Thursday, February 6, 2014

Books about storytelling doing the rounds of the Vic Tellers


Dan Yashinsky, one of North America's best-known storytellers, shows how an old tradition has become the new avant-garde. The belief that storytelling is a necessary and beneficial art for our times has sparked a contemporary renaissance of oral literature with a variety of festivals, groups, and gatherings.

Brought to our attention by Doetre Henschel

Mike Alfreds makes the case for putting story and storytelling back at the heart of theatre. He explores the whole process of adapting for the stage, and investigates the particular techniques - many of them highly sophisticated - that actors require when performing 'story-theatre'.

Brought to our attention by Jan Wositzky

Thanks Folks!

Monday, February 3, 2014

Cindy-Lee Harper created the first agency exclusively for storytellers


In the mid 90s Cindy-Lee Harper created The Storytelling Garden, the first agency exclusively for Storytellers. Her mentorship enabled several Victorian tellers to begin telling stories for a living.

How did you get into storytelling?
Down Bridge Rd in Richmond was the first and best Faery shop. My response upon seeing it? “Look, look! A Faery Shop! Let’s go in!”

The upshot of spotting a faery shop in the mid 90s was learning that they held storytelling sessions for adults. I was utterly entranced and dragged a tolerant group of friends along to an evening of wine and words.

Afterwards my friends insisted that I could do that. What? Tell stories for a living? You can’t earn a living from telling stories, I scoffed. The thought stayed.

I became driven by the desire to meet other storytellers, hear stories and tell one. Typical me, I had to have a story prepared before I even went to my first Storytelling Guild cafe. I was so nervous. I listened enthralled and trembling told my first tale, The Standing Stones. It went well and I was hooked.

Several months into this journey I took the plunge to tell stories for money! My first gig was at a child care centreI was so nervous, I was too sick to eat breakfast.

When did you start the agency?
I was married at the time and was able to work part time and start my storytelling business. I did the New Enterprise Incentive Scheme and understood enough about marketing to successfully promote myself. I sent out fliers and began cold calling in my local area, gradually spreading out. It was hard selling myself with each call and eventually used some of my part time wages to pay a friend to make the calls.

The work began rolling in. Each program was meticulously prepared and planned with an existing knowledge of early childhood education. I was aware of how preschools planned their programs. When I branched out into Primary schools, I researched the curriculum needs and what I had to offer that met those needs and tailored my offerings accordingly.

You contributed to the work that storytellers are still doing and developing in the Early Childhood sector. Would you talk a bit about that?
I developed my style based in my own performance experiences, training as an English, Speech and Drama teacher and work with young people. I had not had much to do with young children when I started but I understood teaching. I understood expectations of teaching, about learning outcomes and quickly ascertained the learning framework the teachers had to meet.

I created programs on themes that I knew preschools covered, spoke to why storytelling would be of benefit and did my best to tick as many boxes for time poor teachers as possible. The idea was to become the incursion of choice for each preschool I went to.

Soon I had more gigs than I could provide a service for. After agonising, I opened the Garden gate to other storytellers, who also had an interest in early years storytelling, and invited them to join us at the Garden.

The Storytelling Garden website still exists and many of the same features are still on the site. Go to www.storygarden.com.au to check it out.

There were eventually ten incredibly different and talented Storytellers in the Garden. We needed a united front as an agency, so everyone developed programs they were comfortable with. This did not stop tellers developing their own interests and client bases.

Most Garden clients booked back through the Garden because of the level of professionalism. We made sure they booked back by calling them all at the beginning of each school year so they had their choice of dates.

Would you talk a bit more about how you encouraged Storytellers to develop?
Having the Garden tellers gathered in one place was always delightful for me. I really enjoyed listening and watching the enthusiasm and development of ideas. I actually called them Story Gatherings.

We had some inservice training, by sharing amongst ourselves and having each teller share their speciality. Discussing practical storytelling tips for working in early childhood was very important. I have a love of puppets and they work extremely well with the 0-8 age group. As the children got older, I used fewer props and with older teens and adults, none at all.

I liked to use Auslan (Australian Sign Language) key word signing as actions for little ones.  This works well for all age groups, would get the occasional child with a disability excited (and feel very included), enable children without verbals to participate and give children a secret language. We had a few incursions ourselves with Mother Goose, Baby Sign and Aboriginal storytelling.

Garden tellers branched out into string stories, drawn stories, picture stories, puppets, treasure boxes, boxes within boxes, baskets, anything and everything went.

