Throughout this time of soaring popularity,
they performed at Folk Festivals in Chicago, Vancouver,
Winnipeg, Ithaca, Michigan, Knoxville, Alaska, Long
Island, St. Louis, Charlotte, Philadelphia, Maine, Connecticut,
Lincoln, and Monterey. Their lively folktales kept audiences
applauding at such divergent places as Bele Cher Celebration
in Asheville, the World's Fair in Knoxville, Old Faithful
in Yellowstone National Park, the International School
in Belgium, U.S. Dependent Schools in the Philippines,
the Healing Arts Festival in Boulder, CO, the Washington,
D.C. Ethical Society, dozens of state library associations,
the International Reading Association, and the National
Council of Teachers of English.
Later, phone calls replaced cards. In 1985, Barbara
called to announce: "We can afford to fly and
rent cars now and stay in motels - in separate rooms!
- instead of sleeping in the back of D'Put. We've
settled here in Asheville, opened an office and hired
a company manager and a staff. Best of all-we've started
on a new project. We've co-written and produced a
professional two-act play using our favorite tales.
Can you come down to see it?"
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It
was impossible then. But three years later, in the
Spring of '88, 1 found myself driving through the
mist-shrouded mountains of the Blue Ridge Parkway,
heading for the glitzy new Folk Art Center near Asheville
to see their two-woman play, Mountain Sweet Talk.
As I pulled into the crowded parking lot, I wondered
exactly how the two formerly thread- bare Scheherazades
in Denim had transformed themselves into off- Broadway
(okay-way off-Broadway) stars of a hit production
that has sold over 11,000 tickets during its three
season run of over 100 performances.
Inside, I picked up my Annie Oakley and stopped to
read some reviews that were posted in the lobby. The
National Storytelling Journal (Winter 1987) described
the play as "daring, brilliantly directed and
performed - an evening that grows in the imagination
... superb! There are a thousand lovely touches ...
a story brilliant with movement, mime, laughter and
drama." The Asheville Citizen-Times
said it was "an enchanting and completely satisfying
production."
I talked briefly with Jim Gentry, director of the
Folk Art Center (he also doubles as house manager),
who told me that since the center opened in 1980,
Mountain Sweet Talk has been the single most
exciting special program in which they have been involved.
I chose a seat halfway up the amphitheatre above
the recessed stage and waited expectantly. The faint
wail of a mountain strain set a mood of nostalgia:
"Take me back to the place where I first saw
the light, to the sweet sunny South take me home .
. ." Then came the rousing notes of a clog dance
(an old mountain form of square dancing) and, suddenly,
there Barbara and Connie were in the spotlight, sparks
of energy cascading from them like the sparkling contrail
of an incandescent rocketship. In moments we fell
under the spell of their words as they pulled us -
like Doctor Who - through a rotating tunnel of time
travel into a simpler era and place, a place where
we could hunker up closer to a lighter knot fire in
a cabin, or a cave where we could share in the universal
mysteries of that ubiquitous shaman, the master teller
of stories. With artful direction they lured us into
that distant inner space, revealing in us depths of
joy and terror, hilarity and grief.
One minute we felt the pangs of regret or denial,
envy, revenge, even the pale chill hand of death on
our shoulders. In the very next story, we kicked off
our shoes and luxuriated in the rib-bursting laughter
of a mountain Jack Tale - all part of the storytellers'
magic.
After the show, Connie and her husband, Phil Blake,
Barbara and her new groom, Mike Vaniman, and I chatted
over burgers at an all-night restaurant. It was immediately
apparent that these two very attractive men - both
strong and stable - were totally supportive of their
wives' endeavors.
Mike, who designed and built the sets for the play,
grew up in the theatre: his mother was assistant director
of the prestigious Palo Alto (CA) Community Theatre.
He has been scenic designer for the Brevard Little
Theatre and has had leading roles for the Asheville
Community Theatre. A machine designer and holder of
a commercial pilot's license, Mike first wooed Barbara
with an invitation to go blueberry picking in the
mountains. This past November 26, they were wed in
a fairytale ceremony at the tiny log cabin they built
them- selves high atop Elk Mountain (befitting a true
storyteller, they live nearby on Spooks Branch Road).
Connie and Phil share her little white artist's cottage
on 44 acres of wild Mountainside. Phil, a real estate
appraiser and champion amateur racquetball player
and golfer, often handles lights and sound for the
play. A native of Asheville, he completed his college
credits toward his B.A. in business administration
by serving as a full-time magician at the popular
Blowing Rock, NC, tourist attraction, Tweetsie Railroad,
doing "big time illusions -- sawing women in
two, levitating bodies, etc."
