Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival
Thursday, October 6, 2016
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
2016 Featured Teller Tim Lowry
Tim has been a featured performer at the National Storytelling Festival, Charleston Tells Storytelling Festival, Piccolo Spoleto Festival, South Carolina Storyfest, the North Carolina Storytelling Festival, Patchwork Storytelling Festival, and the Connecticut Storytelling Festival. He has logged over 5,000 school performances.
As a communications consultant Tim's growing client list
includes Daramic LLC of Charlotte, NC and the International Tourism
Management Institute of San Francisco, CA.
Tim lives in Summerville, SC with his wife Bonnie and their two adopted
daughters, Libby and Bethany. Bonnie is a part-time violin/fiddle
teacher and full time mom. As a family, the Lowrys enjoy puppet shows,
vegetable gardening, picture books, live opera, and dancing to music on
their 1911 Victrola.
Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival Package Deal
HERE IS HUGE NEWS! The folks a Cumberland Falls State Resort Park has
put together a package deal.
For $129 you Get not only the Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival, March 11 & 12 , but also lodging on Friday and Saturday night, supper on Friday night and all 3 meals Saturday!
We are excited to announce that Storyteller Tim Lowry will be our Featured Teller this year.
Festival favorites, Pam Holcomb from Harlan County, Kentucky and Stephen Hollen from over to Clay County, Kentucky will be back to join Tim Lowry. Y'all don't want to miss this!
For $129 you Get not only the Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival, March 11 & 12 , but also lodging on Friday and Saturday night, supper on Friday night and all 3 meals Saturday!
Festival favorites, Pam Holcomb from Harlan County, Kentucky and Stephen Hollen from over to Clay County, Kentucky will be back to join Tim Lowry. Y'all don't want to miss this!
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Haint Stories at the Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival
HAINT WALK is scheduled for April 11 along the
Falls!
The Haint Stories around the Campfire is April 12!
What is a Haint? That's another name for the ol' boogety man, spooks and such!
For a mere $5 you can have the wits scared out of you as you go from station to station and hear our storytellers share scary stories!
This is in addition to the ticket cost for the whole weekend (only $35 for the whole weekend. One day tickets and family rates are also available. Call for information).
Tickets for the HAINT WALK Friday night and HAINT TALES around the Campfire Saturday night are limited in number.
Reserve tickets early by calling (606) 528-4121.
The Haint Stories around the Campfire is April 12!
What is a Haint? That's another name for the ol' boogety man, spooks and such!
For a mere $5 you can have the wits scared out of you as you go from station to station and hear our storytellers share scary stories!
This is in addition to the ticket cost for the whole weekend (only $35 for the whole weekend. One day tickets and family rates are also available. Call for information).
Tickets for the HAINT WALK Friday night and HAINT TALES around the Campfire Saturday night are limited in number.
Reserve tickets early by calling (606) 528-4121.
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Press Release
Department of Parks
Cumberland Falls State Resort Park to Host Storytelling Festival April 11-13
Press Release Date: | Thursday, February 27, 2014 |
Contact Information: | Bret Smitley, 606-528-4121 |
CORBIN,
Ky. – The Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival is set for April 11-13
at Cumberland Falls State Resort Park near Corbin.
The
Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival promises to be a weekend of both
traditional and unique entertainment for adults, plus a school-day
session for local schoolchildren.
Four nationally known storytellers will share the stage as featured storytellers:
Sharon Kirk Clifton
is a professional storyteller who is also passionate about writing,
especially for children. Her debut novel, “Up A Rutted Road,” was
released in May 2013. She tells old time “Jack tales” in the person of
Jack’s Mama and is beloved by audiences everywhere. She also writes
poetry, essays, and whatever strikes her fancy.
Buck P. Creacy
is a humorist and storyteller who uses humor to make life better for
his audience. It was while shining shoes at the barber shop he realized
he could shine more shoes if his customers were laughing. An “honest-to-God” humorist, Buck shares both wit and wisdom with children and the international corporate world alike.
Pam Holcomb
taught high school arts and humanities, speech, oral communications,
drama, and mathematics for 29 years in Harlan County, Ky. A true
Appalachian storyteller, it is her desire to preserve the Appalachian
culture that drew her to the performing arts and developed her love of
storytelling.
Stephen Hollen has been telling stories for over 35 years. He is an Appalachian storyteller, Mark Twain impersonator and full-time storytelling professional. His
first experiences as a storyteller were sitting on a front porch in
Clay County, Ky., listing to uncles, aunts, friends and family tell folk
tales, Jack tales and all sorts of bone-chilling stories. Through the
years Stephen has told stories in 28 states and Canada.
Visitors
can tour the falls, hike the trails and visit with vendors all weekend.
Vendors will be demonstrating and selling traditional and Kentucky-made
crafts all around the park’s DuPont Lodge.
Schedule of Events:
Friday:
School Day from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. for local schools and students from
third through sixth grades with storytelling, hiking and a tour of
Cumberland Falls. Vendors will be demonstrating all day. An evening
storytelling concert will begin at 7 p.m. At 9:30 p.m. there will be a “Ghost Walk” with scary stories along the Falls for the brave of heart.
Saturday:
Hiking the trails and tours of the Falls all day. Storytelling Matinee
at 1 p.m. and a storytelling concert at 7 p.m. The evening will end with
“Haint Tales and Scary Campfire Stories” around a campfire.
