In the beginning, there was fright...
I started my journey through storytelling by
- Observing other librarians do it
- Rehearsing. I remember rehearsing my whole 'act' more than 4 times the first couple of times I did it. The first time, I rehearsed till I was sick of it and then I rehearsed a few times more.
i) Went through every story I had chosen
ii) Rehearsed exactly how I'd tell it including, body movement, voice and interaction
iii) Get the timing right to fit it all in 30min
iv) Have a back up story or two in case I speed through the first few out of fright or if the children have heard them before. - I also had some tips from various librarians, including Peter Chan who typically tells his own stories by drawing.
Over the years, I've continued
- Observing how other librarians and professional storytellers do it - mostly live but sometimes through videos.
- Rehearsing - it became more and more of a mental rehearsal as I went along. Experience tends to give a pretty accurate similation.
- Attended a few courses on storytelling and drama.
If I see something I like, I typically start by doing an exact copy and then adapting it to my style and putting in new elements.
The different types of storytelling I've done include:
- Storyreading
- Dramatizing (either alone, with colleagues or on two occasions, getting children to do it)
- Origami
- Draw and Tell (some original, some existing ones)
- With Puppets, throwing in some ventriloquism
- With Magic - I am particularly proud of this one because I created a 20-25 minute story to weave together some effects I had learned.
On occasion, I've had to do a storytelling with no preparation and had to
- Tell or adapt a story from memory
- Create a story on the fly
Some of the librarians I enjoy observing for their skills:
Nelly Fredolin, Raneetha Rajaratnam, Joanna Zhang - they all pour energy and poise into their programmes
Hussain Bachek, Azizah Osman, Pek Een - I like their more understated way to doing it that is so unlike me and yet effective. Pek Een is also much better at 'crowd' control than I am
Professional storytellers I enjoy:
Roger Jenkins - a very confident storyteller that has many unique takes on some standards
Bobby and Sherry Norfolk - Sherry Norfolk was amazing at creating some voices and Bobby Norfolk just put in so much amazing energy that I revisited some stories I had previously discarded as too boring
Randel McGee - he does ventriloquism too and tells stories in a very humourous manner. He also performs paper cuttings (mainly of Hans Christian Andersen stories) - something that is still out of my skilset.
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