Understandably, both of their swains have a vested
interest in show business, but it's extraordinary
that both couples get along so famously. "On
the very few days off they've had during the past
three years," Barbara teased them, "guess
where they went? To the play! They study the audience,
suggest bits of business we might use on stage, check
the music and lighting and generally work the house.
And they love storytelling."
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I
asked how they accounted for the wide appeal of storytelling,
beyond even the scope of the men in their lives.
“Storytelling is so personal," Connie
said, "and because of that, it has great power
to move people in the same way great music moves them.
That's what draws all people to storytelling - people
have always listened to and told stories, so there's
a sense of familiarity. Even if people say, 'You know,
I've never heard a story told before,' the stories
seem very familiar to them. Stories take us back to
our origins.
"There's a real healing effect to storytelling,"
Connie continued, “Once when we were in State
College, PA, telling stories to a 4th through 6th
grade group, a really strange thing happened. While
Barbara was telling a story, my mind kept wandering
to my cat, Gingko (I really miss her when I'm away).
I felt her sitting on my lap; I was petting her. I
couldn't focus in on Barbara's story; I began to wonder
if something had gone wrong with Gingko - it was such
a strong kinetic image!
"After we had finished our set, the teacher
pointed out a young boy leaving the room, waving goodbye
to us. She said that he had just spoken and smiled
for the first time in three weeks. His home had caught
on fire; all the family got out but they had watched
helplessly through the window as their cat burned
to death. The boy had not said a word in three weeks,
but when we started our stories, he gave a big smile
and turned around to say 'Aren't they good?”
to the teacher. As soon as she told me about it, I
started weeping, because the power had been so strong
to me - the feel of my cat safe in my lap. She told
us we had given that boy a real gift.”
Barbara also told of an incident that had a strong
personal meaning for her. "One night, before
the play started," said Barbara, "I asked
Connie to enhance a tender moment by joining me in
a duet instead of my singing alone. When we went out
on stage, we noticed several handicapped people in
wheelchairs seated down front, stage left, where Connie
stands.
"So I start off singing, 'in the pines, In the
pines,' and suddenly I hear this booming bass voice
singing 'In da PINES, In da PINES.' I thought maybe
I shouldn't have asked Connie to join me after all!
But it was a man in a wheelchair, singing at the top
of his voice. First the audience tensed up when they
realized it was not part of the performance. Then
they all relaxed as he sang all the verses of the
old song right along with us, oblivious to everyone.
He was so involved with the performance, it was truly
touching."
Coping with spontaneous outbursts while on stage
was one thing; working together to solve problems
on the road was quite another. "My method of
dealing with problems," said Barbara "was
to let them roll off my back like drops of water until
they formed a pond, and then try to drown Connie in
it. Her method was to dip in an oar every time a problem
came up. So with these two different approaches, we
did learn to communicate. Some days we'd cry our differences
out, some days we'd laugh ‘em out."
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"Our three-day discussions were lifesavers,"
Connie agreed, "life rafts for getting over conflict
as we traveled. We became so much better friends after
that, and, I believe, better performers. "
Usually Barbara keeps them loose by playing the part
of the prankster, her ebullient personality and Falstaffian
laughter filling the room - and imbuing any situation
with hilarity.
The "cosmic pixie" (as Mike calls her)
can match extempo wits with the best comedians going
when she's on the run. Occasionally, it created problems
on the road until they both learned what was happening.
"Once," Connie said, "a microphone
fell apart during a concert. Barbara replaced it and
delivered a funny quip, but I found it hard to get
the audience back into the mood of my story. So she
had to learn to reserve her special humor for her
own introductions."
Connie, ever the intense and serene partner of the
team, developed a splendid clarity of tone and purpose
during their work on Mountain Sweet Talk.
On one hand, her haunting sepulchral tones invoked
the pleas of a mother, mistakenly buried alive; whereas
the lyrical quality of her lighter moments caused
fellow story- teller Jay O'Callahan to write, "If
a rose could speak, it would have Connie's voice."

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They have never missed a performance in 14 years.
They came close once when they developed terrible
sore throats and head colds before flying from California
to Boston to accept the Alice Jordan Award at the
New England Round Table of Librarians. While one woman
was performing, the other was blowing her nose and
hacking away (detached from the lapel mike) and vice
versa. But they performed so smoothly, the audience
never noticed just how sick they were.
Barbara said, "Our most grueling experience
occurred in Arizona when we'd just completed a full
week of shows at school. We had really over scheduled
ourselves and had just struggled through the last
show on Friday afternoon, and were packing up our
props and were ready to leave the stage when the principal
begged us to do just one more 30 minute set for the
kindergarten children who had missed the assembly.
