility. Also, I can’t forget Dale, the intrepid and unflappable sign language interpreter.

Q- What is one piece of advice you could give our young tellers or anyone who would like to share their stories?

A- A storyteller isn’t presenting a story to an audience. The teller and audience are working together to get the story told. You’ve got to pay attention to the audience and respond to how they are hearing the story. All good storytelling is a conversation, an extension of the supper table or the front porch. When you are telling a story to your friends or family, other people are asking questions, interrupting, interjecting, contradicting and having various emotional reactions. A good teller responds to the input of the listeners. When you are on stage hopefully people aren’t vocally interjecting or worse, contradicting, but you have to be aware that the audience is an active participant in the story. Also, you gotta listen to what the other tellers tell. If you’re anything but first in the line-up, you are continuing a conversation, not starting a new one.

Finally, know you’re story and be confident. You can be nervous, but if you’re ill at ease your audience will be too. You want your audience cheering for you, not worrying about you.

Q- Our theme this year is Timeless Tales. In what way do you think storytelling is timeless or timely?

A- Whether you are telling ancient stories, traditional stories, serious stories, true stories or tall-tales, you are talking to people of all ages. When you get everybody from the grandchild to the grandparent laughing, or otherwise engaged in your tale, you are spanning generations and and uniting the feelings and memories of everyone involved. In that way, you are spanning time. If you have a 9 year old, a 45 year old, and a 95 year old simultaneously remembering when they were each 7 years old you have breached the space time continuum: you have three people- or 3000 people- actively reliving and reveling in separate events that happened decades apart but are happening all over again in the present moment. That’s pretty timeless. As for timely, if stories didn’t teach timely and timeless values they wouldn’t still be being told 1000s of years after they were created. If you see trouble, and you know it’s trouble, don’t pick it up! is a message as timely now as it was then.

Three Questions for Anne Rutherford

Three Questions for Anne Rutherford

Anne Rutherford is another new featured teller at this year’s Timpanogos Storytelling Festival. We’ve asked her three questions to help us get to know her and her alter-ego, the wild-west adventurer Clementine Ryder.

Q- This is our 30th anniversary and we’re so happy you will be celebrating this milestone with us. As a first time teller at the festival, what would you like our audience to know about you?

A- “My mother grew up in Denver Colorado, met and married my father who was from a little town in the Susquehanna River Valley in Pennsylvania, where I grew up. My mother was determined to show my Dad there was a lot of country west of Ohio, so we went on looooong family driving trips…including one through Utah where I remember floating in the Great Salt Lake! I am so happy to be coming back to your part of the country as an adult, to participate in this wonderful festival. My husband Norm Brecke (also a storyteller) is coming with me and we are staying after the Festival to do some hiking and exploring.

I’ve been in the Pacific Northwest (Portland area specifically) since 1983. I came out for a ONE-YEAR volunteer service program, fell in love with the natural beauty of the Northwest and the congeniality of its people and never left. And, when people ask me “Is the TV Series “Portlandia” exaggerated? “ I say, “No, if anything it is understated!”

I love working as a main stage storyteller, and also as a teaching artist in the schools. I do a residency helping students feel more comfortable and confident with public speaking through storytelling — and also a writing residency where they create an original character using a process I’ve developed and write a story featuring that character. I use my own original character, Clementine Ryder (more about her next question!) and I love it. My “sweet spot” is 3rd-5th grade, but I’ve worked with K on up through High School. I’ve been a teaching artist with Young Audiences of Oregon/SW WA since 2001, it’s one of my favorite aspects of being a storyteller.”

Q- Our theme this year is Timeless Tales. Would you consider your stories to be more timeless (traditional stories) or timely (personal narrative)?

A- “I’ll do a mix — I’ve got some lively trickster tales and some tall tales —I’ll be telling some stories as my alter-ego, the wild-west adventurer Clementine Ryder; her stories are legendary — literally. I thought the experiences she described were legends (hidden treasure, frozen rattlesnakes) but turns out they really happened to Clementine. She is about as timeless as they come. As Anne, I’ve just won 1st place in the NW Folklife Festival’s Liar’s Contest for the 5th time, with a tale of childhood adventure that is mostly true; I’ll be bringing that as well as some of my other award-winning lies to tell! stretching the truth in an entertaining fashion is a timeless art!

I’ll also do some fun personal stories, lots from my childhood in a little town in the Susquehanna River Valley of Pennsylvania where I was born and raised, in a house with a graveyard on one side and a cow pasture on the other. In my personal stories I focus on the universal, the timeless experiences we have in common that my audience can relate to. Sometimes truth is indeed stranger (and as entertaining) as fiction!”

Q- How can a new fan hear more from you after the festival? Do you have any published work, a website or other social media sites?

A- “I’ve got six CDs including two hot off the press this summer just in time for the Festival.! Fans can connect with me and get a sample of my work in audio & video format on my website www.annerutherford.com. I also am active on Facebook and welcome new friend requests from people who’ve heard my stories, at annerutherfordstoryteller or anne.rutherford.37”

Welcome to the Timpanogos Storytelling Festival family Anne! Be sure to get your tickets to the 30th annual Timpanogos Storytelling Festival on September 5-7 at the Gardens at Thanksgiving Point in Lehi, Utah. Get your tickets at timpfest.org.