Storyteller Spotlight: Miriam Nadel

Miriam Nadel is an aerospace engineer, craftswoman, blogger, and traveler.  She is also the Virginia State Liaison for the National Storytelling Network and on the board of Voices in the Glen.   For nearly 30 years, she has told personal stories, folk tales, and original fairy tales at venues ranging from a children’s art gallery to a Las Vegas night club.   All of her stories are true, whether or not they happened that way.

Watch a video of Miriam’s true, personal storytelling here

********SEE MIRIAM NEXT IN******

Lost & Found: stories of taking the wrong turn and finding your way

The Auld Shebeen (DOWNSTAIRS)

3971 Chain Bridge Rd., Fairfax, VA 22030

March 30, 2019

6:00 PM Doors Open/7:00 PM Show

Full drink and dinner menu available for purchase

Seating is on a first come, first served basis

$15 at the Door (Cash Preferred)

$12 Advance Tickets at bettersaidthandone.com/storytelling-shows/

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Storyteller Spotlight: Sandra Hull

Sandra Hull long used storytelling in her day job as a corporate IT trainer and instructional designer before taking to the Better Said Than Done stage in 2015 to share her personal experiences from A to Zamboni. In 2016 Sandra contributed a short story to the ROAR: True Stories of Women Warriors anthology and performed a different story at several live ROAR events in 2017-18. Read about Roar here. Previously she performed with a handful of DC-area amateur improv troupes including the ComedySportz Farm Team. Sandra’s been a regularly published contestant in humor-writing contests in the Washington Post, the Toronto Globe and Mail, and New York Magazine. Her proudest achievement in that realm was being awarded a t-shirt by the Post’s Style Invitational contest for writing a poem about episiotomies.

Watch a video of Sandra’s true, personal storytelling here

********SEE SANDRA NEXT IN******

Lost & Found: stories of taking the wrong turn, and finding your way

The Auld Shebeen (DOWNSTAIRS)

3971 Chain Bridge Rd., Fairfax, VA 22030

March 30, 2019

6:00 PM Doors Open/7:00 PM Show

Full drink and dinner menu available for purchase

Seating is on a first come, first served basis

$15 at the Door (Cash Preferred)

$12 Advance Tickets at bettersaidthandone.com/storytelling-shows/

 

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Storytelling On A Winter’s Night

When our  storytelling show, “On a Winter’s Night,” ended, I walked around The Auld Shebeen talking to people. I heard over and over again, “This was your best show yet.” After about the 5th time, I said to a group, “I’m a little offended since I didn’t host or tell a story tonight.” When no one laughed, I went home and cried.

But despite my personal failing, the show was a success. A big part of that success was due to first time host, long time charmer, Sufian Zhemukhoz (referred to by his fans as Sufian Z). Sufian did a great job leading the storytellers and the audience through a series of true and personal stories about winter, cold, and finding warmth. Some people even seemed to think he was a better host than me! (hahahahahahaha – ahem)

But, of course, the host is only part of the fun. The storytellers did a great job, bringing heat and warmth to cold tales.

Links to videos of some of the stories follow. You don’t get the same feeling of community, of warmth, watching the videos as you do being at the show, but you will get to see some great performances. And don’t miss the chance to be at our next storytelling show – March 30th. Details below.

First time storyteller Jon Modell. Here’s his story about meeting the in-laws for the first time.

Sarah Snyder shared a personal narrative about looking for warmth in Scotland. Watch Sarah’s story here.

Giselle Ruzany shared her story of trying to find the sun and warmth she’d grown up with in Brazil, here in Northern Virginia. Watch Giselle’s story here.

Host extraordinaire, Sufian Zhemukhov kicked off the second half of the show with his own story.

Ellie Klein took us on a trip down memory lane – to a long lost time when people used to have to go a store to rent a video. Ironically, the video of this story is only for the few people who have the membership card to see it.