I also used a lot of songs, rhymes and poetry. They are all small stories. I used them to break up the stories, get children moving and joining in. There was always a child who participated silently. They would be entranced and be doing tiny tiny actions. They were participating in their own minds. I feel that it is very important to allow children to receive the story however they do and not expect particular reactions.

I feel that the most important thing I shared was that children were welcome to receive the storytelling however they did, they were welcome to the story and they were well come. I understood that the small interruptions (of, “We’ve got bunk beds” or “My daddy has a penis”, which always got an “Excellent” from me) were the children’s way of giving back to you. They just wanted to share as you were sharing with them.

I enjoyed that period of my life enormously.

Cindy-Lee’s website HERE

(pics: Cindy-Lee's treasure chest of stories is legendary. If Australian Storytellers ever create a museum of story props, the treasure chest deserves pride of place!)



Thursday, January 30, 2014

REMINDER: DREAMING AND PLANNING DAY & AGM. Sunday 2 March 2014

Members and non members, please join us,  for the 
Dreaming and Planning Day. 
Let's talk about how we can work to support each other and make the dreams a reality!

If you can't make it send your apologies and ideas via  friend or email our secretary Anne E Stewart. anne@anneestewart.com.au 

If you haven't met us before, rest easy, you will be made very welcome!

Our facilitator: KATE LAWRENCE

Time and Venue: HERE


NB
  • Register for the Sydney International Storytelling Conference HERE
  • Inaugural Australian Fairytale Conference: HERE
  • World Storytelling Day March 20. The Dutch Storytelling Foundation invite you to participate      HERE



Friday, January 24, 2014

WORKSHOPS: Niki na Meadhra. La Mama Learning Program 27 & 29 MARCH 2014


EMBODYING STORIES
27 & 29 March 10.00am - 1.00pm
La Mama Learning Program invites you to a Storytelling Workshop presented by much-loved Melbourne Storyteller Niki na Meadhra. Explore skills in both contemporary & traditional oral storytelling.

For teachers, take away activities and resources you can apply in your classroom for all levels of Aus VELS & for VCE students. Also suitable for actors and those with a story to tell.

Niki na Meadhra has taught performing arts for over 25 years in schools and Universities. Her storytelling practice, HEARTH TALES, is based at Abbotsford Convent, where she hosts regular storytelling events.


Bookings and venue details at La Mama: HERE
HEARTH TALES: HERE

Monday, January 20, 2014

Storytelling Australia (Victoria) banner at the Turramurra Folk Music Camp 2014

Storyteller Susan Pepper designed and stitched this banner for us. Quilted so it won't crumple and small enough to carry in planes as hand luggage, its admired wherever it goes. Here it is at the Turramurra Folk Music Camp where storytelling workshops were part of the 2014 program. 

Susan is a passionate lover of wildlife and the natural environment. The camp is located in the Otways in a strip of Land for Wildlife. Wedge-tailed eagles circled all weekend, yellow robins, kookaburras, fantails, gang gangs, black cockatoos, shrike thrushes ... were just a few of the sightings.

Susan, the banner put smiles on the faces of all who saw it blowing in the breeze and I know you would have loved seeing it flying in the bush!

I'm looking forward to taking it the to the Port Fairy Folk Festival in March and then to the Sydney International Storytelling Conference in June.

Storytellers, please, if you would like to use the banner it currently resides at my place but it belongs to all of us.

Jackie K

Friday, January 17, 2014

Storytelling Australia (Tasmania) 2014


There has been some energy of late – a wish to reboot storytelling in Tasmania. The storytellers are there but as group have drifted apart. Many of us miss the Tasmanian contribution and some are working hard to reconnect. Recently emails have been flying across the continent as the older storytellers debate the history of the Australian oral storytelling revival in the 1970s.  There seems to be unanimous agreement that it began with Tasmanian Patricia Scott. Mary French from the ACT emailed “It is to Pat Scott - who was a well-known identity in Oatlands … that I owe my passion for storytelling.”

Jenni Woodroffe (WA) kindly forwarded this obituary written by Launceston Storyteller Prue McCausland for the IBBY Australia newsletter No 15 Nov 2012


Patricia Scott probably had more influence on the development of storytelling in Australia than most other individuals.  It was her work and dedication to promoting storytelling that inspired many current and former tellers and raised the profile of storytelling in Australia in the late 1970’s and 1980’s. Her involvement with the Children’s Libraries Section of the Library Association of Australia and, more particularly, her participation in the IBBY conferences of this period made her well known to those interested in children’s literature and storytelling.  Throughout the  ‘70’s and ‘80’s she ran many workshops and in-service courses, and gave talks, lectures and demonstrations in many schools, tertiary institutions and community centres throughout eastern Australia and elsewhere.