How we did that show, I'll never know - but we did.
We always pace ourselves down to the last minute,
not like some performers who wing it. We know exactly
how long it will take for each set, each gig, and
we pace ourselves, because our voices and our energy
levels have to be recharged, but that day we were
literally croaking out the stories. It was the absolute
pits. But the kids loved it."
During the course of our after-theater session, I
got a chance to ask them some specific questions:
Who took care of the business while you were on
the road?
Connie: "To handle our business
affairs we worked out an effective system called 'Business
Week.' At first, it was 'Business Day.' It evolved
slowly and from necessity. Every other week one of
us had to handle all the necessary telephone calls,
record titles of stories we told each place in our
master book (to prevent repeats on return trips);
record addresses, be responsible for leaving the host's
house on time for the next appointment; leave parties
early so we could sleep; plan the driving schedule
... and lock up the camper. One perk was that the
Business Week person got first choice of beds. This
system kept the total burden from falling on one person
and also allowed each of us a vacation every other
week. It also ensured that each of us learned all
facets of the business, not just those that came easiest
to us."
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Did you ever get bored from so much enforced
- even claustrophobic - intimacy on the road?
Barbara: "Never! We used the
CB a lot. My handle was Storyteller; Connie's was
Carolina Gypsy. We learned so much from CB'ers: where
the best, cheapest food and gas was, the shortest,
safest routes to our destination. We sang, exchanged
jokes. Once we even told a story in tandem over the
CB to a principal who later booked us for a concert
at his school! "
Connie: "And we were always
busy on the road, doing correspondence, figuring expenses,
organizing our schedules and planning our stories.
Seems like we were always singing or telling stories
or working on our delivery as the miles rolled along."
Barbara: "When we started out,
we knew of no one who was doing this, so we had no
role models. We just started inventing the job of
itinerant storytellers as we drove along. In 1975,
there were many fine performers keeping the craft
alive in libraries, but not traveling the circuit.
Others were beginning to hold community concerts,
but there was only one Storytelling Festival in the
country in Jonesboro, Tennessee. Today, there are
300 professional storytellers and over 50 festivals
in 38 states, and we have appeared at many of the
first festivals ever held."
When did you officially become THE FOLKTELLERS®?
Barbara: "In 1975 Margery Nichols,
a friend of Bill Domler (he really launched our career),
thought it up. Later, we registered it officially
with the Copyright Office. Now it's protected with
an "R", just like a trademark. So many storytellers
who heard of us began to use the term folktellers
generically, like kleenex without the capital "K."
So now, we write them and explain that they must use
another name. After all, before us, there were no
'folktellers': we made the word part of the language."
Do you feel your mission has changed since your
days of working with children in the library?
Barbara: "It's a very different
life-style. The library was 9-to-5 and involved a
lot of paperwork, recommendation of books, and giving
book talks all day long. It was dealing with one person
at a time except when the school groups came in with
30 or 40 kids. When I came to Chattanooga Public Library
in 1971, only 12 children were coming to story-hour.
When I left, we had 200 children lining up to get
into the castle I had designed in the children's room.
Over a hundred of them had to wait in another room
watching movies until the next story hour started.
"But today there may be 20,000 people in the
audience, as we had at the Philadelphia Folk Festival
and Winnipeg Folk Festival. In some ways, because
you've put out enough energy to encompass thousands
of minds and bodies, it's more exhilarating but it's
also more demanding than a regular library job. That's
hard for most people to understand, because they think,
'Oh, you've got it made.' And we do. And I'm not complaining.
And yes, it is a Princess job; yes, it's perfect.
However, when you stand up in front of 20,000 people
to entertain them with stories, there is some energy
going down! You have to deliver!
"The library world is very patterned, very Zen.
On a traveling schedule, getting to the plane or concert
on time may be good stress, but it's stress nevertheless,
and it takes its toll. You can't work 40 hours a week
telling stories, because you wouldn't have a vocal
chord left, and your brain would be pure mush. It's
tough on the road: tough and delightful.”
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What projects do you see in the future?
Connie: "Well, one reason for
producing our play was so that we could have more
time to spend at home. Now, from June to the first
of November, we are able to be with our husbands when
we're not on stage. We may one day take Mountain Sweet
Talk on the road a week at a time, but we aren't contemplating
a full road tour."
Barbara: "Somewhere along the
line, we want to produce a book on how to conduct
storytelling workshops, or how to become a storyteller.
Fortunately, we have time on our side. In the world
of storytelling age is an advantage; you get better,
more credible, as you get older."