Aimee Snow brought us back to that not so long ago Snowpocalypse, 2011. Her story of traffic, ice, and friendship here.

Storyteller, and storytelling teacher, Jack Scheer, closed out the show with a blizzard. Learn about cats, Cats, and blizzards by watching Jack’s story.

And if you want to learn about storytelling from Jack, he’s teaching a half day storytelling workshop on April 6, at The Insight Shop in Vienna, VA. Details here.
It truly was a great show – even if I wasn’t in it. The stories kept us warm. The host kept the show moving. And the audience started out friendly and ended up friends.

Join us at The Auld Shebeen in Fairfax, VA again on March 30, 2019 for “Lost and Found: stories about wrong turns and finding your way.” Sadly for you all, I will be hosting, but, don’t worry, I won’t be telling a story that night. I never get lost – although people are always telling me I should!

Advance, $12 entry and details about upcoming storytelling shows here

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Storyteller Spotlight: Jessica Robinson

Jessica Robinson is the founder of Better Said Than Done, Northern Virginia’s premiere storytelling troupe.  In addition to performing at Exchange Place at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, TN in 2018, Jessica has performed stories for Story District, Tales in the Village, The Grapevine, Stories in the Round, Perfect Liars Club and GMU’s Fall for the Book Festival, and at such venues as Jammin’ Java, Epicure Café, The Auld Shebeen, Town DanceBoutique, The Atlas Theater, Dance Place, the National Women’s Equality Museum, the City of Fairfax Public Library, and on the National Mall.  Her short stories have been published in the anthology Sucker for Love, the anthology Roar: True Tales of Women Warriors, as well as The Northern Virginia Review. She is the author of the urban fantasy novel Caged, published in 2016. Jessica has led storytelling workshops for INOVA Fairfax Hospital, AHRQ, and The World Bank, as well as for many individual storytellers in her classroom.

********SEE JESSICA LIVE AT******

Tales of Adventure: Tru-ish stories of (mis)adventure

The Auld Shebeen (DOWNSTAIRS)

3971 Chain Bridge Rd., Fairfax, VA 22030

March 9, 2019

6:00 PM Doors Open/7:00 PM Show

Full drink and dinner menu available for purchase

Seating is on a first come, first served basis

$15 at the Door (Cash Preferred)

$12 Advance Tickets at http://www.bettersaidthandone.com/storytelling-shows/

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Storyteller Spotlight: Norm Brecke

Norm Brecke: Storyteller, Teacher, Workshop Leader 2002 – present.

Norm Brecke is a spirited storyteller who loves a good story. He was a teacher

for fifteen years and told daily in his classroom as well as teaching storytelling to

intermediate students. Norm has told stories from Vancouver, BC to Los

Angeles, CA. He’s been a featured storyteller at the Stone Soup, Art of the Story,

and Powellswood Storytelling Festivals. Telling at the Seattle Art Museum,

National Storytelling Summit, and narrating for the Seattle Symphony were also

highpoints for him. Norm tells folktales, personal stories, historical accounts, and

stories in song. Find out more at www.normbrecke.com

********SEE NORM LIVE AT********

Tales of Adventure: Tru-ish stories of (mis)adventure

The Auld Shebeen (DOWNSTAIRS)

3971 Chain Bridge Rd., Fairfax, VA 22030

March 9, 2019

6:00 PM Doors Open/7:00 PM Show

Full drink and dinner menu available for purchase

Seating is on a first come, first served basis

$15 at the Door (Cash Preferred)

$12 Advance Tickets at http://www.bettersaidthandone.com/storytelling-shows/

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Storyteller Spotlight: Anne Rutherford

 

Anne Rutherford: Storyteller, Writer, Coach, Workshop Leader 1999 – present.

Anne was a Featured Teller at the National Storytelling Festival as well as Teller

in Residence for the International Storytelling Center in Tennessee. She has told

at many Storytelling Festivals around the country. Her CD “The Habit of Joy” is a

Storytelling World Award winner. As well as telling at festivals, Anne also enjoys

her work as a teaching artist in the schools with Young Audiences of Oregon,

telling at libraries and writing new stories.