Patricia’s interest in storytelling began when she first heard the late Joyce Boniwell (later Saxby) who was a librarian with the Tasmanian State Library in Hobart in the 1950’s and a charismatic storyteller.
 In 1950 while working at the State Library of Tasmania, Patricia was seconded to the then Bellerive Library.  It was an opportunity to establish a weekly after-school story session, and, in those pre-television days, children flocked to hear the stories. (One, at least, a friend of mine, remembers these sessions vividly.)

Patricia later travelled to Toronto and worked for eighteen months with the highly regarded Children’s Library Services, where storytelling was a central part of the service. Here wasere was the opportunity to tell to children from a range of cultural and social backgrounds.  Back at the State Library she held several senior positions, undertook further study and was also President of the Children’s Libraries section of the Library Association of Australia.

In 1970 she moved to Victoria as a lecturer at the Library Training School and In-Service Officer for the staff, State Library of Victoria. Her degree studies had previously been suspended because of a back operation but she was now able to complete this at Melbourne University gaining a BA (Hons Politics) 1974.  In between times, she visited schools and colleges when possible, to promote storytelling.   She resigned from the State Library to complete a Masters degree but her mother’s illness meant frequent visits to Tasmania and finally, in 1976, she returned to be with her father in Oatlands in southern Tasmania. 

It was then she decided to see whether she could make a living as a freelance storyteller.  She began by telling stories to as many children as possible with the hope that teachers and librarians would follow suit but realised that it was necessary to encourage them through workshops and demonstrations.

 The years after this not only included the various IBBY conferences, The Pacific Rim Conference (Melb 1980) and the Conference on Child Language Development (Launceston 1980), but also visits throughout Australia and working for extended periods in Ballarat, Goulburn and Kuringai CAE’s. At Goulburn, as writer-in-residence, she worked with all staff and students and visited many schools. There were trips to outback Queensland and the Northern Territory, lecturing and telling, and a memorable time on Palm Island. These were the means by which so many people around Australia were introduced to storytelling and its power, and convinced of its value.

Back in Tasmania, with encouragement and support from others, she organised weekend workshops and helped establish the Tasmanian Storytellers Guild. Visitors included Bob Barton from Canada, Dorothy Butler and Liz Miller from New Zealand, Anne Pellowski from the USA and many interstate storytellers and writers. With Tasmania’s small, scattered population, it was hard to keep the Guild alive and it finally went into recess in 1993.

For her contribution to storytelling and children’s literature Patricia received the Dromkeen Medal in 1988 and the Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in 1991.  She was a nurse, librarian, student of history and politics, teacher, writer, printmaker and most of all, storyteller – a fortunate life, fortunate for all of us. 

Patricia Scott, AM

28 March 1926 - 29 July 2012

So here we are, years later at the Cygnet Festival. The festival buzzed with poetry and the indefatigable Phil Rush from the Huon Valley co hosted the  Poet's Breakfasts with Yvonne Gluyas. Words flew in all directions. And the storytellers gathered for a Masterclass, shook off the rust and got to work. At the close,  contact details were exchanged and future gatherings are in the planning. 

For further information about Storytelling Australia (Tasmania) contact: 
Lauceston (north of the State) Prue McCausland: pmccausl@bigpond.com
or
Storytelling Tasmania has a Facebook Page HERE




Monday, December 30, 2013

Dreaming and Planning Day and AGM - REMINDER. 2 March 2014


Kate Lawrence will be leading the STORYTELLING AUSTRALIA (VICTORIA) DREAMING AND PLANNING DAY: to explore the why, what, how and who of advancing storytelling in Victoria (and Australia).

Followed by the AGM

We’re hoping for an abundance of ideas and enthusiasm.  Come and have your say. If you can’t make it, send your ideas along with your apologies via a colleague or email our secretary Anne E Stewart: anne@anneestewart.com.au 

 ALL WELCOME including non-members.

WHERE: *Boyd 207 City Road, Southbank
ROOM: The Assembly Hall
DATE: Sunday 2 March
TIME: 10.30am – 4.30pm

Melway reference: Map 1D, M6
 Tram: 55

*Boyd is the of Melbourne’s multi-use facilities featuring the Southbank Library, KereKere cafe, Family Services, community meeting rooms and Creative Spaces studios.

NB It looks like the Cafe is closed on Sundays but between now and March we'll check out where hungry storytellers can eat.