Tuesday, December 8, 2009 – 6 PM
The Cornelia Street Cafe
29 Cornelia Street, NYC
Storytelling occurs the second Tuesday of the month
Curator/Host: Barbara Aliprantis
SPECIAL FORMAT: A night of cameos, including one by the illustrious curator/host of this long-running series, Barbara Aliprantis
This December eve gathering will feature a cornucopia of poignant, heartwarming stories, including The Christmas Truce (a WWI peace story) with a great message for modern times!
ERICA LANN-CLARK grew up listening to stories. Born on the eve of the Holocaust, baby Erica escaped with her Viennese Jewish family across an ocean and landed in Brooklyn’s cultural hotbed. Her immigrant mama and papa spun passionate tales to bring their history alive with tears and gales of laughter. Everything that happened was seed for a future story. These memories inspire Erica's powerful stories. She tells to honor the past and bless the future.
KURT GERSTMANN was smuggled out of Germany through a network of Catholic safe houses to the Holy Land prior to WWII. At the age of 14 he joined the Hagana Underground and at 16 joined the just born Israeli Army. After Medical Studies in Switzerland, he immigrated to the US where he spent his adult life as a Pathologist in the NYC area. His stories are drawn from that background and are in turn funny and poignant.
JIM HAWKINS, beloved Irish-American Storyteller/Actor/Musician and gifted teacher, charms audiences and lifts our spirits with his stories and songs, including memories of his childhood spent in the Midlands of Ireland and on the stoops and concrete sidewalks of Astoria, Queens.
ELIZABETH ROWE, storyteller/actor/writer and teacher, performs in English and French! Her repertoire includes a rich blend of family stories, world folktales, myths, legends and literary stories. Tonight she’ll tell her Scottish father's first hand account of The Christmas Truce (a WWI peace story). "'Twas Christmas in the trenches where the frost, so bitter hung.
The frozen fields of France were warmed as songs of peace were sung..." - Christmas in The Trenches, Words & Music by John McCutcheon
November 10, 2009
Featured Tellers:
Lonnie Harrington & Ruben Gonzalez
Cameo: Rivka Widerman
LONNIE HARRINGTON has been telling stories for as long as he can remember. He has also been singing, playing guitar, and hitting some kind of percussion instrument in just about every type of musical style one can think of since the 1950’s, performing around the United States including Florida, the Northeastern United States, eastern Canada and New Mexico. Born in Tallahassee, Florida of African, Seminole, Cherokee, Choctaw, and Shawnee ancestry, Lonnie has researched African-Native American relations since 1972 and is the author of Both Sides of the Water: Essays on African-Native American Interactions. Lonnie lives in the New York City area, working as an arts administrator, musician, lecturer AND storyteller!
RUBEN GONZALEZ, a remarkable classical guitarist and composer, calls himself a “cantautor” who tells stories thru music and song. Born in San Juan, Argentina, where he studied classical guitar, Ruben combines Rock en EspaƱol, bossa nova, the Latin American popular song with his own rhythmic style with novel harmonies. His lyrics touch upon social issues and current events as well as personal experiences. www.rubengonzalez.info
RIVKA WIDERMAN is a real Renaissance woman who has worn many hats, including professional storyteller, professor of law, Hebrew/Yiddish translator, workshop facilitator, and visual artist. A native of Brooklyn, now living in Manhattan, Rivka draws on her extraordinarily diverse talents, whether she’s painting a picture, telling a family story, a folktale or really big fib.
September 15, 2009
Epitelos (the Greek word for finally), at long last I've managed to log on to my blog! (Sitting here in Flushing I can almost see my beloved webmaster raising his eyebrows and shaking his head...oiy!)
NEWS FLASH: The Cornelia Street Cafe's "Second Tuesday of the Month Storytelling Series" I've been curating/hosting for the past 12 years will now be known as The New York STORY Exchange (NYSE). We will continue to feature storytellers of all kinds, telling all manner of stories from personal tales to folktales and everything in between. Our format stays the same: Open MIC and/or Cameo Slots, followed by featured teller(s). Hope you can join us at our next gathering.
Tuesday, October 13 - 6:00 PM
Featured Teller: Bob ReiserTonight we will end at
The Cornelia Street Cafe is located at 29 Cornelia Street, NYC -see website for direction: http://www.corneliastreetcafe.com
Tuesday, June 9, 2009 - 6 PM
"2nd Tuesday of the Month Storytelling Series"The Cornelia Street Cafe
29 Cornelia Street in Greenwich Village, NYC
http://www.corneliastreetcafe.com
FEATURED TELLER: Bob Reiser telling Dangerous Stories!
FORMAT: Open Telling (5-6 minutes) followed by Featured Teller(s)
"2nd Tuesday of the Month Storytelling Series"
The Cornelia Street Cafe
29 Cornelia Street in Greenwich Village, NYC
http://www.corneliastreetcafe.com
Barbara Aliprantis, Curator/Host
FORMAT: Open Telling (5-6 minutes) followed by Featured Tellers:
Robin Bady continues her exploration of our contemporary connection to fables. She comes to storytelling from a long line of performers, storytellers, painters, writers, and other liars, near-do-wells and thieves! She wears many hats, including writer, actor, director, educator, musician and storyteller and performs throughout the USA and Europe. Her explorations include collaborations with musicians and visual artists. She is the Director of the Storytelling Center of New York City. http://www.robinbady.com
Terri Campion: In The Saint Therese Kiss, a young girl prepares for her first kiss in the back seat of a shiny green Volkswagon bug while struggling with her life long desire to become a saint. This short piece is a trailer for Terri's full length solo play - Following the Yellow Brick Road Down the Rabbit Hole, in which she portrays eighteen different characters and explores the question: Is there a way to have a fun and happy life and still get into heaven when you die? The work evolved from a collection of memoirs laced in a veil of fiction.
Terri is an Actress, Playwright, Teaching Artist and the recipient of the 2007 Jerry Kaufman Award for Excellence in Playwriting. Her work has been published with Meriwether Publishing, Smith&Kraus and The Great Kills Press. Terri also offers solo show workshops and coaching. http://www.terricampion.com
The Cornelia Street Cafe
29 Cornelia Street, Greenwich Village, NY
www.corneliastreetcafe.com
Tuesday, March 10, 2009 @ 6:00 PM
Curator/Emcee: Barbara Aliprantis
FORMAT: Open Telling (5-6 minutes) followed by Featured Teller
About Me
- Barbara
- New York, NY, United States
- “I was born in a two-room house, in a small fishing village on the Island of Paros. In my village community, as I remember it, there was a yiayia – a grandmother – in every house, and I thought they were all mine. When my mother, Margarita, 9 year old brother Yanni, 3 l/2 year old sister, Calypso and my 2 l/2 year old self, departed our Greek Island home, bound for America, to join my father, Anastasios, I left with vivid images of teary-eyed village folks, young and old, lining narrow, winding village streets, waving goodbye. While I was only 2 l/2, I remember that day as though it were yesterday…thus began my journey as a story teller, story listener…”