Find more at www.annerutherford.com

********SEE ANNE LIVE AT********

Tales of Adventure: Tru-ish stories of (mis)adventure

The Auld Shebeen (DOWNSTAIRS)

3971 Chain Bridge Rd., Fairfax, VA 22030

March 9, 2019

6:00 PM Doors Open/7:00 PM Show

Full drink and dinner menu available for purchase

Seating is on a first come, first served basis

$15 at the Door (Cash Preferred)

$12 Advance Tickets at http://www.bettersaidthandone.com/storytelling-shows/

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Adventure Calling

When I went to Tennessee to perform on the Exchange Place Stage at the National Storytelling Festival in 2018, I didn’t know what to expect. As a performer of true, personal stories for the past 11 years, I was worried that I wouldn’t like the variety of storytelling. Well, there was variety, and it was wonderful. Every performer truly earned the right to be called a professional, and every performance was better than the last.

I loved every performance I saw at the NSF, but I will say that one of the funniest shows was Anne Rutherford performing a story in character as “Clementine.” Anne/Clementine told a tall tale of a search for some haunted pirate gold. The story had edge-of-seat drama followed by wet-the-seat laughter. Anne was enchanting.

I spent the whole weekend marveling at the talent in the room, at these amazing storytellers gathered in one place. I kept thinking I can’t wait to go back to TN so I can see some of these performers again. And at the very end of the weekend I had this hand-to-forehead moment where I remembered that I’m a show producer.

When I learned that Anne Rutherford and Norm Brecke had plans to perform in DC, at The Grapevine, in March, I invited them to come to Fairfax, VA for a show with us. Northern Virginia got lucky, because they agreed.

“We’re excited to be part of the dynamic scene Jessica has created in Fairfax with Better Said Than Done,” said Anne Rutherford. And then she added, somewhat ominously, “Of course, I am a 4-time winner of the Northwest Folklife Festival’s Liar’s Contest, so don’t believe everything I tell you.”

The great news is, you don’t have to go to Tennessee – but you definitely should – to see these amazing storytellers perform. Join Jessica Robinson, Anne Rutherford and Norm Brecke for “Tales of Adventure: tru-ish stories of (mis)adventure,” Saturday, March 9, 2019, at 7 PM, downstairs at The Auld Shebeen, 3971 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Virginia 22030.

$15 at the Door (Cash Preferred)
$12 Advance Tickets here

Seating is on a first come, first served basis. The Auld Shebeen offers a full dinner and bar menu for purchase during the show.

Better Said Than Done usually defines storytelling as the art of performing a true, personal story in front of a live audience. But professional storytellers, the ones who roam the country sharing their tales, do not limit their stories strictly to truth.

Norm Brecke explained the extent of truth in his storytelling. “In our performing, folktales and personal stories go hand in hand, with music thrown in for spice. The folktales we tell, which most have never heard before, tend to add universal truth to what we are communicating.” Anne Rutherford added, “We like to find stories that blur the line between legend and reality. Every good story has an emotional truth, even those that are pure fiction.”

Come to our show, “Tales of Adventure,” and see if you can see the line where truth and reality meet legend.

Storyteller Bios:
Norm Brecke is a spirited storyteller who loves a good story. He was a teacher for fifteen years and told daily in his classroom as well as teaching storytelling to intermediate students. Norm has told stories from Vancouver, BC to Los Angeles, CA. He’s been a featured storyteller at the Stone Soup, Art of the Story, and Powellswood Storytelling Festivals. Telling at the Seattle Art Museum, National Storytelling Summit, and narrating for the Seattle Symphony were also high points for him. Norm tells folktales, personal stories, historical accounts, and stories in song.
Find out more at www.normbrecke.com