Sunday: The day will begin with a free, public “Sacred Stories” concert at the Falls at 10 a.m. The day will continue with tours of the Falls, hiking and the final storytelling matinee at 1 p.m.
The cost of this event is $35 per person for the entire weekend. The Haint Walk and Camp Fire Stories are $5 extra. School, group and family rates are available. For more information contact Bret Smitley at the Cumberland Falls State Resort Park at 606-528-4121.
--30—
The
Kentucky State Park System is composed of 49 state parks plus an
interstate park shared with Virginia. The Department of Parks, an agency
of the Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet, operates 17 resort parks
with lodges -- more than any other state. For more information on Kentucky parks, visit our website at http://www.parks.ky.gov
Buy Your Tickets Now!
Just a reminder; when you call to make your reservations, be sure to buy your ticket for the Cumberland Falls Storytelling Festival
which is only $35 for the whole weekend.
The Haint Walk and Haint Tales around the Campfire on Friday and Saturday night are $5 each. The Sacred Stories Sunday morning is free and open to the public.
To reserve your tickets call (606) 528-4121. Lodging reservations can be made at the same time!
The Haint Walk and Haint Tales around the Campfire on Friday and Saturday night are $5 each. The Sacred Stories Sunday morning is free and open to the public.
To reserve your tickets call (606) 528-4121. Lodging reservations can be made at the same time!
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Saturday, March 1, 2014
About Don "Buck P" Creacy
"I am a weaver of words since 14 years old, telling stories at Slim's Barbershop, while I shined shoes and made folks laugh."
Buck P. Creacy is a humorist and a storyteller and he uses humor to make life better for his audience. It was while shining shoes at the barber shop, he realized he could shine more shoes if his customers were laughing.
"I love the connection I enjoy with my audience and their own imaginations."
An “honest to God” humorist, Buck shares both wit and wisdom with children and the international corporate world alike.
"I love drawing their faces and hearts into the story, my world; our world's oldest art."
Choosing to make his humor “safe” for any audience, Buck sees the world just differently enough to make you laugh out loud. He also realized that by making life better for others; he could make life better for himself. His humor is never mean-spirited though his sense of the funny stuff in our world is very sharp.
Buck P. Creacy is a humorist and a storyteller and he uses humor to make life better for his audience. It was while shining shoes at the barber shop, he realized he could shine more shoes if his customers were laughing.
"I love the connection I enjoy with my audience and their own imaginations."
An “honest to God” humorist, Buck shares both wit and wisdom with children and the international corporate world alike.
"I love drawing their faces and hearts into the story, my world; our world's oldest art."
Choosing to make his humor “safe” for any audience, Buck sees the world just differently enough to make you laugh out loud. He also realized that by making life better for others; he could make life better for himself. His humor is never mean-spirited though his sense of the funny stuff in our world is very sharp.
About Sharon Kirk Clifton
Some folks says ye can almost hear the screen door creak and taste the
ice-cold apple cider when ye listen to a mountain tale told by Jack's
Mama. Jest a plain ol' pioneer woman, Jack's Mama has been a favorite of
audiences fer near a quarter of a century. Young'uns 'n' old folks
alike says don't nobody tell a tale from America's eastern highlands
better. Hit'd pleasure her t' hitch up th' mule, pack up a tow-sack full
o' tales 'n' magic beans, 'n' head over yer way. Got special doin's
a-goin' on in yer neck o' the woods? Folks gatherin' in from all over t'
have a good time? Give Jack's Mama a holler.
Many of the motifs found in the Appalachian stories are found in literary works such as Beowulf, the Arthurian Legend, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, Shakespeare's works (including King Lear and The Taming of the Shrew), the Bible, and Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, to name a few.
Despite the origin of the tales, the characters usually became Americanized as they were passed down in this country. For example, Jack, the Appalachian giant-killer, is likable and easy-going (except when it comes to giants), unlike his English counterpart, who is a cocksure, arrogant young hero.
This program was funded in part by a Lilly Teacher Creativity Fellowship grant.
With nearly 60 tales from which to draw, Jack's Mama is adaptable to all audiences and ages, as well as a variety of venues, including festivals, schools, libraries, museums, and churches. All of Clifton's shows are family-friendly.
More about the Stories Jack's Mama Tells
When this country's first settlers came, many arrived with few
possessions. The stories that had been such an integral part of their
heritage, however, did survive the perils of sea and land, stored
securely in the memories of the people.
Most of the stories that make up Appalachia's oral tradition came from
England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Germany, France, and Africa. Once in
this country, many of the tales - as well as the people - mingled with
the Native Americans who already were here, and had their own stock of
stories. The Jack Tales constitute an important cycle in this tradition.Many of the motifs found in the Appalachian stories are found in literary works such as Beowulf, the Arthurian Legend, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, Shakespeare's works (including King Lear and The Taming of the Shrew), the Bible, and Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, to name a few.
Despite the origin of the tales, the characters usually became Americanized as they were passed down in this country. For example, Jack, the Appalachian giant-killer, is likable and easy-going (except when it comes to giants), unlike his English counterpart, who is a cocksure, arrogant young hero.
This program was funded in part by a Lilly Teacher Creativity Fellowship grant.
With nearly 60 tales from which to draw, Jack's Mama is adaptable to all audiences and ages, as well as a variety of venues, including festivals, schools, libraries, museums, and churches. All of Clifton's shows are family-friendly.
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