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The Power of the Tale |
| December 2006 |
World-renowned
and award-winning storyteller, Jay O’Callahan, recently visited
Milton to work with Peter Parisi’s Oral Interpretation class
for a morning of “sculpting stories.” Mr. O’Callahan
began his visit with a journey story about a grasshopper who wants
desperately to become a butterfly. With an incredible talent for
becoming each of his characters, Mr. O’Callahan showed the
power that committing to a story can have.
“The detail is what brings any work of art to life, and it’s
what brings a story to life,” he explained. “You really
have to use the tools you have—your sounds, your body, repetition,
rhythm—to create each character. Each character has its own
distinct gestures, voice, language, and way of moving. There are
millions of ways to tell a story, but I like to be the character.”
In between stories—which ranged from a fable story of forest
creatures to entertaining tales based loosely on Mr. O’Callahan’s
childhood—he worked with students who partnered up to share
their own and listen to one another’s stories. “Appreciations,”
where the audience gives positive feedback to each storyteller,
were also part of the workshop.
Mr. O’Callahan concluded by explaining that “stories
are a series of images. When telling a story, you’re creating
and shaping images. The sculpture here isn’t a visible stone,
but it’s something you’re shaping so that the imagination
of the listener can see it just as clearly.”
Click here www.ocallahan.com
to learn more about Mr. O’Callahan and his work.

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