Jessica Robinson is the founder of Better Said Than Done, Northern Virginia’s premiere storytelling troupe. In addition to performing at Exchange Place at the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, TN in 2018, Jessica has performed stories for Story District, Tales in the Village, The Grapevine, Stories in the Round, Perfect Liars Club and GMU’s Fall for the Book Festival, and at such venues as Jammin’ Java, Epicure Café, The Auld Shebeen, Town DanceBoutique, The Atlas Theater, Dance Place, the National Women’s Equality Museum, the City of Fairfax Public Library, and on the National Mall. Her short stories have been published in the anthology Sucker for Love, the anthology Roar: True Tales of Women Warriors, as well as The Northern Virginia Review. She is the author of the urban fantasy novel Caged, published in 2016. Jessica has led storytelling workshops for INOVA Fairfax Hospital, AHRQ, and The World Bank, as well as for many individual storytellers in her classroom.
More about storyteller Jessica Robinson here.

Anne Rutherford was a Featured Teller at the National Storytelling Festival as well as Teller in Residence for the International Storytelling Center in Tennessee. She has told at many Storytelling Festivals around the country. Her CD “The Habit of Joy” is a Storytelling World Award winner. As well as telling at festivals, Anne also enjoys her work as a teaching artist in the schools with Young Audiences of Oregon, telling at libraries and writing new stories.
Find more at www.annerutherford.com

Anne & Norm: Storytellers, Teachers, Workshop Leaders 2015 – Present
Anne Rutherford and Norm Brecke have been performing together since 2014. In 1999, Anne got an idea for a story program for adults, rented a hall, sold tickets – and people came! She’s a four-time winner of the Folklife Liar’s Contest and was a featured teller at the National Storytelling Festival last fall. Norm heard a teller in 2002 and said, “I want to do that.” He has told at a few festivals; most recently the Stone Soup Festival in Woodruff, SC last spring. They tell personal stories, original fiction, history, and folktales. They love to laugh together.
Find out more at www.anne-norm.com

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Storytelling World Awards

This week, Storytelling World announced the 2019 Storytelling World Awards. I am both honored and humbled to see Roar: True Tales of Women Warriors on the page with so many other fantastic books. Thank you to the selection committee of the Storytelling World Awards. Please check out all the winners. I know I now have so many books to read this year!

The award is a blessing and an honor, but it is also somewhat bittersweet. We submitted Roar: True Tales of Women Warriors last year for consideration in the “Stories for Adults” category. The selection committee chose to honor the story “Power Play,” written by Anne Thomas. Many of you may already know, Anne passed away in January. She did not learn about winning the honor for her story, but, in December, I was able to let her know her story was a finalist. I am thrilled with the honor, but saddened that Anne is not here to receive it. One of our fellow Roar authors, Dawn Gross, put it best, however, when she said, “Thank you for bringing us together to raise our voices for good. Anne certainly did that and her stories will continue to carry her voice long after her final exhale. The award and its timing strikes me as a most poignant exclamation point.”

As Dawn said, we brought together 21 female authors to raise up our voices for good. Roar is a collection of stories about what it means to be a woman in today’s world. Each and every story in Roar deserves to be read, and heard. It is through storytelling that we learn. It is through storytelling that we understand. And it is through storytelling that we can heal.

All proceeds from the sale of the book benefit the National Network to End Domestic Violence. Roar is available for sale at Curious Iguana Bookstore in Frederick, MD, on Amazon and BN.com, at many libraries, and at all Better Said Than Done storytelling shows. You can find more information about all the authors of Roar here.

Because women’s stories still need to be shared, we continue to host Roar storytelling events around the country. If you would like to have a Roar book event or storytelling show at your library, museum, book store, event, or venue, contact jessica at bettersaidthandone.com.