When
Connie and Barbara started out in 1975, they gave
1,000 performances in three years, a grueling schedule
largely advertised and promoted by word-of-mouth.
Today nine people handle the production of Mountain
Sweet Talk, their personal appearances, sales
of cassettes and records, TV, radio, newspaper and
magazine interviews, their travel schedules and their
finances. The multi-talented Lindig Hall Harris, a
typographer and former theatre manager, directs the
office operations from downtown Asheville, keeping
the books, and contracting for distribution of flyers,
placards and posters. Nancy Orban handles all their
publicity.
These days the Folktellers fly to their performances,
hire rental cars, stay in motels. This frees them
from the demands of their earlier minstrel lifestyle
where the host or hostess often expected free improvisational
performances (often until the wee hours) in return
for bed-and-breakfast or dinner.
No question: these two were pioneers, and pioneers
have no competition. But they constantly offer advice
and down-to-earth survival information to would-be
storytellers, itinerant or otherwise.
Connie: "So many people have
told us that our article in School Library Journal
made them decide to quit their jobs and become storytellers.
We always refer them to NAPPS [the National Association
for the Preservation and Perpetuation of Storytelling]
for a directory of institutes, workshops, resource
catalogs, and folk or storytelling festivals around
the world."
Both Connie and Barbara were in on the founding of
NAPPS, which was conceived by their close friend,
festival organizer Jimmy Neil Smith, who has helped
guide the group to its present size of 2,000-plus
members. Both women served on the Board of NAPPS for
ten years, actively leading the organization to its
new national prominence.
When they first came up with the idea of producing
a theatrical showcase for their stories in 1985, they
contacted a noted writer-director-actor, John Basinger,
who with his daughter Savannah worked with them on
the script for Mountain Sweet Talk. Now for
the first time Connie and Barbara could bring together
in a single vehicle their many talents for storytelling,
drama, humor, history and research. The play draws
deeply on their own ancestry and on the powerful spiritual
ambience of the hills that have shaped their lives
as Southerners, the Blue Ridge Mountains of the Carolinas
and Tennessee.
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In 1987 an event occurred which may send the Folktellers
in yet another creative direction. Barbara won a minor
role as Mavis the cook in a major motion picture to
be released in 1989 - Columbia Pictures' production
of Winter People, starring Lloyd Bridges
and Eileen Ryan. Lynn Stalmaster chose Barbara for
the role from dozens of contenders. Now agents are
already submitting offers to her and Connie for future
films.
It may sound like all business, but there is a light
side. "We do have a good time performing,"
Connie said. "We try to convey that, so that
we can encourage children and adults in the audience
to consider optional careers. Lots of children write
us. One letter in particular showed we had gotten
our message across. A young boy wrote, 'My father
asked if I wanted to be a storyteller or a fireman.
I said a storyteller during the week and on weekends
a fireman.' "
Rachel Stein, writing in The Arts Journal,
October 1985, perhaps describes best Barbara's and
Connie's effect on the field: "At the forefront
of the American storytelling renaissance, [they] are
continually forging the territory, bringing a love
of tales to new audiences."
By creatively and energetically overcoming obstacles
and by simply enduring on the road, the Folktellers
have carved a new frontier of careers and lifestyles
for hundreds of future storytellers. Like great wise
resourceful spiders - like Charlotte herself - they
have spun iridescent filaments of courage, color,
and craftsmanship into a web of literary delight which
first attracts, then ensnares and ultimately captures
the minds and hearts and imaginations of the viewers.
We all become a part of the warp and weft of the
ageless tales they weave. We are truly touched by
that simplest of ancient devices: the well-told tale.
The fractured fable, the ancestral anecdote, the philosophical
parable - all are a part of the storyteller's stock
in trade because they deal directly with the human
condition: with affairs of the heart and mind and
soul. This is nothing more than direct, powerful,
one-to-one communication, undiluted by technical effects,
laugh tracks, or TV commercials. It is nothing more
than the majesty of simple words conveying fear and
dignity, courage and compromise, bitter loneliness
and lasting love.
We hear it faint and clear at first, then rising
to thunderous force, then fading to a just perceptible
graveyard whisper, the melodic strains of the Folktellers
weaving their country rhymes and robust jokes, spinning
their lilting and unforgettable Appalachian tales.
As Stein wrote, "In their stories, the Folktellers
have carried a taste of Appalachia far and wide and
now the mountains have drawn them home." Yes,
Thomas Wolfe, you can go home again. Even
to Asheville, North Carolina.
SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL/JANUARY 1989
Barbara
Home Stewart is Senior Regional Sales Manager, Institute
for Scientific Information, Philadelphia, and a freelance
writer.
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