Wednesday, September 28, 2011

NEW FALL SCHEDULE ~ NEW MEETING PLACE


Please come join us for an engaging evening of storytelling.

We meet at THE AVID READER in Sacramento. 
Location and time:  16th and Broadway at 7:00 p.m.
When:  The First Wednesday of every month.

October 5:   Guest Host, Nancy Griffith. Theme: Behind the Mask
...
November 3:  Guest Host, Charlotte Donovan. Theme: Community: Finding Home

December 7:  Guest Host, Terry Chekon: Theme: Celebrations and Disasters

Saturday, March 5, 2011

WHERE IS LOVE? & I WAS VERY HUNGRY

This month our tellers told stories based on the theme of "Where is Love? and  I Was Very Hungry".

L to R - Pat Sandefur, Ann Rothschild, Nancy Griffith and Robin Aurelius.

Pat Sandefur
was inspired to tell us the story of meeting her husband while on duty as a librarian.  Her charming and more sophisticated supervisors cautioned her that he might be acceptable if "he would lose the red pants."  Since they both knew Oklahoma well, Pat accepted him, red pants and all, and the rest is history. 

Ann Rothschild
told of the legacy of WWII when she and her family suffered in many ways on the beautiful Isle of Guernsey, and how she found the one place she was sure to find warmth and love.

Nancy Griffith
led a big troop of hungry Girl Scouts into the wilderness and the packer bringing the food to a drop-off point did not show up.  Many miles into the wilderness, with a hoard of hungry scouts, what's a leader to do?  and, what did the Scouts do to the packer when he came a day late?

Robin Aurelius
played the organ as a boy in church, and as he grew older followed the profess into many different churches.  In one, he helped with the merger of two congregations, but found the new organ could not coexist with the old.  It was the building committee versus the music committee. What would happen to the Hammond organ if the alter rail and the carpet had to be cut?

LOCAL PUBLICITY

It seems that Straight Talk Storytellers is gaining a little bit of "awareness" momentum. We were featured in the February 22 edition of Senior Spectrum.  We were delighted make the front cover. The feature story is called, "Once Upon a Life."

The February edition of Midtown Monthly also published a fun candid shot of Mary McGrath at the Marrs building off of J street.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

WHERE IS LOVE? & The devil made me do it.

February 2 saw tellers tackling the themes 'Where is Love' and 'The Devil Made Me Do It'.  Mary McGrath made the introductions.

Olga Browne
Kiyomi told a story of exhibiting love to a neighbor in the face of anger - a tale fit to tame the wild blackberry.

Pat Alexander followed with a story about when boys begin to notice girls and what they do to signal their love.

Olga Browne brought gasps and laughs with her story of snakes in the outhouse - where children were small and the holes were big.

Iris Diamond
Iris Diamond shared a story of her resolve to start up the tea shop she planned with her husband, while experiencing deep grief just as the business was ready to open.

Terry Chekon gave us a commentary on life in the 30's when her parents had to manage a secret marriage in order to remain employed.

Gail Ryall told us how she was able to keep husband Lenny out of the draft.

Thank yo to Pat Alexander who told her first story so very well, and other students, Irene, Hao, Sandra, and Yoshiko who came to enjoy the evening. 

Thursday, January 13, 2011

UPCOMING STORYTELLING GATHERINGS

March 2, 2011 - 6:30 pm
I WAS VERY HUNGRY  ~  Where is love?  

April 6, 2011 - 6:30 pm
AMAZEMENTS AND SURPRISES  ~  I was very hungry  

May 4, 2011 - 6:30 pm
WHERE IN THE WORLD?  ~  Amazements and Surpises  




A WALK ON THE WILDSIDE

This month our tellers tell stories based on the theme of "Walk on the Wildside - Stories in Nature".

 JAMES CALLAGHAN 
"At this time n the morning the forest should be dead quiet. So what the hell is making that noise?"

MARY McGRATH  
"I knew that a visitor to a wild place should never shout the word help unless you're actually being eaten by a grizzly bear."

DEBORAH HICKERSON  
"We threw a rod in Delta, Utah.  That was just the beginning..."




STORIES TO BE TOLD



              MARY McGRATH's Story
A few years ago when in New York I experienced a most exciting evening of storytelling in a club with many other listeners who howled at the true experiences of the tellers. It was a production of 'The Moth', and did not feature professional tellers, but folks the founder and his buddies rounded up. I had heard of this kind of event, which took place all over town, guided by novelist George Green, who wanted to recreate the evenings of storytelling he had experience in his youth in Georgia. Many of these events have been recorded and the stories played on 'This American Life' on NPR. I wanted to do the same in Sacramento, but where?
In all the many years I have been storytelling in Sacramento, I never knew of the public library sponsoring a series of storytelling events for adults. And, of course, that sponsorship is common in the SF Bay area, so I saw it as an ideal place for telling and listening to stories. Since the radio is featuring the stories of tellers across America, and many people listen in. I thought of producing the true life stories of our Sacramento neighbors as a good way to add to the stories on NPR, as these are weighted toward the East Coast. I asked my old friend Terry Chekon, who had worked for many years in the library system, if she was interested in the idea. She thought it was time to ask local branches. Many said 'yes' and we started with Belle Cooledge. 

 TERRY CHEKON's Story    
When my friend, and fellow-storyteller, Mary McGrath contacted people about the possibility of creating a series of programs in which adults could share stories from their real lives, I jumped at the chance to be involved. I believe that through sharing stories people really can know and appreciate others, both people they already know and people they have not met before. After just three Straighttalk Storyteller evenings, I have experienced, as a teller, and listener, the ability of stories to create bonds between people. Some experiences, such as making paper chains to decorate Christmas trees, are shared by many; watching an enormous bear coming toward you while you're alone in the woods is an experience most of us have never had. But deep down, my reason for helping create Straighttalk Storytelling is that I love to listen to stories, anywhere and anytime. 

  
Straight Talk Storytellers Founders - Mary Lynn McGrath and Terry Chekon

We have used themes suggested by "The Moth".  One of their goals was to "revive a tradition of adults telling stories from their lives, a practice feared lost in the buzz of social chatter and the loneliness of high-tech communication. We have had evening in November (Coming to California), December (A Walk on the Wildside) and January (The Devil Made Me Do It: Stories of Folly).  Upcoming themes can be viewed here.

Monday, January 10, 2011

THE MISSION

We are dedicated to promoting the art of storytelling and celebrating the diversity and unique quality of each individual teller.  We also honor the ability of story to explore our common experiences and believe we will create a closer community through live storytelling.

By producing events that give tellers a public forum for personal stories, we hope to encourage both tellers int he public eye,and those whose stories often go untold and unheard.

We are inspired by the storytelling project centered in New York called 'The Moth' and plan to produce tapes to be used in their podcasts.