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Fairy Dust Stories

Our first regularly scheduled storytelling show of the year – the last Saturday of the month at The Auld Shebeen in the City of Fairfax, VA – was “Fairy Dust: stories of dreams and illusions.” I always love to find out how storytellers will interpret a theme, and this one was especially fun. We got stories about dogs and names and sleep and Shakespeare. Actually, there was a lot of Shakespeare. Our storytellers dig the Bard.

You can see and hear for yourself by clicking on the links below of videos of each of the storytellers’ performances.

Arthuretta Holmes Martin started the show with a story about her lifelong dream of owning a dog.

Anna Marie Trester crossed the country to be with us and share her tale from across the pond.

Richard Barr’s illusion of a name.

Allison Stevens’ love of sleep contrasted with her high school schedule.

Barbara Fornoff’s trippy dream to join a commune. You dig?

Sandra Hull’s story of a shattered illusion.

Giselle Ruzany likes her coffee Brazilian, like her mom.

Jessica Robinson would love to have a dream, if only she could sleep long enough to get one.

Performing for our lovely Northern Virginia audience each month at The Auld Shebeen is like a dream come true. And getting to hear and see these fantastic storytellers share their true, personal stories of dreams and illusions is like fairy magic.

And if watching videos of a storytelling show feels a bit more like illusion than reality, come to our next show and watch in person. Wouldn’t that be dreamy?

Upcoming storytelling show information and tickets here.

All about storytelling workshops here.

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Peace and Justice Storytelling Show

For Better Said Than Done’s first storytelling show of 2019, we decided to stretch a little – not only in subject matter, but also in style. Normally, all Better Said Than Done shows feature true, personal stories – what many refer to as personal narratives. And as much as this style of storytelling is all the rage these days, it is not the only style of storytelling. In fact, “traditional” storytelling tends more towards folk tales, tall tales, and stories of history.

I got to hear some amazing examples of this “other” (some might say original) kind of storytelling when I went to Jonesborough, TN last October – to perform on the Exchange Place stage – and to absorb performances by the best storytellers in the country at the National Storytelling Festival. It was a blast. And lucky for me, I got to make plans to hang out more with some of the amazing storytellers who were featured – like Ms. Sheila Arnold!

When Sheila and I decided to do a show together, we thought it would be fun to mix styles – the personal narrative style Better Said Than Done audiences are familiar with, and the traditional style Sheila often performs herself. The resulting show was Peace & Justice.

You can watch videos of all the stories in this playlist. However, I might suggest the following two videos as an example of one true, personal story by Jessica Robinson on the the theme of Peace, and one (sort of) traditional story on the theme of Justice by Ms. Sheila Arnold.

We were lucky to have Nick Baskerville host the show. He was the bread to our P&J.

What I love about Sheila Arnold…Oh man, I just realized that would take too long. (She really is amazing!) What I loved about Sheila’s performance in Peace & Justice was how she transitioned from a personal narrative story about her relationship with her mom – a story that made me cry; to a story about grits (sort of); to a story about a ruler with orange hair, no sense of style, and a need to surround himself with sycophants, without missing a beat. Each story was its own, perfect performance and could’ve fit in a million other shows – though also fit beautifully in this one. And boy did she make me want some grits!

And I had so much fun. Not only working with Sheila – and watching her close up – but also getting to perform some sad, some poignant and some, hopefully, funny stories for a terrific audience at Jammin’ Java, in Vienna, VA.

I did mention I picked up a few storyteller friends at Jonesborough, right? Well, we got another show coming up that’s going to be a bit of a stretch, in a wonderful way. Join Jessica Robinson on March 9th, 2019, alongside nationally renowned, funny, and devilishly attractive storytellers Anne Rutherford and Norm Brecke for tru-ish tales of mis-adventure.

We’re back at The Auld Shebeen for this one – nestled in the City of Fairfax, VA. Tickets for the March 9th show, as well as the February 23rd show, and information on all our upcoming storytelling shows here.

Keep up to date with Ms. Sheila Arnold here.

Check out Nick Baskerville’s blog about storytelling in the DMV here.

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